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Edin - Intellectual Humility: Practice 

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Intellectual Humility: Practice
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Coursera 
Overview

Duration

19 hours

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Total fee

Free

Mode of learning

Online

Difficulty level

Beginner

Official Website

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Credential

Certificate

Intellectual Humility: Practice
 at 
Coursera 
Highlights

  • Shareable Certificate Earn a Certificate upon completion
  • 100% online Start instantly and learn at your own schedule.
  • Flexible deadlines Reset deadlines in accordance to your schedule.
  • Beginner Level
  • Approx. 19 hours to complete
  • English Subtitles: French, Portuguese (European), Russian, English, Spanish
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Intellectual Humility: Practice
 at 
Coursera 
Course details

Skills you will learn
More about this course
  • We live in a polarised world where all too often people talk past each other. But do you know when to believe what others say? For example, how quick should we be to accept something that someone else tells us is true, and what should we be looking out for when assessing a person's trustworthiness? Meanwhile, what should we do when we encounter disagreements with people who seem to be our equals? How and when should we adjust our beliefs, and how does the appropriate response vary depending on the evidence? These challenges may be especially important in the arena of religious disagreements. How should we weigh the evidence for and against various theistic and atheistic stances?
  • Experts in psychology, philosophy, theology and education are conducting exciting new research on these questions, and the results have important, real-world applications. Faced with difficult questions people often tend to dismiss and marginalize dissent. Political and moral disagreements can be incredibly polarizing, and sometimes even dangerous. And whether it?s Christian fundamentalism, Islamic extremism, or militant atheism, religious dialogue remains tinted by arrogance, dogma, and ignorance. The world needs more people who are sensitive to reasons both for and against their beliefs, and are willing to consider the possibility that their political, religious and moral beliefs might be mistaken. The world needs more intellectual humility.
  • In this course. we will examine the following major questions about applied issues surrounding intellectual humility:
  • ? Should you believe what people say?
  • ? How should we handle disagreement?
  • ? What is the role of evidence in resolving religious disagreements?
  • All lectures are delivered by leading specialists, and the course is organised around a number of interesting readings and practical assignments which will help you address issues related to humility in your daily life.
  • This course can be taken as a part of a series which explores the theory, the science and the applied issues surrounding intellectual humility. Before, we considered how to define and measure intellectual humility, what intellectual virtue is, whether we are born or can become humble, and what cognition and emotions can tell us about intellectual humility. If you are interested, complete all three courses to gain a broader understanding of this fascinating topic. Look for:
  • ? Intellectual Humility: Theory - https://www.coursera.org/learn/intellectual-humility-theory
  • ? Intellectual Humility: Science - https://www.coursera.org/learn/intellectual-humility-science
  • Check out our trailer to hear more - https://youtu.be/x_CWjrYxKZU.
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Intellectual Humility: Practice
 at 
Coursera 
Curriculum

GETTING STARTED

Trailer - Intellectual Humility: Practice

About this course

Course assessments and exercises

Optional companion book

Ian introduces Module 1

Introduction to testimony

Trust and scepticism

The evolutionary background of trust

Reconciling testimony with what we already believe

The right, the wrong, and the humble

Humility, fear and bias

Humility and confidence

Before you begin...

"Can You Believe What You Hear?" by Ian Church & Peter Samuelson (recommended)

Jennifer Saul on Implicit Bias (recommended podcast)

Daniel Kahneman on Bias (recommended)

"Social Knowledge and Social Norms" by Peter Graham (further reading)

"Knowledge, Assertion and Humility" by Emma C. Gordon and J. Adam Carter (further reading)

Miranda Fricker on Epistemic Injustice (further podcast)

"On Testimony and Transmission" by J. Adam Carter and Philip J. Nickel (further reading)

Initial thoughts

Practice Quiz

Feels good to be right?

Your examples of fears and biases

Module quiz

Reading quiz on "Can You Believe What You Hear?" by Ian Church and Peter Samuelson

HOW SHOULD WE HANDLE DISAGREEMENT?

Ian introduces Module 2

Introduction to disagreement

Disagreement between equals

Dimensions of reasonable disagreement

"How Should We Handle Disagreement?" by Ian Church & Peter Samuelson (recommended)

"The Epistemic Significance of Disagreement" by Thomas Kelly (recommended)

"Reasonable Disagreement" by Catherine Elgin (further reading)

"The Epistemology of Testimony" by Duncan Pritchard (further reading)

"Philosophical Peer Disagreement" by Nicolás Lo Guercio (further reading)

"The Epistemology of Disagreement" (video discussion between Roy Sorensen and David Christensen).

"Intellectual Humility, Knowledge-How and Disagreement" by Duncan Pritchard and J. Adam Carter (further reading)

Your initial thoughts

Practice Quiz

Back to last week

The disagreements you know

The dimensions in your example

Module quiz

Reading quiz on "How Should We Handle Disagreement?" by Ian Church and Peter Samuelson

RESOLVING RELIGIOUS DISAGEEMENTS: THE ROLE OF EVIDENCE

Ian introduces Module 3

Introduction

Biases and evidence-weighting

Three evidence-weighting policies

Assessing privatism

Assessing publicism

Assessing egalitarianism

Improving egalitarianism

"What Does Intellectual Humility Tell Us About Religion?" by Ian Church & Peter Samuelson (recommended)

"Faith and Reason" by Duncan Pritchard (recommended reading or viewing)

"Two Concepts of Intellectual Humility" by Jason Baehr (further viewing)

"Can There Be Religious Disagreement Between Epistemic Peers?" by Jennifer Lackey (further viewing)

"Scepticism and Implicit Bias" by Jennifer Saul (further reading)

Initial thoughts

Good disagreement

Practice Quiz

Evidence weighting in disagreement

Module Quiz

Reading quiz on "What Does Intellectual Humility Tell Us About Religion?" by Ian Church & Peter Samuelson

END OF COURSE ASSIGNMENTS

Before you finish...

Show what you learned by editing the Wikipedia entry on intellectual humility!

A brief How-To

TRAILER: Intellectual Humility: Theory

TRAILER: Intellectual Humility: Science

Intellectual Humility: Practice
 at 
Coursera 
Admission Process

    Important Dates

    May 25, 2024
    Course Commencement Date

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