- 2000-4000-level courses are open to undergraduates, 4000-5000-level
open to graduate students.
PHIL2003 Introduction to Philosophy An examination
of such basic philosophical topics as the existence of God, the
nature of the human mind, the relationship between appearance and
reality, the forms and limits of human knowledge, freedom of the
will, and standards of right and wrong. Includes both historical
and contemporary readings. UNIVERSITY CORE COURSE
PHIL2103
Introduction to Ethics Basic concepts of moral philosophy,
including historical and contemporary literature concerned with
such issues as ethical relativism vs. objectivism, duty, happiness,
freedom of the will and responsibility, facts and values, individual
liberty and society. Application of theories to substantive questions.
UNIVERSITY CORE COURSE
PHIL2203 Logic Traditional and modern methods
of deductive and inductive inference. Degree credit may not be earned
for both PHIL 1203 and 2203. UNIVERSITY CORE COURSE
PHIL3103 Ethics and the Professions After
a survey of the standard theories of moral obligation, justice,
and rights, the course focuses on specific moral problems that arise
within engineering, business, and the professions. UNIVERSITY CORE
COURSE
PHIL390V
Readings (1-6)
PHIL3923H Honors Colloquium Treats a special topic of issue offered
as part of the honors program. May be repeated. Prerequisite: honors
candidacy (not restricted to candidacy in philosophy).
PHIL399VH
Honors Course (1-6) May be repeated for 12 hours. Prerequisite:
junior standing.
PHIL4003
Ancient Greek Philosophy Pre-Socratics, Socrates, Plato,
and Aristotle. Prerequisite: 3 hours of philosophy.
PHIL4013
Platonism & Origin of Christian Theology The study of Plato,
gnosticism, Middle and Neoplatonism, including Philo, Plotinus,
and Procius, and the influence of Platonism on the Greek church
fathers of the 2nd-5th centuries, principally Irenaeus, Origen,
Athanasius, and Gregory of Nyssa, as well as Psuedo-Dionysius. Prerequisite:
3 hours of philosophy.
PHIL4023 Medieval Philosophy Includes Augustine,
Bonventure, Aquinas, Scotus, and Ockham.
PHIL4033 Modern Philosophy-17th and 18th Centuries
British and Continental philosophy, including Bacon, Descartes,
Spinoza, Liebniz, Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, and Kant.
PHIL4043
Nineteenth Century Continental Philosophy Study of major
Continental European philosophers of the 19th century including
Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche. Emphasis on the
nature of persons, the question of freedom, and the importance of
self-expression, as well as views on knowledge, reality, and the
nature of philosophy.
PHIL4063
Twentieth Century Continental Philosophy Study of major
figures (e.g. Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre, Foucault, Derrida) and
trends (phenomenology, existentialism, hermeneutics, critical theory,
deconstruction) in 20th century French and German thought. Topics
include human beings and their place in the world, the role of history
and culture, and the possibility of critical reflection.
PHIL4073
History of Analytic Philosophy From Frege to recent figures,
including Russell, Moore, Wittgenstein, Schlick, Carnep, Ayer, Ryle,
Strawson, Quine, including a representative sample of works on the
logical analysis of language, logical positivism, and ordinary language
analysis. Prerequisite: 3 hours of philosophy.
PHIL4083
Existentialism Readings in major figures associated with
"Existentialism" (e.g. Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Sartre,
Merleau-Ponty). Emphasis on connections between the metaphysical
views of these thinkers, their views of freedom, their conceptions
of modernity, and their responses to it.
PHIL4113
Social and Political Philosophy Selected philosophical theories
of society, the state, social justice, and their connections with
individuals.
PHIL4123 Classical Ethical Theory Study
of classical texts in the history of philosophical ethics from Plato
to Nietzsche. Philosophers covered may include Plato, Aristotle,
Butler, Hume, Kant, and Mill. Prerequisite: 3 hours of philosophy.
PHIL4133 Contemporary Ethical Theory A study
of contemporary texts in philosophical ethics from G.E. Moore to
the present. Philosophers covered may include Moore, Stevenson,
Hare, Foot, and Rawls. Prerequisite: 3 hours of philosophy.
PHIL4143
Philosophy of Law A philosophical consideration of the nature
of law, theory of adjudication, concepts of legal responsibility,
liberty and the limits of law, and selected moral-legal issues (abortion,
affirmative action, punishment, etc.).
PHIL4203
Theory of Knowledge An examination of skepticism, the nature
and structures of knowledge and epistemic justification, human rationality,
and the justification of religious belief. Prerequisite: 3 hours
of philosophy.
PHIL4213
Philosophy of Science
Examination of issues related to scientific explanation,
empirical foundations of science, observation and objectivity, nature
of laws and theories, realism and instrumentalism, induction and
confirmation, models, causation, and simplicity, beginning with
historical survey set in the context of the history of science but
emphasizing works from the 1930s to the current period, often including
issues in recent physics.
PHIL4233
Philosophy of Language A survey of mainstream philosophical
theories of meaning, reference, truth, and logical form. Attention
given to the views of such figures as Frege, Russell, Tarski, Searie,
Dumett, and the advocates of possible worlds semantics.
PHIL4253
Symbolic Logic I Rigorous analyses of the concepts of proof,
consistency, equivalence, validity, implication, and truth. Full
coverage of truth-functional logic and quantification theory (predicate
calculus). Discussion of the nature and limits of mechanical procedures
(algorithms) for proving theorems in logic and mathematics. Informal
accounts of the basic facts about infinite sets. (Same as MATH 4253)
PHIL4263
Symbolic Logic II Topics include: soundness and completeness
of propositional logic, soundness and completeness of quantification
theory, the elements of model theory and recursion theory, G]odel's
incompleteness theorems, and the limitative theorems of Tarski and
Church. (Same as MATH 4263) Prerequisite: PHIL 4253 or MATH 4253.
PHIL4303 Philosophy of Religion Types of
religious belief and critical examination of their possible validity,
including traditional arguments and contemporary questions of meaning.
PHIL4403
Philosophy of Art Varieties of truth and value in the arts
and aesthetic experience, focusing on the creative process in the
art and in other human activities.
PHIL4423 Philosophy of Mind An examination
of such topics such as the relationship between mind and body, the
mentality of machines, knowledge of other minds, the nature of psychological
explanation, the relationship between psychology and the other sciences,
mental representation, the nature of the self, and free will and
determinism.
PHIL4603
Metaphysics Theory and critical analysis of such basic metaphysical
problems as mind and body, universals and particulars, space and
time, determinism and free will, self-identity and individualism,
with emphasis on contemporary perspectives. Prerequisite: 3 hours
of philosophy.
PHIL5763
Seminar: Aquinas
PHIL5843 Seminar: Hume
PHIL5883
Seminar: Wittgenstein
PHIL5893
Seminar: Heidegger
PHIL5903
Seminar: Social & Political Philosophy
PHIL5913 Seminar: Ethical Theory
PHIL5933
Seminar: Philosophical Theology
PHIL5953
Seminar: Philosophy of Language
PHIL5963
Seminar: Philosophy of Mind
PHIL5973
Seminar: Metaphysics
PHIL5983
Philosophical Seminar Various topics and issues in historical
and contemporary philosophy.
PHIL600V
Master's Thesis (1-6)
PHIL690V
Graduate Readings (1-6) Supervised individual readings in
historical and contemporary philosophy.
PHIL700V
Doctoral Dissertation (1-18) Prerequisite: candidacy.
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