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PHIL 325: (P) Literature and Ethics
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course examines the “old quarrel between philosophy and literature,” the dispute between Plato and Ancient Athenian poets regarding the best and truest source of moral knowledge, and examines the impact of this quarrel on contemporary moral theory and practice.
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PHIL 325 - (P) Literature and Ethics
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PHIL 326: (P,D) Advanced Topics in Feminist Philosophy
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
(Prerequisite: PHIL 218, other Women’s Studies courses, or permission of instructor.)This course will explore a special topic in feminist philosophy. Course may be repeated as topics vary. Possible topics might include: feminist aesthetics, issues of equality, theories of the body. This course is cross-listed with Women’s Studies.
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PHIL 326 - (P,D) Advanced Topics in Feminist Philosophy
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PHIL 327: Readings in the Later Plato
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
A survey and contextualization of the dialogues usually said to be “Later” in Plato’s intellectual development will precede a textually based examination of those dialogues in which Plato’s dialectic turns on the “concept” of difference. Thaetetus, Sophist, and Parmenides will be emphasized.
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PHIL 327 - Readings in the Later Plato
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PHIL 328: (P) Philosophy of Literature
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course examines the nature of literature, and its relation to philosophy and political life. Students will study both classical texts on literature and contemporary Anglo-American examinations and appropriations of them, as well as recent European literary theory.
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PHIL 328 - (P) Philosophy of Literature
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PHIL 329: (P) Advanced Topics in Biomedical Ethics
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
(Prerequisites: PHIL 120 and PHIL 210 and one of the following: PHIL 212, or PHIL 316, or science/allied health major, or permission of instructor)This course will focus narrowly upon an issue (or a set of related issues) in biomedical research which generates significant moral concern. Topics will vary, but may include embryo-destructive research; cloning and donor siblings; genetic testing and eugenics; genetic enhancement; and the production of human/non-human chimeras. Typically the course will also consider the nature and purpose of biomedical research and medicine.
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PHIL 329 - (P) Advanced Topics in Biomedical Ethics
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PHIL 331: (P) Feminist Philosophy of Science
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
A feminist critique of both the alleged value-free character of modern science and the positivist philosophy of science supporting this view. The course thus focuses on feminist arguments for the contextual, i.e., social, political and economic, nature of science and the resulting need to rethink such key concepts as objectivity, evidence, and truth in light of androcentrism and gender bias. Consideration is also given to critical responses from feminist and nonfeminist defenders of more traditional accounts of science.
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PHIL 331 - (P) Feminist Philosophy of Science
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PHIL 333: (P) The Seven Deadly Sins
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
A conceptual and moral-psychological analysis of pride, envy, greed, anger, lust, gluttony and sloth. The works of such philosophers from the history of philosophy as Aristotle, Aquinas, and Spinoza will be considered as well as contemporary thinkers in philosophy, theology, psychology, and sociology.
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PHIL 333 - (P) The Seven Deadly Sins
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PHIL 335: (P, W) Philosophy of Interpretation
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course explores twentieth century theory of interpretation or hermeneutics. It deals with the interpretation of texts and with methods of understanding that allow for the emergence of meaning. It examines the philosophies of such thinkers as Heidegger, Gadamer, Derrida, Ricoeur, and Kearney.
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PHIL 335 - (P, W) Philosophy of Interpretation
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PHIL 336: (P) Religion After God
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course considers the question of the possibility of religious experience and the idea of God as it is explored in contemporary phenomenology and hermeneutics, in the wake of the “death of God” and the “demise of metaphysics.” It studies the thought of such thinkers as Ricoeur, Heidegger, Levinas, Marion, Chretien, and Henry.
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PHIL 336 - (P) Religion After God
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PHIL 339: (P) Philosophy of the Person
3.00 Credits
University of Scranton
This course will investigate the nature of the person and conditions for personhood. Such concepts as human being, soul, self, ego, consciousness, substance, mind, rationality, intentionality, sentience and reciprocity will be examined. Questions about self-same personal identity, divine personhood and the personhood of animals will be addressed.
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PHIL 339 - (P) Philosophy of the Person
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