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PHIL 3301: HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
The beginning and the early developments of the western philosophic tradition. Ancient Greek philosophy, basically the Pre-Socratics, Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
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PHIL 3302: HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: ROMAN AND MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
Post-Aristotelians (e.g., the later Stoics, the Epicureans, Neo-Platonists); philosophy of the early Church Fathers through Aquinas and later Scholastics.
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PHIL 3302 - HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: ROMAN AND MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY
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PHIL 3303: HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: RENAISSANCE AND EARLY MODERN EUROPEAN PHILOSOPHY
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
The philosophical views of Galileo, Newton, Bacon, and Hobbes, the Continental Rationalists and British Empiricists, and a brief introduction to the philosophy of Immanuel Kant.
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PHIL 3303 - HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: RENAISSANCE AND EARLY MODERN EUROPEAN PHILOSOPHY
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PHIL 3304: HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY PHILOSOPHY
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
Major philosophers from Kant to the early 20th century.
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PHIL 3304 - HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY PHILOSOPHY
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PHIL 3307: SEMINAR IN RESEARCH METHODS AND PHILOSOPHICAL WRITING
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
Examination of philosophical methodology; philosophical analysis, philosophical writing, discipline-specific bibliographic tools, etc. Students write a series of short papers on topics of interest. Prerequisite: PHIL 2311 and one other PHIL course.
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PHIL 3307 - SEMINAR IN RESEARCH METHODS AND PHILOSOPHICAL WRITING
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PHIL 3316: PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
Problems that engage philosophy of religion (e.g., the existence of God, theodicy, religious language) and the way these problems have been treated by some outstanding Western thinkers.
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PHIL 3316 - PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION
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PHIL 3317: INTERMEDIATE LOGIC
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
Begins with predicate calculus and includes such topics as soundness and completeness theorems, definite descriptions, identity, modal logic, and others. Prerequisite: PHIL 2311.
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PHIL 3318: THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
The method and goals of scientific scholars and inquiry. The distinction between formal and empirical sciences, laws and theories, measurement, the role of observation and experiment, and probability. Formerly listed as 4315. Credit cannot be received for both 4315 and 3318.
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PHIL 3318 - THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
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PHIL 3319: BIOMEDICAL ETHICS
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
Major ethical problems which arise in modern medicine and in medical/biological research (euthanasia, abortion, patient-physician relations, allocations of medical resources, genetic research, etc.).
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PHIL 3320: PHILOSOPHY OF LAW
3.00 Credits
The University of Texas at Arlington
Examination of the institution of law, legal concepts, legal reasoning, and the legal process. Topics may include the nature of law; the moral limits of the criminal law; legal rights; liberty, justice, and equality; punishment; responsibility; the private law (property, contract, and tort); constitutional law; and feminist jurisprudence.
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PHIL 3320 - PHILOSOPHY OF LAW
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