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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course strengthens reasoning, communication, and argumentation skills in professional, academic, and public contexts. We focus on creating, analyzing, and evaluating arguments (the good, the bad, and the ugly) in a variety of forms: scientific, causal, statistical, analogical, moral, legal, political, and other reasoning methods encountered in our professional, personal, and civic lives. Semester: All
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to moral philosophies focused on our conceptions of, and obligations to, the environment; including topics such as moral extensionism; animal rights and welfare; ecocentrism, deep ecology and ecofeminism; environmental justice, future generations, and sustainability; and more. Application to classic and contemporary environmental issues. Semester(s) taught: Fall and Spring
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3.00 Credits
This course will explicate and evaluate some of the truth-claims made by the major world religions concerning the nature of reality and humanitys relationship to it. It will address such classic topics in Philosophy of Religion as conceived of by the major Western monotheistic traditions (i. e. , Judaism, Christianity, Islam). Semester: All
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
Themes and topics of special interest that vary from semester to semester. Topics may include current event, new and emerging technologies, and other topics not normally taught or covered elsewhere. Repeatable when specific topics vary. Pre-Requisite(s): instructor approval Semester(s): Fall & Spring
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3.00 Credits
Conceptual survey course in introductory physics. For non-science majors. Principles of mechanics, heat, light, sound, electricity, magnetism, and modern physics. Semester: All
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3.00 Credits
Course includes structure, scale, and behavior of the universe and its underlying laws presented in a conceptual format. It shows examples of formation and workings of the sun and planets. Also teaches earth as a planet and as a reference for reckoning of the celestial sphere. Semester: All
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4.00 Credits
For pre-professional, non-science, non-engineering majors. Newton's laws of motion, gravity, work and energy, solid body motion, fluid motion, vibrations and waves, and thermal physics. Prereq: MATH 1050 Recommended Coreq: PHYS 2015 Semesters: All
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1.00 Credits
Graded laboratory may be taken concurrently with PHYS 2010. Semester: All
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4.00 Credits
Prereq: PHYS 2010. Recommended coreq: PHYS 2025. Continuation of PHYS 2010. Laws of electricity and magnetism optics and light, modern atomic theory, nuclear physics and an overview of relativity. Semester: All
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1.00 Credits
Graded laboratory recommended to be taken concurrently with PHYS 2020: College Physics II. Semester: All
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