This shop provides an in-depth guide to the AQA A-Level Law and Philosophy specifications. Each section of the specification is broken down into detailed lessons, covering specific topics in a clear, structured way. Combined, these lessons offer a complete overview of all the essential content needed to excel in exams.
This shop provides an in-depth guide to the AQA A-Level Law and Philosophy specifications. Each section of the specification is broken down into detailed lessons, covering specific topics in a clear, structured way. Combined, these lessons offer a complete overview of all the essential content needed to excel in exams.
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “Kantian Deontological Ethics” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
Immanuel Kant’s account of what is meant by a ‘good will’.
The distinction between acting in accordance with duty and acting out of duty.
The distinction between hypothetical imperatives and categorical imperatives.
The first formulation of the categorical imperative (including the distinction between a contradiction in conception and a contradiction in will).
The second formulation of the categorical imperative.
Issues, including:
clashing/competing duties
not all universalisable maxims are distinctly moral; not all non-universalisable maxims are immoral
the view that consequences of actions determine their moral value
Kant ignores the value of certain motives, eg love, friendship, kindness
morality is a system of hypothetical, rather than categorical, imperatives (Philippa Foot).
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “Utilitarianism” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
The question of what is meant by ‘utility’ and ‘maximising utility’, including:
Jeremy Bentham’s quantitative hedonistic utilitarianism (his utility calculus)
John Stuart Mill’s qualitative hedonistic utilitarianism (higher and lower pleasures) and his ‘proof’ of the greatest happiness principle
non-hedonistic utilitarianism (including preference utilitarianism)
act utilitarianism and rule utilitarianism.
Issues, including:
whether pleasure is the only good (Nozick’s experience machine)
fairness and individual liberty/rights (including the risk of the ‘tyranny of the majority’)
problems with calculation (including which beings to include)
issues around partiality
whether utilitarianism ignores both the moral integrity and the intentions of the individual.
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “The Limits of Knowledge” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
Particular nature of philosophical scepticism and the distinction between philosophical scepticism and normal incredulity.
The role/function of philosophical scepticism within epistemology
The distinction between local and global scepticism
Descartes’ sceptical arguments (the three ‘waves of doubt’)
Responses to scepticism: the application of the following as responses to the challenge of scepticism:
Descartes’ own response
empiricist responses (Locke, Berkeley and Russell)
reliabilism.
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “The Intuition & Deduction Thesis” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
The meaning of ‘intuition’ and ‘deduction’ and the distinction between them.
René Descartes’ notion of ‘clear and distinct ideas’.
His cogito as an example of an a priori intuition.
His arguments for the existence of God and his proof of the external world as examples of a priori deductions.
Empiricist responses including:
responses to Descartes’ cogito
responses to Descartes’ arguments for the existence of God and his proof of the external world (including how Hume’s Fork might be applied to these arguments)
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “Innatism” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
Arguments from Plato (ie the ‘slave boy’ argument) and Gottfried Leibniz (ie his argument based on necessary truths).
Empiricist responses including:
Locke’s arguments against innatism
the mind as a ‘tabula rasa’ (the nature of impressions and ideas, simple and complex concepts)
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “Berkley’s Idealism” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
The immediate objects of perception (ie ordinary objects such as tables, chairs, etc) are mind-dependent objects.
Arguments for idealism including Berkeley’s attack on the primary/secondary quality distinction and his ‘Master’ argument.
Issues including:
arguments from illusion and hallucination
idealism leads to solipsism
problems with the role played by God in Berkeley’s Idealism (including how can Berkeley claim that our ideas exist within God’s mind given that he believes that God cannot feel pain or have sensations?)
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “Indirect Realism” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
The immediate objects of perception are mind-dependent objects (sense-data) that are caused by and represent mind-independent objects.
John Locke’s primary/secondary quality distinction.
Issues including:
the argument that it leads to scepticism about the existence of mind-independent objects. Responses including:
Locke’s argument from the involuntary nature of our experience
the argument from the coherence of various kinds of experience, as developed by Locke and Catharine Trotter Cockburn (attrib)
Bertrand Russell’s response that the external world is the ‘best hypothesis’
the argument from George Berkeley that we cannot know the nature of mind-independent objects because mind-dependent ideas cannot be like mind-independent objects.
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “Direct Realism” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
The immediate objects of perception are mind-independent objects and their properties
Issues including:
the argument from illusion
the argument from perceptual variation
the argument from hallucination
the time-lag argument
This resource contains everything students and teachers alike need to learn or teach the “What is knowledge?” area of the AQA A-Level Philosophy specification. It contains the following information:
The distinction between acquaintance knowledge, ability knowledge and propositional knowledge.
The tripartite view
Propositional knowledge is defined as justified true belief: S knows that p if and only if:
S is justified in believing that p,
p is true and
S believes that p (individually necessary and jointly sufficient conditions)
Issues with the tripartite view including:
the conditions are not individually necessary
the conditions are not sufficient – cases of lucky true beliefs (including Edmund Gettier’s original two counter examples):
responses: alternative post-Gettier analyses/definitions of knowledge including:
strengthen the justification condition (ie infallibilism)
add a ‘no false lemmas’ condition (J+T+B+N)
replace ‘justified’ with ‘reliably formed’ (R+T+B) (ie reliabilism)
replace ‘justified’ with an account of epistemic virtue (V+T+B).