ENG 160 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Sophist, Anglerfish, Good And Evil

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15 Dec 2016
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(cid:455)ou"(cid:448)e hea(cid:396)d these thi(cid:374)gs si(cid:374)(cid:272)e (cid:455)ou (cid:449)e(cid:396)e (cid:272)hild(cid:396)e(cid:374) Weaker argument stronger than the strong argument: sophistry looks into things he should(cid:374)"t: hea(cid:448)e(cid:374)s a(cid:374)d ea(cid:396)th. Politicians: shows they are not wise though they claim to be wise. Poets: claims they do(cid:374)"t u(cid:374)de(cid:396)sta(cid:374)d their own poetry. Because they write such beautiful poetry, they think they are wise in other matters; however, they have no wisdom about other things or about their poetry. Artisans: they do have some wisdom, but like the poets, they think they are wise in other matters about which they are not wise. A man should only consider if an act is good or not. He will not beg for his life or drag his kids before the court to gain sympathy. Part 3: explain the analogy of the two runners. Instead of trying to escape/outrun death, we need to try to outrun evil: e(cid:454)plai(cid:374) o(cid:272)(cid:396)ates" p(cid:396)ophe(cid:272)y.

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