Skip to main content
Home Home
Menu Close

Help Navigation

  • Gateway
  • Alumni
  • Support Us
  • Questions?
  • Contact Us
Search
Home Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Community News
    • Take the Tour
  • Admissions
    • Overview
    • Apply
    • Events
    • Enrollment Options
    • Tuition
    • Financial Aid
    • Criteria
  • Academics
    • Overview
    • Course Catalog
    • Middle School
    • Graduation Requirements
    • College-Style Schedule
    • Curriculum
  • Student Life
  • Student Support
    • Overview
    • Academic Advising
    • College Counseling
    • Counseling & Wellness
    • Writing & Tutoring Center

Help Navigation

  • Gateway
  • Alumni
  • Support Us
  • Questions?
  • Contact Us

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Course Catalog
  3. Critical Reading and Argumentation
Back to search results

Critical Reading and Argumentation

In addition to the unique problems and questions that constitute its subject matter, philosophy makes use of a variety of intellectual tools and argumentative strategies that are widely applicable to both academic and informal inquiry. This course helps students develop these resources through a careful analysis of exemplary pieces of philosophical argument and literature. To this end, we explore philosophical thinking about modes of reasoning as well as such core philosophical topics as the existence of God, the nature and limits of knowledge, the nature and content of ethics, and the mind's relation to the world. While the course emphasizes the cultivation of the tools and strategies of reading and argument, the materials encourage reflection on some of the foundational characteristics and assumptions in the disciplines of ethics, religion, and philosophy itself. Readings may include Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Leibniz, Voltaire, Locke, Mill, Hume, Kant, Camus, Descartes, Kafka, Nietzsche, as well as more contemporary authors such as Le Guin, Hursthouse, Vargas, Gyekye, Beebee, and Ismael.

Core Course Progression Chart
Click to Enlarge
Back to search results
Course Number
OCRA1
Level
High School
Semester
Year-long
Credit per Semester
5.00
Subject
Core
Prerequisites
Democracy, Freedom, Justice, and the Law (ODFRL) or placement assessment

Who We Are

Footer logo

Explore Stanford Pre-Collegiate Studies

Contact Info

Stanford Online High School
Academy Hall  Floor 2 8853
415 Broadway
Redwood City, CA 94063

Contact Stanford OHS

  • Facebook
  • Camera 2

Navigate

  • About
  • Alumni
  • Gateway
  • Questions?

Support Us

Your gift to Stanford Online High School benefits instructional and outreach activities.

Make a Gift
 Footer logo
  • Stanford Home
  • Maps & Directions
  • Search Stanford
  • Emergency Info
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Trademarks
  • Non-discrimination
  • Accessibility

© Stanford University. Stanford, California 94305.