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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
P: 12 credit hours of psychology. Origins and development of concepts and theories in science and philosophy that supplied the foundations of experimental psychology; an integrative description of psychological thought to the twentieth century. (Occasionally)
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2.00 Credits
P: PSY P101, PSY P211, PSY K300. Active participation in research. An independent experiment of modest magnitude, participation in ongoing research in a singlelaboratory. Students who enroll in PSY P493 will be expected to enroll in PSY P494. (Occasionally)
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3.00 Credits
P: consent of instructor. May be repeated twice for credit. (Fall, Spring, Summer I, Summer II)
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3.00 Credits
Western religious convictions and their consequences for judgments about personal and social morality, including such issues as sexual morality, medical ethics, questions of socioeconomic organization, and moral judgments about warfare.
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3.00 Credits
Traditional patterns of encounter with the sacred. Secularization of Western culture. Religious elements in contemporary American culture. (Fall, Spring, Summer I and II)
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3.00 Credits
Selected topics and movements in religion seen from an interdisciplinary viewpoint. May be repeated twice under different titles. (Occasionally)
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3.00 Credits
Interpretation of human destiny in contemporary religious and antireligious thought. (Occasionally) ?
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3.00 Credits
Nature of interpersonal relationships, societies, groups, communities, and institutional areas such as the family, industry, and religion; social process operating within those areas; significance for problems of personality, human nature, social disorganization, and social change. (Fall, Spring, Summer I, Summer II)
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3.00 Credits
P: SOC 5161. Major social problems in areas such as the family; religion; economic order; crime; mental disorders; civil rights; racial, ethnic, and international tensions. Relation to structure and values of larger society (Fall, Spring, Summer I, Summer II)
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3.00 Credits
Analysis of courtship, marriage, and its alternatives and the basic issues of human sexuality, with an emphasis on contemporary American society (Fall, Spring, Summer I, Summer II)
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