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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to Philosophy investigates the aims, nature and problems of philosophy with emphasis upon the theory of knowledge, metaphysics, ethics and philosophy of religion.
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Sections Offered: Not Offered This Term Course Satisfies: Humanities, Liberal Arts, Open/Free, Philosophy & Religion, Reading Content Corequisites: GOV 101P Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( Basic Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Sections Offered: Not Offered This Term Course Satisfies: Humanities, Liberal Arts, Open/Free, Philosophy & Religion, Reading Content Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( Basic Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Sections Offered: Days/Times Course Satisfies: Humanities, Liberal Arts, Open/Free, Philosophy & Religion, Reading Content Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( Basic Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Sections Offered: Not Offered This Term Course Satisfies: Humanities, Liberal Arts, Open/Free, Philosophy & Religion, Reading Content Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( Basic Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
Practical Logic is designed to introduce the student to the basics of reasoning, argumentation, and critical thinking. Included are criteria of sound reasoning, rational assessment of arguments, common fallacies, and basic informal logic.
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3.00 Credits
Early and Medieval philosophy is an adventure in the history of ideas. A study of the rise and evolution of western philosophy from the early Greeks to the Renaissance. Emphasis on Plato, Aristotle, Augustine and Aquinas.
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Sections Offered: Not Offered This Term Course Satisfies: Humanities, Liberal Arts, Open/Free, Philosophy & Religion, Reading Content Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( Basic Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
3.000 Credit Hours 2.000 Lecture hours 2.000 Lab hours Sections Offered: Not Offered This Term Course Satisfies: Fine & Performing Arts, Humanities, Liberal Arts, Open/Free, Philosophy & Religion, Reading Content Prerequisites/General Requirements: ( College Reading proficiency ) and ( Basic Writing proficiency )
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3.00 Credits
Existentialism is a type of philosophical thinking and writing that originated in the works of Kierkegaard and Nietzsche. It accepts that the world we live in offers no simple answers. In fact many existentialists believe the world is inherently irrational. The main task, then, of philosophy and of life is to face this absurdity of life and figure out my responsibility in life and my response to the irrationality of life. This course will study several philosophers who have been called existentialist, to understand their depiction of life's absurdity. Rather than being a specific school of philosophy, existentialists share the trait of a common reaction against more traditional ways of doing philosophy.
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