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PHIL 218: (P,D) Feminism: Theory and Practice
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
What is feminism? What is the relationship between feminist theory and practice? This course focuses on these and related philosophical questions. Special attention will be paid to the interrelationship of gender, class and race. This course also fulfills a requirement in the Women’s Studies Concentration.
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PHIL 220: (P) Ancient Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
The Pre-Socratics, Plato, Aristotle and their immediate successors. Special emphasis on the theory of knowledge, the metaphysics and philosophical anthropology of Plato and Aristotle.
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PHIL 220 - (P) Ancient Philosophy
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PHIL 221: (P) Medieval Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
A survey of philosophy in the European Middle Ages, including the connections between medieval philosophy and its classical and Christian sources; questions concerning nature/grace, reason/faith, theology/philosophy, and the nature and ethos of scholasticism.
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PHIL 221 - (P) Medieval Philosophy
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PHIL 222: (P) Modern Philosophy I
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
Machiavelli and the break with the Ancients. Modern political thought and social contract. Hobbes with an appeal to the passions. Locke and theoretician of capitalism. Rousseau and the crisis of modern political thought. Foundations of modern epistemology. Descartes and the search for absolute certainty. Hume and empiricism.
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PHIL 222 - (P) Modern Philosophy I
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PHIL 223: (P) Modern Philosophy II
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
The development of idealism in the thought of Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel, with its influence on Feuerbach, Marx, Engels, and Kierkegaard. Special consideration of dialectical thinking in its resolution of the antitheses of reality and appearance, freedom and necessity, infinite and finite, and faith and knowledge.
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PHIL 223 - (P) Modern Philosophy II
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PHIL 224: (P) Foundations of Twentieth-Century Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
A study of some of the key figures that have set the tone for the 20th-century philosophy. Buber, Marx, Kierkegaard, Hume and Russell are studied in detail.
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PHIL 224 - (P) Foundations of Twentieth-Century Philosophy
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PHIL 225: (P,D) Asian Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course will introduce students to the various systems of Asian philosophy including Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism and Shinto with special emphasis on the metaphysics, ethics and political philosophy of these systems.
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PHIL 225 - (P,D) Asian Philosophy
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PHIL 226: (P,D) Chinese Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
An introduction to the classical Chinese understanding. The course examines Daoist teachings and vision, the thought of Confucius and Buddhism.
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PHIL 226 - (P,D) Chinese Philosophy
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PHIL 227: (P) Political Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
Philosophical and ethical analysis of the social nature of man with emphasis on modern social questions. Ethics of the family, of nation and of communities. International ethics.
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PHIL 227 - (P) Political Philosophy
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PHIL 229: (P,D) Philosophy of Religion
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
An investigation of the main topics in philosophers’ reflections on religion: arguments for the existence of God; meaningful statements about God; assessment of religious experience; notions of miracle, revelation, and immortality; the problem of evil; relations between religious faith and reason; religion and ethics. Readings from classical and contemporary authors.
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PHIL 229 - (P,D) Philosophy of Religion
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