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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Basic principles of microeconomics and macroeconomics. Emphasis on applications to current national and global economic issues. For majors requiring one quarter of economics. Not open to students having previous credit in ECON 222 or equivalent. 4 lectures.
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4.00 Credits
The multiple and conflicting ways in which various Americans (defined in terms of race, class and gender) have struggled to formulate and promote their own understandings of freedom and equality, from the pre-conquest era to the present. 4 lectures. New crosslisted course, effective Fall 2008. .
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4.00 Credits
How the global dispersal of Europeans, Asians, and Africans, the hemispheric dispersal of Latin Americans, and the forced internal migration of Native Americans have contributed to American cultural heritage and the struggles for ethnic, class and gender equality, and justice. 4 lectures.
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4.00 Credits
Comparative history of Western and non-Western societies in global perspective. The history of cross-cultural exchange, interaction, and conflict in the making of the modern world, concentrating on the economic, political, and cultural transformations that facilitated and emerged from imperialism. 4 lectures.
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4.00 Credits
Study of several classic works from the history of philosophy on issues in metaphysics and epistemology. At least one will be from the Ancient period, and at least one from the Modern era. No more than one from the twentieth century. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A.
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4.00 Credits
Readings from primary philosophical texts, from the ancient and modern periods, with focus on the identification and evaluation of the central ethical and political themes and arguments presented in them. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A.
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4.00 Credits
Broadly surveys Romantic, Victorian, Modern, and Contemporary British literature in an historical-cultural context. Investigates works from several genres and a variety of national and cultural voices. May include such writers as Wordsworth, Wollstonecraft, Dickens, G. Eliot, Wilde, Woolf, Yeats, and Gordimer. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A. New course effective Spring 2009.
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4.00 Credits
Partial derivatives, multiple integrals, introduction to vector analysis. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: MATH 143.
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4.00 Credits
Separable and linear ordinary differential equations with selected applica-tions; numerical and analytical solutions. Linear algebra: vectors in n-space, matrices, linear transformations, eigenvalues, eigenvectors, diagonalization; applications to the study of systems of linear differential equations. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: MATH/HNRS 143 or consent of instructor.
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4.00 Credits
Examination of the ancient epics and classical literature of Mesopotamia, Greece, and Rome. Representative readings include "The Epic of Gilgamesh," "The Illiad," "The Odyssey," "Genesis," "Exodus," "Antigone," "The Symposium," "The Aeneid," and Marcus Aurelius's "Meditations." 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A.
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