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Professors: Griffith, Whelan
Assistant Professor: Herring (Chairperson)
Part-time Instructor: Chappen
The study of philosophy develops a critical
understanding of the basic concepts and
presuppositions around which we organize
our thought in morality, law, religion,
science, education, the arts and other human
endeavors. A major in philosophy, together with other
appropriate courses, can provide an excellent
preparation for policy-making positions of
many kinds, for graduate study in several
fields, and for careers in education, law, and
the ministry.
The major in philosophy requires eight
courses, including PHIL 223, 224, 225, 440,
and at least three others numbered 300 or
above. PHIL 340 can be counted toward the
major only once except with departmental
approval. With permission of the department,
PHIL 105 and an additional 300-level course may be substituted for PHIL 225. Majors
who demonstrate strong competence on a
departmental logic test may substitute an
additional 300-level course for PHIL 225.
The following courses, when scheduled as
W courses, count toward the writing intensive
requirement: PHIL 216, 217, 218, 219, 301,
332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 340.
Students interested in teacher certification
should refer to the Department of Education
on page 103.
Minors
The Philosophy Department offers four
minors: (1) Philosophy—any four philosophy
courses numbered 220 or above, or any
five philosophy courses that include three
numbered 220 or above. (2) Philosophy and
Law—four courses from PHIL 224, 225, 334,
335, 336, 337, 340, and independent studies.
(3) Philosophy & Science—four courses form
PHIL 223, 225, 333, 340, and independent
studies. (4) Ethics—four courses from PHIL
224, 335, 336, 340, and independent studies;
one of these may be replaced by two from 114, 115, 216, 219. Since topics in PHIL 340
and independent studies vary, these courses
may count toward a minor only if they are
approved by the department. 105
PRINCIPLES OF CRITICAL THINKING
An introduction to the elements of
critical thinking centered on developing the
skills necessary to recognize, describe, and
evaluate arguments. Not open to juniors and
seniors except with consent of instructor.
114
PHILOSOPHY AND PERSONAL CHOICE
An introductory philosophical examination of a number of contemporary moral
issues which call for personal decision. Topics
often investigated include: the "good" life,
obligation to others, sexual ethics, abortion,
suicide and death, violence and pacifism, obedience
to the law, the relevance of personal beliefs to morality. Discussion centers on some of
the suggestions philosophers have made about how to make such decisions.
Not open to juniors and seniors except with consent
of instructor.
115
PHILOSOPHY AND PUBLIC POLICY
An introductory philosophical examination of the moral and conceptual dimensions
of various contemporary public issues, such as the relation of ethics to politics and the
law, the enforcement of morals, the problems of
fair distribution of goods and opportunities, the legitimacy of restricting the use of
natural resources, and the application of ethics to
business practice. Discussion centers on some of the suggestions philosophers have made
about how to deal with these issues. Not open
to juniors and seniors except with consent of instructor.
140
CENTRAL PROBLEMS IN PHILOSOPHY
A study of several central philosophical problems, such as the problem of free will
and determinism, the relationship between mind and
body, the nature and limits of human
knowledge, arguments about the existence of God, and the problem of personal identity.
Not open to juniors and seniors except with consent of instructor.
215
PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN
COMMUNICATION
An introduction to the foundations of communication. Theories of truth and
meaning are illustrated by means of practical
examples, with special attention given to the issue
of objectivity and bias in communication.
216
PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN BUSINESS
A systematic and philosophically informed consideration of some typical moral
problems faced by individuals in a business setting,
and a philosophical examination of some common moral criticisms of the American business system.
217
PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN EDUCATION
An examination of the basic concepts involved in thought about education, and
a consideration of the various methods for justifying educational proposals. Typical
of the issues discussed are: Are education and
indoctrination different? What is a liberal education? Are education and
schooling compatible? What do we need to learn?
Alternate years.
218
PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
A philosophical examination of some important controversies which arise
in connection with the American criminal justice system. Typically included are
controversies about the nature and purpose of
punishment, the proper basis for sentencing, the
correct understanding of criminal responsibility,
and the rationale and extent of our basic human rights with respect to the criminal law.
219
PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES
IN HEALTH CARE
An investigation of some of the philosophical issues which arise in therapy and in
health research and planning. Topics typically include euthanasia, confidentiality,
informed consent, behavior control, experimentation
on humans and animals, abortion, genetic engineering, population control, and
distribution of health care resources.
223
HISTORY OF SCIENCE
AND METAPHYSICS
An historical survey of the attempt to understand the physical universe.
Particular attention is paid to common origins of philosophy and science in the works of
the ancient Greek philosophers, to the question of how scientific and philosophical
thinking differs from mythological and technological
thinking, to the rationalism-empiricism dispute in science and metaphysics, and to
the interaction between philosophy and science in formulating fundamental questions about
the physical universe and in developing and criticizing concepts designed to answer them.
224
HISTORY OF SOCIAL AND
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
An historical survey of the most important social and political philosophers
from Socrates to Marx. Special attention is paid
to the relationship between ethics and politics as seen by Plato and Aristotle and to the
social contract theories of Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau.
225
SYMBOLIC LOGIC
A study of modern symbolic logic and its application to the analysis of arguments.
Included are truth-functional relations, the logic of propositional functions, and
deductive systems. Attention is also given to
various topics in the philosophy of logic. Alternate years.
301
ANCIENT GREEK PHILOSOPHY
A critical examination of the ancient
Greek philosophers, with particular emphasis on Plato and Aristotle.
Prerequisite: Students without previous study in philosophy
must have consent of instructor. Alternate years.
332
PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION
A philosophical examination of religion.
Included are such topics as the nature of religious
discourse, arguments for and against the
existence of God, and the relation between
religion and science. Readings from
classical and contemporary sources. Prerequisite:
Students without previous study in
philosophy must have consent of instructor.
Alternate years.
333
PHILOSOPHY OF NATURAL SCIENCE
A consideration of philosophically important
conceptual problems arising from
reflection about natural science, including
such topics as the nature of scientific laws and
theories, the character of explanation, the
importance of prediction, the existence of
“non-observable” theoretical entities such as
electrons and genes, the problem of justifying
induction, and various puzzles associated with
probability. Prerequisite: Students without
previous study in philosophy must have
consent of instructor. Alternate years.
334
CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY
A close reading of four or five defining
works of contemporary political philosophy,
beginning with the work of John Rawls.
Prerequisite: Students without previous study
in philosophy must have consent of instructor.
Alternate years.
335
ETHICAL THEORY
An inquiry about the grounds for distinguishing morally right from morally
wrong
actions. Central to this course is
critical consideration of important theories, such
as relativism, utilitarianism, and subjectivism,
as well as historically important theorists, such
as Aristotle, Mill, and Kant. Prerequisite: Students without previous study in
philosophy must have consent of instructor.
Alternate years.
336
CONTEMPORARY MORAL PHILOSOPHY
A close reading of four or five centrally
important works of contemporary moral
philosophy. Prerequisite: Students without
previous study in philosophy must have
consent of instructor. Alternate years.
337
PHILOSOPHY OF LAW
An introduction to the philosophy of law
using both classical and contemporary
sources. General theories concerning the
nature of law, as well as philosophical issues
which arise primarily within a legal context,
will be discussed. Prerequisite: Students without previous study in philosophy
must have consent of instructor. Alternate years.
340
SPECIAL TOPICS
Study of selected philosophical problems, texts, writers, or movements. Recent
topics include ethical obligations to animals, lying
and lawbreaking, environmental ethics, research on human subjects, and
artificial intelligence. Students without previous
study in philosophy must have consent of instructor.
With consent of the instructor, this course may be repeated for credit.
440
PHILOSOPHICAL RESEARCH
AND WRITING
In-depth instruction in both the independent and the cooperative aspects of
philosophical research and writing. Each student undertakes an approved research project
and produces a substantial philosophical paper.
Open only to, and required of, senior philosophy majors.
470-479
INTERNSHIP (See index)
N80-N89
INDEPENDENT STUDY (See index)
Recent independent studies in philosophy include Nietzsche, moral education,
Rawls' theory of justice, existentialism,
euthanasia, Plato's ethics, and philosophical aesthetics.
490-491
INDEPENDENT STUDY FOR
DEPARTMENTAL HONORS (See index)
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