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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Critique of Pure Reason.............................................................. .4 hours A study of Kant's theoretical philosophy, his "metaphysics of experience," through a readinand analysis of his major work. An attempt will be made to discover which portions of Kant's philosophy can be accepted as valid and true in the light of present-day philosophy and science.
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4.00 Credits
Being and Time................................................................. .4 hours This course involves a close and patient reading of one of the most important and difficult works of Continental philosophy. An effort will be made to avoid speaking "heideggerianese"and to translate the dense language of the text into a way of speaking accessible to students.
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4.00 Credits
It has been argued that the most provocative developments in the current development of German philosophy have been the French readings of now classic German writers such as Kant, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Freud and Heidegger, to name a few. Students will attempt to test this thesis by reading some representative and challenging texts. The authors studied may include Bataille, Foucault, Deleuze, Derrida, Althusser, Blanchot and others.
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4.00 Credits
Intensive study of the thought of a single important philosopher or group of philosophers will be covered in this course. Prerequisite: See individual course listing in the current semester class schedule.
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4.00 Credits
Studies of selected philosophical questions usually of special relevance to the present day have included courses such as Philosophy of History, War and Its Justification and Philosophical Issues in Women's Rights; and What Counts As Art? that included a trip to New York City.
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4.00 Credits
An introductory course without calculus. Fundamental aspects of mechanics, fluids, waves, thermal physics, electricity and magnetism, optics and modern physics. The text will be on the level of Cutnell and Johnson, College Physics. Three lectures per week. Prerequisite: MAT 103; PHY 101 must precede PHY 102. Corequisites: PHY 101L and PHY 102L.
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1.00 Credits
Introductory physics laboratories to accompany PHY 101, 102, 201 and 202.
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4.00 Credits
An introductory course without calculus. Fundamental aspects of mechanics, fluids, waves, thermal physics, electricity and magnetism, optics and modern physics. The text will be on the level of Cutnell and Johnson, College Physics. Three lectures per week. Prerequisite: MAT 103; PHY 101 must precede PHY 102. Corequisites: PHY 101L and PHY 102L.
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1.00 Credits
Introductory physics laboratories to accompany PHY 101, 102, 201 and 202.
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5.00 Credits
Introductory physics with calculus. Subject matter is the same as in general physics but on a level more suited to physics majors, engineering majors, etc. One year of calculus as a prerequisite is preferred, otherwise calculus must be taken concurrently. The text will be on the level of Halliday, Resnick and Walker, Fundamentals of Physics. Prerequisite: PHY 201 with a grade of "C-" or higher must precede PHY 202. Corequisites: PHY 101L and PHY102L.
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