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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(175) Either semester. Three credits. Theories of ethics, with specific application to ethical issues in modern health care. CA 1.
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4.00 Credits
(121Q-122Q) Either semester. Four credits each semester. Three class periods and one 3-hour laboratory period. Prerequisite: MATH 1060 or 1110 or1120 or passing score on the Calculus Placement Survey or equivalent. PHYS 1201 not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1401, 1501 or 1601. PHYS 1202 not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1402, 1502 or 1602. PHYS 1201 required for PHYS 1202. Basic facts and principles of physics. The laboratory offers fundamental training in precise measurements. CA 3-LAB.
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3.00 Credits
(123) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: PHYS 1202 and MATH 1122 or 1132, both of which may be taken concurrently. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1501 or 1601. Problems, emphasizing applications of calculus, dealing with topics in general physics. Intended for those students who have taken or are taking PHYS 1202 and who desire to have a calculus-based physics sequence equivalent to PHYS 1401-1402.
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3.00 Credits
(127) Second semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: MATH 1120 and 1121, or MATH 1131, or MATH 1151. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1230, 1401, 1402, 1601, 1602, 1501, or 1502. Survey of the principles of physics and their application to the health sciences. Basic concepts of calculus are used. Examples from mechanics, electricity and magnetism, thermodynamics, fluids, waves, and atomic and nuclear physics.
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4.00 Credits
(131Q-132Q) Either semester. Four credits each semester. Three class periods and one 3-hour laboratory period. Recommended preparation for PHYS 1401: MATH 1121 or 1131. Prerequisite for PHYS 1402: PHYS 1401. Recommended preparation for PHYS 1402: MATH 1122 or 1132. PHYS 1401 is not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1501 or 1601. PHYS 1402 not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1502 or 1602. PHYS 1401 may be taken for not more than 2 credits, with the permission of the instructor, by students who have received credits for PHYS 1201. PHYS 1402 may be taken for not more than 2 credits, with the permission of the instructor, by students who have received credit for PHYS 1202. Quantitative study of the basic facts and principles of physics. The laboratory offers fundamental training in physical measurements. Recommended for students planning to apply for admission to medical, dental or veterinary schools and also recommended for science majors for whom a one year introductory physics course is adequate. CA 3-LAB.
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4.00 Credits
(151Q) Either semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 3-hour laboratory period. Recommended preparation: PHYS 1010 or secondary school physics; and CE 2110, as well as either MATH 2110 or 2130 which may be taken concurrently. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1401 or 1601. PHYS 1501 may be taken for not more than 2 credits, with the permission of the instructor, by students who have received credit for PHYS 1201. Basic facts and principles of physics. Elementary concepts of calculus are used. Classical dynamics, rigid-body motion, harmonic motion, wave motion, acoustics, relativistic dynamics, thermodynamics. CA 3-LAB.
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4.00 Credits
(152Q) Either semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 3-hour laboratory period. Prerequisite: PHYS 1501. Not open for credit to students who have passed PHYS 1402 or 1602. PHYS 1502 may be taken for not more than 2 credits, with the permission of the
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3.00 Credits
(170W) (Also offered as HRTS 2170W.) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800; open to sophomores or higher. Philosophical examination of the ethical and human rights implications of recent advances in the life and biomedical sciences from multiple religious and cultural perspectives. CA 1.
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3.00 Credits
(205) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: At least one of PHIL 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107. The fundamentals of aesthetics, including an analysis of aesthetic experience and judgment, and a study of aesthetic types, such as the beautiful, tragic, comic and sublime. Recent systematic and experimental findings in relation to major theories of the aesthetic experience.
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3.00 Credits
(210) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: At least one of PHIL 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107. Topics may include time, personal identity, freewill, the mind-body problem, skepticism, induction, perception, a priori knowledge.
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