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Music 491 ,492: Senior Seminar in Composition
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
Advanced independent study culminating in the creation of a substantial composition. The course must be taken as a fall-spring pair of half-credit courses. Open to seniors majoring in music. Prerequisite: 245, 246, 255 and permission of the department chair.
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Music 491 ,492 - Senior Seminar in Composition
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Music 493 ,494: Senior Seminar in Analytical Theory
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
Advanced independent study in musical analysis culminating in the creation of a major analytical essay. Open to seniors majoring in music. Prerequisite: 245, 246, the relevant 300-level seminar, and permission of the department chair.
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Music 493 ,494 - Senior Seminar in Analytical Theory
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Music 495 ,496: Senior Seminar
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
Advanced independent study in music history culminating in a major research paper. Open to seniors majoring in music. Prerequisite: two courses from 351-354 and permission of the department chair.
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Music 495 ,496 - Senior Seminar
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Philosophy 111: Introduction to Philosophy
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
An introduction to Western philosophy through an examination of problems arising in primary sources. How major philosophers in the tradition have treated such questions as the scope of human reason, the assumptions of scientific method, the nature of moral action, or the connections between faith and reason.
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Philosophy 112: Ethics
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
Major theories in terms of which philosophers have tried to make sense of moral problems. The aims are to expand the student's understanding of ethical alternatives, to provide models and methods for thinking about moral dilemmas, and to help formulate and clarify one's own ethical position.
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Philosophy 112 - Ethics
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Philosophy 113: Introductory Topics in Philosophy
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
Introduction to philosophy through the exploration of a specific topic or problem.
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Philosophy 120: Critical Reasoning
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
The study and practice of forms and methods of argumentation in English. Students will learn methods of identifying, evaluating, and formulating sound arguments and will learn to distinguish these from faulty reasoning that may nonetheless appear persuasive.
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Philosophy 121: Introductory Symbolic Logic
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
An introduction to the basic concepts and techniques of symbolic logic through the study of sentential logic and quantificational logic. Focus on symbolizing sentences and arguments, constructing formal proofs of validity, demonstrating validity and invalidity using semantic techniques.
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Philosophy 210: Philosophy of Feminism
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
Critical examination of key issues concerning the status and roles of women and of the developing theories which describe and explain gender-related phenomena and prescribe change for the future. Prerequisite: WOST 200, one course in philosophy or permission of instructor. This course is cross-listed as WOST 210.
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Philosophy 215: Existentialism
3.00 Credits
Dickinson College
A study of existentialist thinkers, including Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre, de Beauvoir, and Camus, who treat the human condition as irreducibly individual and yet philosophically communicable, and for whom the experience of the existing individual is of primary importance in issues ranging from one?s relationship to God to the inevitability of death. Prerequisite: one course in philosophy or permission of instructor. Offered every two years.
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