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PHIL 424: Existentialism
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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The movement from Kierkegaard to the present.
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PHIL 425: Phenomenology
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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Some proponents of phenomenological philosophy stemming from Husserl.
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PHIL 426: Existential Psychology
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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A study of important existentialist philosophers and their influence upon psychology and psychologists.
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PHIL 427: Analytic Philosophy
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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A survey of 20th century Anglo-American philosophy.
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PHIL 428: Philosophical Hermeneutics
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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Allied with phenomenology, philosophical hermeneutics struggles not only with interpreting patterns of meaning in classical philosophical texts, but also with interpreting patterns of meaning in human existence, based on the model of the text.
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PHIL 429: African Philosophy
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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This course provides an introduction to African philosophy. The course is divided into three parts. Part I will focus on recent debates about the nature and scope of African Philosophy. Issues to be examined here include: 1) philosophy and colonialism; 2) the significance of traditional African beliefs for contemporary philosophical practice; 3) individual thinkers and communal wisdom; and (4) writing, versus speech as vehicles for philosophical expression. In Parts II and III we turn more explicitly to philosophical issues concerning (5) science, technology, and modernization in Africa; and (6) African moral and political theory.
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PHIL 430: Metaphysics
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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A systematic ordering and development of the perennial questions concerning being and existence; unity, diversity, truth, value, causality, and transcendence; the existence and nature of God.
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PHIL 432: Philosophy of Education
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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Representative thought regarding educational agents, aims, and curricula.
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PHIL 433: Philosophy of Psychology
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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Systematic philosophical investigation of primary psychological phenomena such as the emotions, intentions, explanations of actions, motivational systems, the nature of self-deception, weakness of will, and the nature of the self. Consideration will be given to general theories of psycho-pathology and to various major psychological schools of thought.
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PHIL 434: Chinese Philosophy
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3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
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A survey of the history of Chinese philosophy focusing on the Confucian tradition and taking other traditions such as Taoism and Buddhism into account.
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