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PHIL 214: Biomedical Ethics
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. A study of ethical problems that arise in the context of medicine and the life sciences. The course will cover such topics as informed consent, paternalism, assisted suicide, abortion, genetic engineering and the allocation of scarce resources.
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PHIL 214 - Biomedical Ethics
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PHIL 215: Environmental Ethics
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. This course studies the ethical dimensions of the environmental impact of human activities such as development and the disposal of industrial wastes. It also will explore the ethical responsibilities of environmental scientists themselves.
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PHIL 215 - Environmental Ethics
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PHIL 221: Philosophy of Art
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. A study of both historical and contemporary philosophical theories about art, beauty, the criteria of aesthetic judgment. The course also will examine attempts to describe the nature of the creative process. Examples will be drawn from a variety of art forms.
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PHIL 221 - Philosophy of Art
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PHIL 222: Philosophy of Religion
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. A study of historical and/or contemporary philosophical theories regarding such topics as the existence and nature of God, the nature of our knowledge of God, and the relationship between faith and reason.
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PHIL 222 - Philosophy of Religion
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PHIL 230: Symbolic Logic
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. A study of modern formal logic, including both sentential logic and predictive logic. This course will improve students' abilities to reason effectively. Includes a review of topics such as proof, validity, and the structure of deductive reasoning.
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PHIL 230 - Symbolic Logic
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PHIL 301: Ancient Philosophy
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: PHIL 101 or permission of instructor. A study of the origin of philosophical and scientific thought in the Western world, including the pre-Socratic philosophers, Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.
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PHIL 301 - Ancient Philosophy
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PHIL 303: Modern Philosophy
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: PHIL 101 or permission of instructor. A study of the central philosophical ideas that underlie the emergence of modern scientific thinking in the 17th and 18th centuries. This course will cover figures such as Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Hume and Kant.
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PHIL 303 - Modern Philosophy
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PHIL 305: Philosophy of Religion
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: PHIL 101 or permission of instructor. A study of historical and/or contemporary philosophical theories regarding such topics as the existence and nature of God, the nature of our knowledge of God and the relationship between faith and reason.
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PHIL 305 - Philosophy of Religion
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PHIL 311: Political Philosophy
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: PHIL 101 or permission of instructor. A study of the principal philosophical theories about the nature of political life. This course will address topics such as the concept of natural right, social contract theory, liberalism, communitarianism and the theories of distributive justice. Figures to be studied may include Plato, Aristotle, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hegel, Marx and Rawls.
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PHIL 311 - Political Philosophy
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PHIL 331: Existentialism
3.00 Credits
Jacksonville University
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: PHIL 101 or permission of instructor. A study of the major themes and concerns of contemporary existentialist thinkers such as Kierkegaard, Nietzsche and Sarte.
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PHIL 331 - Existentialism
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