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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
No course description available.
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
No course description available.
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
No course description available.
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
No course description available.
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2.00 Credits
A study of pharmaceutics used in surgery; emphasis placed on pre-anesthetic and post-anesthetic medications. Knowledge will be gained in pharmacological math, modes of administration, pharmacologic action, toxic levels and safe effects of different pharmaceutics. (Usually offered Spring semester.) Restricted to Surgical Technology students.
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3.00 Credits
A survey course designed to meet the needs of health professionals or other interested student who wishes to gain an understanding of the principles of pharmacology. Major topics will include: Legal regulations, prescriptions, calculations, interactions and uses of drugs and chemotherapeutic agents for anti infective therapy and cancer treatment, as well as toxicology. (Usually offered Fall and Spring semesters). Prerequisite: BIO 213 or permission of the Instructor.
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
This course will be an introduction to the experience of how one¿s thought, speech and action shapes the world we live in. It will show how philosophy is an experience of self-transformation in which we become free, empowered and capable of self-healing and self-creation. The philosophies of PLATO and Nietzsche are the focal points. Prerequisites: AAC 042 and ENG 099 or waiver through testing. Meets SUNY General Education requirement for Humanities (H)
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3.00 Credits
This course will raise the issue of the nature of ethics, morality and purposeful existence in relation to the nature of happiness and self satisfaction. We will read about and examine several of the great thinkers from Plato to Nietzsch. The questions of social responsibility and moral obligation will be raised. The issues of legal and social force, emotion and reason will be raised as they relate to moral problems. We will cover topics such as the nature of desire, duty, pleasure, pain, self respect, self esteem, personal interests, holiness, sinfulness, conscience and happiness. (Usually offered Spring semester.) Prerequisites: AAC 042 and ENG 099 or waiver through testing. Meets SUNY General Education requirement for Humanities (H)
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3.00 Credits
This course will explore the political relationship between what it means to be a free individual, a member of a community, and a citizen of a Federal state. In the enquiry we will define how these political relationships shape our understanding of crucial issues concerning the environment, culture, and social power. The philosophical context of the course will grow out of readings about fundamental political ideas that shape thought and action in contemporary politics. We will examine the ideas that have shpaed the Liberal-democratic state as we know it today and contrast them with the more radical and marginal ideas of communitarians, populists, tradionalists, the religious right, and single-issue political groups. Case studies of environment, culture, and the state will serve as the practical framework against which the basic ideas of political philosophy will be examined and critized. (Usually offered Spring semester.) Prerequisites: AAC 042 and ENG 099 or waiver through testing.
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