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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to logistics management and identifies the relationships between logistics and the other functions of the firm, particularly marketing and operations management.The course covers strategic and operational issues in logistics and supply chain management, including logistics and supply chain design, logistics of customer service, transportation management, demand forecasting, inventory management, order processing, warehousing and materials handling, and facility location.The course examines recent developments in logistics, including third party logistics.(Prerequisites: IS 100, and BU 225 or OM 101) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course enables students to understand and to manage innovation at the operational and strategic levels of an organization.It integrates the management of market, technological, and organizational changes to provide a framework for improving the competitiveness of firms and effectiveness of organizations.It emphasizes an effective transition from research and development to successful products and services.The course adopts a competence-based approach to technology management and focuses on internal structure as well as external linkages and processes.(Prerequisite: IS 100) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This introductory course considers the philosophical questions of several significant thinkers from the dawn of Western philosophy to the 17th century.The course introduces students to the vocation of incessant questioning by acquainting them with the rich and stimulating variety of ancient and medieval philosophical thinking and by developing their own thinking, reading, and critical writing skills.Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This introductory course considers the philosophical questions of several significant thinkers from the 17th century to the present.It introduces students to new ways of thinking ushered in by the revolutionary era of scientific reasoning and the enlightenment, as well as the reaction to modernism by contemporary thinkers.The course also introduces students to the vocation of incessant questioning by acquainting them with these new ways of philosophical thinking while continuing to develop their own thinking, reading, and critical writing skills.(Prerequisite: PH 10) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This introductory course considers the philosophical questions of several significant thinkers from the 17th century to the present.It introduces students to new ways of thinking ushered in by the revolutionary era of scientific reasoning and the enlightenment, as well as the reaction to modernism by contemporary thinkers.The course focuses on the philosophy of science (both natural and social) within the context of modern and contemporary philosophy.It also introduces students to the vocation of incessant questioning by acquainting them with these new ways of philosophical thinking while they continue to develop their own thinking, reading, and critical writing skills.(Prerequisite: PH 10) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This introductory course considers the philosophical questions of several significant thinkers from the 17th century to the present.It introduces students to new ways of thinking ushered in by the revolutionary era of scientific reasoning and the enlightenment, as well as the reaction to modernism by contemporary thinkers.The course focuses on ethical theory and a comparative study of the various schools of ethical theory in modern and contemporary philosophy.It also introduces students to the vocation of incessant questioning by acquainting them with these new ways of philosophical thinking while they continue to develop their own thinking, reading, and critical writing skills.(Prerequisite: PH 10) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
The course addresses ethical theories, including utilitarianism, deontological ethics, and postmodern ethics.It addresses themes from political philosophy, including rule by divine right, social contract theory, Marxism, and twentieth century analytic and continental political thought.This course also explores the early ideas of international law, the concept of a community of nations, and the tension between idealism and political realism.Finally, the course looks at human rights by touching on different forms of dehumanization: coloniz-ation of the indigenous population in the western hemisphere; enslavement of Africans and the history of African-Americans; and the treatment of gays and lesbians.(Prerequisite: PH 10) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides a basic acquaintance with prevailing systems and methods of logic, notably traditional (Aristotelian) and modern (standard mathematical) logics.(Prerequisites: PH 10 and one 100-level philosophy course) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course presents a coherent picture of the main currents of contemporary philosophy in the Western and the non-Western tradition: phenomenology and existentialism, pragmatism and analytic philosophy, Marxism and dialectic materialism, and philosophy of history and culture.(Prerequisites: PH 10 and one 100-level philosophy course) Three credits.
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3.00 Credits
The course examines aesthetic experience and concepts like imitation, expression, and psychic distance; considers the relationships among the various arts; and explores the role of art in life.(Prerequisites: PH 10 and one 100-level philosophy course) Three credits.
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