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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Classical Greek philosophy, including pre-Socratics, Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Figures and problems of medieval philosophy. Study of leading thinkers from the 5th to the 15th centuries.
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Figures and problems of modern philosophy. Study of philosophers such as Descartes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, Kant, and Hegel. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Examines some moral problems that arise with regard to the responsibilities of various segments of the business community, including employers, management, stockholders; to one another; to the consumer; and to society at large. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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1.00 Credits
Credits: 1 Working independently or in teams, students participate in evaluation of organizations nominated for National Capitol Business Ethics Award. With no scheduled class meetings but working with the professor, students learn ethical standards and practices for business and how ethics can be incorporated into organizational culture. They gain understanding of ethics codes, leadership skills that develop ethical behavior, and management techniques that support an ethical environment in business. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 0 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: completion or concurrent enrollment in all other general education courses. Examines some major moral issues involved in practice and research in medicine and health care. Topics to be chosen from medical experimentation, defi nition of death, physician assisted dying, genetics and human reproduction, distribution of scarce resources, fertility and organ transplants.
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Investigation of theories of natural law, legal positivism, and legal realism as they pertain to some of the central philosophical questions about law. Prerequisites 3 credits of philosophy, or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Philosophical examination of modern technology in its broadest human context. Several alternative philosophies of technology are considered. Examines the relationships between technology and religion, economics, and politics. Ethical issues raised by the use of technology are also examined. Typically, the course focuses on the ethical issues raised by the use of one kind of technology. Prerequisites 3 credits of philosophy, or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Study of classical appeals to philosophy in support of belief in god's existence (Philo, Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Descartes); the fideism of Hume and the metaphysical agnosticism of Kant; the concept of religious experience in the philosophies of Hegel, Schleiermacher, and Kierkegaard; and the problem of religious language in contemporary empirical philosophy. Prerequisites 3 credits of philosophy, or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Exploration through lecture and discussion of developments in the Western tradition of political thought from the time of the Greek city-state to late medieval Christendom, focusing on such topics as the nature and purpose of politics, the relationship between the individual and the state, the political significance of religion and tradition, and the concept of natural law. Prerequisites GOVT 101, or 3 credits of philosophy. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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