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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Study of selected great philosophers or basic problems involving imaginative and critical interpretations of experience and reality. 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to the analysis and evaluation of actual arguments, to the practice of constructing logically sound arguments, and to logic as the theory of argument. Emphasizes arguments of current or general interest. 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Introductory study of concrete issues, involving the analysis of evidence, causal explanation, statistical inference, generalization, and probability. Emphasizes issues in such areas as the law, the sciences, economics, and education. 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Includes topics such as validity and soundness in deductive arguments, strength and cogency in inductive arguments, traditional/Aristotelian logic, fallacies, elementary symbolic logic. 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Philosophical study of the language and theories of death, and of cultural attitudes and beliefs, including preparation for death, fear of death, and the possibility of immortality. 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Critical discussion of philosophical psychology and practices leading to self-realization; contemporary neurophysiology and psychology, including concepts of self, mind, psychosomatic health and knowledge (Jnana). 3 credits.
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9.00 Credits
Study of the nature of self, mind, knowledge, truth, logic and related themes characteristic of India, China, Japan, or any other Asian country; any one of these may be taught separately. May be repeated to a maximum of nine credits. 3 credits.
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6.00 Credits
Study of special topics in philosophy or religion taken at the introductory level (e.g., philosophy of atheism, ethics of euthanasia, abortion, etc.). May be repeated to a maximum of six credits. 1-3 credits. College of Liberal Arts 345
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3.00 Credits
Historical and critical introduction to ethics from ancient Greece and Biblical ethics to the present. Includes such topics as conscience and self-betrayal, formation of character, integrity, trust, justice, and corruption. 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Series of currents and thinkers in contemporary philosophy examined in order to explore the concept of human existence and life in the work of Kierkegaard, Dilthey, and Nietzsche. Other philosophers include Jaspers, Heidegger, Sartre, and Ortega Y Gasset. 3 credits.
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