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PHIL 312: (P) Modern Philosophy III
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
A study of 19th-century European philosophers such as Hegel, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard and Marx. We will consider the place of philosophy in history and society, the theme of conflict in life and thought, and the simultaneous spread and decay of humanism in Europe.
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PHIL 313: (P) Philosophy and Friendship
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
An historical survey of primary texts which discuss friendship. Readings in the course include authors of the ancient, medieval, modern and contemporary periods in the history of philosophy. Some of these authors are, Xenophon, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Augustine, de Montaigne, Bacon, Kant, Emerson, Nietzsche, Gray, Arendt and Sartre.
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PHIL 314: (P,D,W) Philosophy and the City
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course explores philosophical issues connected to urban and public policy. Students will analyze the relationship between philosophy and public life and will develop a deeper understanding of their own relation to the city and their roles as citizens.
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PHIL 315: (P) Twentieth-Century Political Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course is a survey of recent social and political theory dealing with issues such as human rights, ethnicity in the nation-state, bio-environmental and security challenges to political sovereignty, and the implications of globalization for technology, the function of media and the role of the market.
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PHIL 315 - (P) Twentieth-Century Political Philosophy
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PHIL 316: (P,W) American Perspectives on Health-Care Ethics
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course will consider basic ethical issues in the practice and distribution of health care in the United States. Topics covered will include the physician-patient relationship, clinical issues such as transplants or end-of-life concerns, the nature of professionalism, just distribution, ethics in health-care institutions, and biomedical research. Recommended for those interested in the health-care professions.
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PHIL 316 - (P,W) American Perspectives on Health-Care Ethics
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PHIL 317: (P) American Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
(Pre-requisite: PHIL 120 and 210)This course surveys currents of philosophy rooted in North America, with emphasis on Transcendentalism, Pragmatism, and Native American Thought. Authors may include Emerson, Pierce, James, Dewey, and Black Elk.
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PHIL 319: (P) Philosophy of Law
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
A study of the various justifications of law and their implications. Special consideration will be given to the problems of civil disobedience and the force of law in private institutions.
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PHIL 320: (P) Aesthetics
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
The main theories of the essential character of beauty or art, how they are judged, how they are related to the mind and the whole person, how they are created and how this creativity expresses a commitment to oneself and to the world. (May be used for Art History minor.)
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PHIL 320 - (P) Aesthetics
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PHIL 321: (P) Great Books in Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course consists of a careful examination of an important text in the history of philosophy. Attention will also be paid to the selected text’s historical significance as well as to its relevance to contemporary philosophical debates. The text examined may vary from semester to semester, and may be drawn from such authors as Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Augustine, Aquinas, Hume, Kant, Mill, Kierkegarde, Nietzsche, Moore, Ross, Ayer, Stevenson, Rawls, Smart, Williams, Finnis, Grisez, and MacIntyre. This course may be repeated by students as the text changes from semester to semester.
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PHIL 322J: Philosophy of Conscience
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
Studies the role of conscience in moral judgment and considers its metaphorical and narrative elements. Explores the difference between clarity and community, truth and wisdom, principle and prudence as we study possible links between conscience, reason, eros, imagination and education in some of the works of Plato, Kant and Marx.
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PHIL 322J - Philosophy of Conscience
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