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Philosophy 236: Aesthetics
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
The branch of philosophy that concerns itself with beauty and art. Examines the main historical and contemporary theories of art and the aesthetic experience. Special emphasis on the nature of aesthetic value, the limits of aesthetic theory and the contributions of aesthetic inquiry to other philosophical fields. (John Partridge) Connections: Conx 20009 Performing into Theory
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Philosophy 236 - Aesthetics
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Philosophy 241: Bio-Ethics
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
A consideration of ethical issues raised by biotechnologies. Possible topics include: laboratory-assisted reproduction and human cloning, enhancement of human traits, designing future children and stem cell research. (M. Teresa Celada)
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Philosophy 241 - Bio-Ethics
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Philosophy 242: Medical Ethics
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
A consideration of current ethical controversies in medicine. Topics will be drawn from life and death issues, resource allocation, experimentation with human subjects and ethical issues in the practice of health care. (M. Teresa Celada)
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Philosophy 242 - Medical Ethics
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Philosophy 245: Philosophy of Science
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
An examination of modern views about the nature of science. One emphasis is on epistemological issues: scientific knowledge and its distinctiveness, observational evidence and theory construction, and scientific method. A second emphasis concerns issues about science, values and democratic society. (M. Teresa Celada)
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Philosophy 245 - Philosophy of Science
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Philosophy 255: Feminism,Philosophy and the Law
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
An examination of issues in law and philosophy posed by feminist theory, including how society views women and their roles, and how that view affects the legal and societal status of women. (Stephen Mathis)
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Philosophy 255 - Feminism,Philosophy and the Law
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Philosophy 260: How Judges Reason
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
A consideration of fundamental issues in the conception and practice of law in the United States. Emphasis on the analysis of forms of legal reasoning; designed to provide students with a basic understanding of the judicial process. (Stephen Mathis)
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Philosophy 260 - How Judges Reason
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Philosophy 265: Philosophy of Law
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
A survey of key issues in legal philosophy and legal theory, such as the nature of law, the role of the ethical in the law and punishment theory. Materials will draw on the social sciences as well as philosophy to develop a framework for study of legal institutions across cultures. (Stephen Mathis)
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Philosophy 265 - Philosophy of Law
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Philosophy 311: Ethical Theory
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
An in-depth examination of theories in normative ethics and meta-ethics. Topics drawn from consequentialist and non-consequentialist theories, moral prohibitions, moral rights, autonomy, naturalism, cognitivism and non-cognitivism and practical reason. (M. Teresa Celada)
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Philosophy 311 - Ethical Theory
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Philosophy 321: Contemporary Social and Political Philosophy
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
A critical examination of recent theories of a just society, including the work of Nozick, Rawls, Habermas, Young and Benhabib. Offered in alternate years. (Stephen Mathis)
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Philosophy 321 - Contemporary Social and Political Philosophy
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Philosophy 325: Metaphysics
3.00 Credits
Wheaton College - Massachusetts
An investigation of philosophical problems involving space and time, causation, agency, contingency and necessity, and the distinction between mind and matter. (Nancy Kendrick)
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Philosophy 325 - Metaphysics
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