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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Students must have taken at least two philosophy courses. This course studies selected philosophers from the early modern period, such as Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Locke, Hume, Berkeley, Kant. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate philosophical problems and answers representative of the early modern philosophers.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Students must have taken at least two philosophy courses. This course gives intensive consideration to various issues that pertain to being human, such as freedom, determinism, person, society, mind-body, immortality, etc. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate a deeper awareness of philosophical problems and answers regarding key issues of human nature.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Students must have taken at least two philosophy courses. This course studies various philosophical issues regarding the nature of all reality, including existence, causality, relations, abstract entities, purpose, the possibility of knowledge of reality. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate a deeper awareness of philosophical problems and answers regarding key metaphysical issues.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Students must have taken at least two philosophy courses. This course studies classical and contemporary approaches to knowledge of the existence of God, divine attributes, good and evil, providence and human freedom. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate a deeper awareness of philosophical problems and answers regarding philosophical views of God.
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3.00 Credits
Reading and discussion of selected philosophical texts concerning the nature of art and artistic experience. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate philosophical problems and answers to questions regarding the nature of art and artistic experience.
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3.00 Credits
This course is a study of selected works of literature and a discussion of philosophical issues in relation to these works. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate a deeper awareness of philosophical problems and answers to questions regarding the nature of literary work, the relations of philosophical and literary language, and methods of interpretation.
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3.00 Credits
This course is a study of the principal works of Augustine, such as the Confessions, City of God. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate philosophical problems and answers found in the works of Augustine.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Students must have taken at least two philosophy courses. This course is a study of the rights, duties, and virtues of individuals as members of societies, covering issues such as family and state, social justice, international society, war, and globalization. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate a deeper awareness of philosophical problems and answers to questions regarding ethics in social contexts.
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3.00 Credits
Philosophical reflections on being a woman. Topics such as womanhood, representations of women, self-respect, oppression, affirmative action, sexism, and racism. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate a deeper awareness of philosophical problems and answers to questions regarding conceptions of and experience of being a woman.
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3.00 Credits
This course pursues a philosophical analysis of law. It deals with topics such as philosophical presuppositions of law, origin and purpose of law, law as social control, current legal problems involving ethical issues. Outcome: Students will be able to understand and articulate philosophical problems and answers to questions regarding law and its applications.
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