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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Independent learning and inquiry in an environment in which students can express knowledge and defend opinions through intensive class discussion, oral presentations, and written expression. May be repeated for credit once if there is no duplication of topic, but students may earn only up to 3 credits in any 115F course per semester of enrollment.
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3.00 Credits
Accounts of life’s meaning. The relations between ways of living, happiness, and the fact of death. The individual’s role in giving meaning to life. Readings from Mill, Tolstoy, Kierkegaard, and several contemporary thinkers.
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3.00 Credits
Accounts of life’s meaning. The relations between ways of living, happiness, and the fact of death. The individual’s role in giving meaning to life. Readings from Mill, Tolstoy, Kierkegaard, and several contemporary thinkers.
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3.00 Credits
A self-contained course designed to convey an understanding of the concepts of modern formal logic, to develop convenient techniques of formal reasoning, and to make some applications of them in one or more of the following: psychology, linguistics, structuralist studies, information and computer sciences, and the foundations of mathematics. Philosophy 102 is not required.
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3.00 Credits
Classical Asian philosophical texts. Historical development of practices and ideas; translation and interpretation issues; comparisons with European and other traditions of thought.
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3.00 Credits
An examination of the major Greek and Roman philosophers with emphasis on the works of Plato and Aristotle.
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3.00 Credits
Comparative study of key figures in Islamic, Jewish, and Christian philosophy as they struggle with the philosophy of logic, metaphysics, language, culture, politics, ethics, and nature.
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3.00 Credits
An examination of the major philosophers of modern Europe from Descartes and Spinoza through Locke, Berkeley, Hume, and Kant.
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3.00 Credits
An examination of selected problems treated in recent philosophical literature such as meaning, perception, knowledge, truth, and freedom. Readings from the Anglo American analytical and the phenomenological traditions.
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3.00 Credits
Nature, sources, and scope of scientific, moral, and religious belief. Justification, knowledge, and skeptical challenges to their legitimacy.
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