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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Surveys theoretical positions on the nature of law, with particular emphasis on American law. Cross-listed with PHIL 4260.
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3.00 Credits
Consideration of the problems in the philosophy of mind, such as the mind-body problem, the problem of our knowledge of other minds, the compatibility of free will and determinism, and discussion of such concepts as action, intention, motive, desire, enjoyment, memory, imagination, dreaming and self-knowledge. Cross-listed with PHIL 4300.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces students to basic issues in American jurisprudence as well as to the elements and dynamics of the modern American legal system. Cross-listed with PHIL 4360.
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3.00 Credits
Asks the questions: What is the nature of the human being? What makes us “human?” Do humans have a “soul?” What is its nature? Is it different from the “spirit?” What is its ultimate fate? Examines the various theories put forward by philosophers of both Eastern and Western traditions. Cross-listed with PHIL 4470 and RLST 4440, 5440.
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3.00 Credits
Traces the influences of philosophy, psychology, and art in the English, French, and German-speaking worlds in the early twentieth century. This intellectual history is extended to broader cultural and political contexts. Key period is between 1910 and 1968, when modernity’s key aspirations and tensions became explicit. Cross-listed with HUMN 5550 and SSCI 5550.
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3.00 Credits
Nature of religion and methods of studying it. Cross-listed with HUMN 5600, PHIL 4600, RLST 4060, 5060, and SSCI 5600.
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3.00 Credits
Explores modernity as a historical epoch and a theoretical space, looking at the commentaries and reflections of influential 20th century thinkers including Adorno, Arendt, Levinas, Merleau-Ponty, Habermas and Foucault. Examines how the theoretical inclinations of modernity were influenced by politics, art, literature and culture. Cross-listed with HUMN 5650 and SSCI 5650.
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3.00 Credits
God, gods, and goddesses have been imagined in many different modes, forms, aspects, and guises throughout human history. This course investigates Paleolithic models of God, the Great Goddess of the Neolithic era, the gods of mythological traditions, Biblical God, the abstract God of the philosophers, the God of the pantheists, the deists, and the God of the mystics. Cross-listed with PHIL 4650, RLST 4400 and 5400.
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3.00 Credits
Registration is changing. Visit our website for details ucdenver.edu/registration.
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3.00 Credits
Considers the philosophical dimensions of literature. Cross-listed with PHIL 4730, ENGL 4735 and 5735.
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