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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Selected problems and issues in the philosophy of religion. Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
Analysis of the nature, sources, and consequences of the oppression and exploitation of women and justification of strategies for liberation. Topics include women's nature and human nature, sexism, femininity, sexuality, reproduction, mothering. Prerequisite: At least one previous course in philosophy or women's studies. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
Themes in the natural, life and social sciences. May be repeated for credit as topic varies. Prerequisite: PHIL 128 or consent of the department chair. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
This seminar course will involve in-depth focus upon a major ancient thinker (e.g. Plato, Aristotle, Sextus Empiricus, Plotinus, etc.) or the classical treatment of a particular theme (e.g. "human nature," "the good life,ethical or political theory, etc.). Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
This seminar course will involve an in-depth focus upon a major movement in Hellenistic Philosophy (roughly 4th century B.C.E. to the 2nd Century C.E.) such as Epicureanism, Stoicism, Ancient Scepticism, or Neoplatonism, or the Hellenistic treatment of a particular theme (e.g. freedom from anxiety, the nature of the Cosmos and our place within it, or human nature). Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. Mendelson (HU)
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4.00 Credits
This seminar course will involve in-depth focus upon a major medieval thinker (e.g. Augustine, Boethius, Maimonides, Bonaventure, Dante, etc.) or the medieval treatment of a particular theme (e.g. the relation of "will" and "intellect," the "problem of universals," ethor political theory, etc.). Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
This seminar course will involve in-depth focus upon a major 17th or 18th century thinker (e.g. Descartes, Leibniz, Berkeley, Kant, etc.) or the modern treatment of a particular theme (e.g. the nature of "ideas," the roles ofexperience, reason, and revelation, ethical or political theory, etc.). Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
This seminar course will involve in-depth focus upon a major 19th century thinker (e.g. Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, Mill, Peirce, Frege, Nietzsche, James, etc.) or the 19th century treatment of a particular theme (e.g. the end of history, revolution, nihilism, authenticity, origins of mathematical logic, infinity, etc.). Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
This seminar course will involve in-depth focus upon a major contemporary thinker (e.g. Russell, Whitehead, Husserl, Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Quine, Habermas, Rawls, Rorty, Derrida, Davidson, Foucault, Deleuze, Irigaray, etc.) or the contemporary treatment of a particular theme (e.g. logical positivism, naturalism, non-foundationalism, existential phenomenology, return to virtue, neo-pragmatism, hermeneutics, post-structuralism, post-modernism, neo-kantian political theory, the politics of identity, etc.). Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. (HU)
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4.00 Credits
This seminar course will involve in-depth focus upon a major figure in Eastern thought or upon the Eastern treatment of a particular theme or set of themes. Content varies. May be repeated more than once for credit. (HU)
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