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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
2626. Engineering Ethics. An examination of ethical problems in the major fields of engineering and an explanation of the methodology needed to address them; an analysis of the rights and duties of engineers in their relations to clients, employers, the public, and the engineering profession. Prereq.: One 2600-level PHIL course, or PHIL 1560 or ENTC 1505 or ENGR 1550. 3 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
2627. Law and Criminal Justice Ethics. Examination of major theories in philosophy of law and justice, and the study of ethical issues and professional standards in criminal justice practice. Prereq.: Any 2600-level PHIL course or PHIL 1560 or CJFS 2601, CJFS 2602 or CJFS 2603. 3 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
2628. Business Ethics. Examines ethical problems in business, ethical responsibilities of business professional, and business as a global institution. Topics include the corporation, at-will employment, unions, technology, privacy, advertising, whistle-blowing, globalization, environmental impact, human rights, just distribution, affirmative action and cultural diversity. 3 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
2631. Environmental Ethics. Application of ethical theories in evaluating human interaction with the natural environment, analysis of rights and duties regarding other species and future generations, the ethics of environmental activism, and philosophical and religious perspectives on environmental issues. 3 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
2635. Ethics of War and Peace. Examines reasons for making war, for restraint on the conduct of war, and for rejecting war as an instrument of national policy as understood within a variety of moral traditions, both secular and religious. 3 s.h.
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1.00 Credits
2698. Introductory Individual Study in Philosophy. Introductory study of a philosophical problem, movement, thinker, or the relationship of philosophy to problems in other disciplines. Intended to be an independent study course with subject matter dependent upon approval of the faculty member and student. May be repeated up to 3 s.h. 1 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
3702. History of Modern Philosophy. Study of major Western philosophical figures and movements from the Renaissance through the 19th century. Prereq.: One 2600-level PHIL course or PHIL 1560. 3 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
3708. Social and Political Philosophy. A study of the philosophical foundations of democracy, dictatorship, and communism, especially their views of reality, knowledge, human nature, and morality, with attention to rights, duties, freedom, authority, dissent, censorship, crime and punishment, and religion. Prereq.: PHIL 1560. 3 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
3711. General Ethics. Examination and evaluation of the major ethical theories in classical, dialectic, pragmatic and naturalistic, analytic and positivist, and existentialist thought. Prereq.: PHIL 1560. 3 s.h.
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3.00 Credits
3712. Philosophy of Religion. The philosophical investigation of religious questions such as existence and nature of the divine, the problem of evil, death and immortality, religion and science, and religious experience. Cross listed with REL 3712. Prereq.: PHIL 1560 or REL 2601. 3 s.h.
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