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Music 96: Philosophy of Music
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits Critical examination of philosophical issues pertaining to music. Consideration of such issues as the definition or concept of music, the ontology of music, musical meaning and understanding, musical expressiveness and arousal, musical representation, musical performance and authenticity of performance, the power and value of music, and the aesthetics of jazz, rock, and popular music. Classical and contemporary philosophers. (This course is the same as Philosophy 22.3.) Prerequisite: one course in philosophy or Core Studies 10 or one course in music, or permission of the chairperson of the offering department.
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Music 96 - Philosophy of Music
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Philosophy 1.1: Introduction to the Problems of Philosophy
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits Survey of basic philosophical problems and different solutions proposed by philosophers. Such topics as the nature and scope of knowledge, meaning and verification, the existence of God, determinism and free will, the mind-body problem, and the nature of moral judgments. (Not open to students who are enrolled in or have completed Philosophy 1.2 or 2 or Core Studies 10.)
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Philosophy 1.1 - Introduction to the Problems of Philosophy
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Philosophy 10: Reasoning
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits Examination and development of reasoning skills. Informal logic. Topics such as meaning, definition, the analysis of arguments, fallacies. Use of examples in reasoning to apply principles studied. Legal reasoning, support for claims about public policy, scientific and philosophical arguments.
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Philosophy 10 - Reasoning
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Philosophy 10.5: Reasoning and Rationality
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits Theoretical investigation of reasoning and rationality. Advanced treatment of some topics in logic and critical thinking, including missing premises, the principle of charity, pragmatics, fallacies, contrasts between inductive and deductive logic, and scientific reasoning. Study of logics-modal, epistemic, paraconsistent-besides classical. Puzzles in social choice reasoning-Prisoner's Dilemma. Study of a relevant historicalwork or author such as Aristotle's writings on logic and rhetoric. Debates in cognitive science on rationality, rules in reasoning, or change of belief.
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Philosophy 10.5 - Reasoning and Rationality
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Philosophy 10W: Reasoning
4.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
4 hours; 3 credits Examination and development of reasoning skills. Informal logic. Topics such as meaning, definition, the analysis of arguments, fallacies. Use of examples in reasoning to apply principles studied. Legal reasoning, support for claims about public policy, scientific and philosophical arguments. Writingintensive section. Prerequisite: English 2.
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Philosophy 10W - Reasoning
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Philosophy 11.1: Ancient Philosophy
4.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
4 hours; 4 credits Development of metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics in ancient thought. Influence on medieval and modern thought. Emphasis on Plato and Aristotle. (Not open to students who have completed Philosophy 11.)
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Philosophy 11.1 - Ancient Philosophy
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Philosophy 11.2: Medieval Philosophy
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits The development of epistemology, metaphysics, and ethics in medieval thought. Free choice of the will; the existence and properties of God; the nature of truth and human knowledge; the problem of universals. Jewish, Arabic, and Christian thought. Such medieval philosophers as Augustine, Abelard, Anselm, Maimonides, Aquinas, Scotus, Ockham. (Not open to students who have completed Philosophy 41.)
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Philosophy 11.2 - Medieval Philosophy
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Philosophy 11.3: Hellenistic and Roman Philosophy
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits The development of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, natural philosophy, and logic in Hellenistic and Roman philosophy. Critical examination of such movements as Epicureanism, Stoicism, Skepticism, and of such philosophers as Cicero, Lucretius, Seneca, Philo Judaeus, Plotinus.
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Philosophy 11.3 - Hellenistic and Roman Philosophy
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Philosophy 11.4: Renaissance Philosophy
3.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
3 hours; 3 credits The development of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, and logic in Renaissance philosophy. Critical examination of Renaissance Humanism, Platonism, Aristotelianism, Skepticism. Such thinkers as Ficino, Pico della Mirandola, Bruno, Bacon, Galileo, Montaigne, Machiavelli.
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Philosophy 11.4 - Renaissance Philosophy
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Philosophy 12.1: Modern Philosophy
4.00 Credits
CUNY Brooklyn College
4 hours; 4 credits Development of metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics since the Renaissance. Emphasis on Descartes, Spinoza, Locke, Leibniz, Berkeley, Hume, and Kant. (Not open to students who have completed Philosophy 12.)
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Philosophy 12.1 - Modern Philosophy
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