Teaching Philosophy

Volume 22, Issue 1, March 1999

Patrick McKee
Pages 1-15

Issues of Old Age in Philosophy Courses

As the percentage of U.S. citizenry over 65 years of age rises, people of old age will become increasingly present both in and out of the classroom. This paper recommends several methods for incorporating philosophical reflection about old age into several philosophy courses and various leading questions to help thematize how old age figures into philosophical texts. For an epistemology course, the author explores the question of epistemological authority (whether living a full human lifespan really imbues one with greater perspective or insight into matters of importance) and epistemological conflict (by what common criteria can one evaluate one’s earlier and later judgments on something when they conflict?). For an ethics course, the author explores one factual question (viz., Do healthy, aging people gradually lose interest in the goals they held when younger and do they acquire different, contemplative priorities?) and one normative question (viz., Ought the elderly to turn towards contemplation?) and relates both questions to the broader philosophical themes of human nature, the nature of activity or action, and what it means to live well. The author relates these questions to a number of philosophical texts and figures, including Hindu classics, Plato, Cicero, and Montaigne.