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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: permission of department. Surveys development of poetry and prose in the Persian-speaking world in modern times. Periods and genres. Content varies. Mastery of Persian is required.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Repeatable to 9 credits if content differs. Topic and language to be announced when offered.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the literature, problems, and methods of philosophy either through a study of some of the main figures in philosophic thought or through an examination of some of the central and recurring problems of philosophy.
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3.00 Credits
The uses of philosophical analysis in thinking clearly about such widely debated moral issues as abortion, euthanasia, homosexuality, pornography, reverse discrimination, the death penalty, business ethics, sexual equality, and economic justice.
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3.00 Credits
Development of analytical reasoning skills through study of formal logics, reasoning systems, and fallacious inference patterns.
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3.00 Credits
Repeatable to 6 credits if content differs. An examination of selected philosophical issues of general interest.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of theoretical perspectives on the arts from Plato to the present, along with critical examination of specific works of art. Analysis of concepts central to thought about art, such as beauty, form, content, expression, representation, interpretation, creation, style, medium, realism, aesthetic experience, and aesthetic value.
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3.00 Credits
Reading and philosophical criticism of fiction, poetry, and drama, dealing with issues of moral, religious, and metaphysical significance.
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3.00 Credits
Also offered as JWST250. Not open to students who have completed JWST250. Credit will be granted for only one of the following: PHIL234 or JWST250. A conceptional introduction to Judaism, analyzing its fundamental concepts from both analytical and historical perspectives. Discussion of "normative" Judaism as well as other conceptions of Judaism. Topics include: God, the Jewish people, authority, ethics, the sacred and the profane, particularism and universalism.
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3.00 Credits
Also offered as JWST251. Not open to students who have completed JWST251 or HEBR298J. Credit will be granted for only one of the following: PHIL235 or JWST251. A broad survey of the concepts of authority, faith, and reason in Jewish tradition from the Bible to the modern period, and their interrelationships.
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