These are the instructions: Will be analyzing Black Mirror episode titled ‘White Bear’. You can choose whatever text you want to relate it back to. Read the rest of the instructions below. For your final (creative) project, you will reflect deeply on a topic of your choosing, all through the lens of a philosophical view we have studied in class. You may write about anything you want. You may choose to analyze a film, an episode of a television show (e.g. Black Mirror works great), a piece of music, lyrics to a song, or a music video. Perhaps you would like to look closely at an issue in sports, the arts, or politics. You may want to explore something in the news or current events, or even something related to the pandemic. Whatever issue you choose to take up, you have a choice in terms of the modality of the writing. For example, you may wish to write a reflective essay, dialogue, short story, poem, or short play. Perhaps you prefer to make a short film or conduct a reflective interview with a relative. No matter the reading, topic, or modality you choose, you must produce a substantial piece of writing (approximately 1,100 words) in which you refer to one of our readings from Section 2 or Section 3 (see below). The project is meant to build on the skills of the 1-page outline assignment and the short paper in that you must make it clear not only that you understand someone else’s philosophical argument, but also that you are capable of expressing your own philosophical views and reasoning. Remember, this is your chance to be a philosopher. Readings assigned in Section 2 or Section 3 (choose ONE of the following): Aristotle, Extracts from Nicomachean Ethics Plato, Extracts from Republic (you don’t have to discuss the whole reading- you can choose to focus on just the Allegory of the Cave, or just the Ring of Gyges, for example) Hobbes, Extracts from Leviathan Kant, Extracts from Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals Mill, Extracts from Utilitarianism Zeno’s Paradoxes (you may choose to focus on just Achilles and the Tortoise or just The Racecourse) Saint Anselm, The Ontological Argument Prisoner’s Dilemma; Hardin, Tragedy of the Commons Newcomb’s Problem