Freedom, Markets, and Well-Being Fall 2023

First Day

Overview

We have two aims:

  1. Doing some genuinely synthetic work in PPE. Here, the course works like a normal seminar where everyone reads the same things and discusses them together.

  2. Preparing to write the thesis in the spring. Here, the course works more like a writing workshop, where everyone is doing their own projects.

At times, you might wonder “what is this class about?” or “are we going anywhere?” Those are reasonable questions. Let me answer them now.

A History of PPE

The history of PPE 160 goes like this. First, there was a PPE major. It consisted of a list of courses from Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. There was no PPE course dedicated to integrating those disciplines.

That was bad.

So PPE 160 was created by Professor Brown and Professor Hurley, my predecessor in the Philosophy Department. The idea was that it would be a senior capstone course dedicated to integrating the different disciplines that make up the PPE major.

That was good.

So we kept doing it even after Professor Hurley left and I slipped into his place (literally: I’m in his old office). But students and faculty were not satisfied with the thesis. They felt that it would be better if students did more work and received more direction in the fall term. In short, the thesis needed more attention than it was getting.

That was bad.

So we decided to devote more attention to the thesis during PPE 160. It is still a class devoted to integrating work in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. But we also structure the course so students work on their theses throughout the term and get regular feedback from the professors and the other students in the class.

That has been pretty good.

The stress people feel about the thesis has gone down and the quality of the work has gone up. But there have been trade-offs. Some students wish we devoted more time to the thesis in PPE 160 and they have a point. You can always do more on a project like a thesis. Others find that the flow of the seminar is interrupted when we break to talk about thesis projects. They have a point too. We did not want to abandon the original goal of a course devoted to integrating the work of different disciplines. In particular, we think that students would miss the group discussion if we tilted the course even farther towards working on individual thesis projects.

This is the balance we settled on and it works reasonably well.

What is this course about?

There is another question about the non-thesis parts of the course that I do not think we have ever squarely answered. It is pretty basic: what are we trying to do? You can ask it about individual class sessions or about the course as a whole. Is there any point we are tying to make? A progression of ideas we are trying to chart? Are we just drifting around from topic to topic or is there a destination?

I wondered about this quite a bit myself and have to confess feeling frustrated with the course at times. But I got over it and here is why. I realized that this is a process course more than a destination course. The point of this course is to work with others who have a diverse skills, backgrounds, and knowledge. The readings are on topics that the disciplines of Philosophy, Politics, and Economics have something to say about. Our seminar meetings try to expose this.

Freshman seminars are similarly about process. The goal of those seminars is to show you how to be a college student: how to prepare, discuss, and write about the kinds of things you will study in college. Senior seminars are the same way but at the other end. Now that you have all this knowledge and all these skills, apply them to this and that.

So when we approach a class session, we are not thinking “what point do we want to make about this reading?” We are trying to set up an environment where we can discuss a piece of writing. The discussion is an opportunity to figure out what is important about the reading to you.

In short, you are seniors now. We are doing less to direct discussion to a particular point than we might do in other courses because when you go out into the big world you are going to have to learn from others, teach others in turn, and decide for yourself what is important to know. A senior seminar like PPE 160 is one step in that direction.

What is everyone doing?

We asked people what they were thinking about for their theses and this is what they said. Check back at the end of the term to see how it all holds up.

  1. Aarushi: philosophy, critique of criminal laws
  2. Andres: international drug trade, economics
  3. Andrew: contradictory public policy concerning work
  4. Andy: political polarization in local government (HOAs, school boards)
  5. Blake: Cuban voting
  6. Carlos: liberation theology, migration
  7. Cindy: merit and mobility or ideas of the self
  8. Cole: economics and politics
  9. Daniel: politics and hip hop
  10. Diya: caste system in the US
  11. Dominic: sailing and boats (we have had a thesis like this!)
  12. Dylan: sick so we don’t know
  13. Ellie: maritime migration, asylum, and climate change
  14. Emily: politics of charter schools in Chicago, Foucault
  15. Jack: something in the humanities
  16. Jackson: public opinion and foreign policy
  17. Jake: economics and philosophy
  18. Jose: economics of Latin America, poverty
  19. Kaliyah: Niger
  20. Kimberlin: Sartre
  21. Leslie: economics of immigration
  22. Li: China and the US on COVID
  23. Liam: US policing, native/indigenous issues, world economy and development
  24. Nicole: economic commodification of transgender athletes
  25. Nina: money
  26. Sridha: intellectual property rights
  27. Veronica: education equity, tech
  28. Yasmine: surveillance of people of color