Prereq: none
What is Philosophy? This course seeks both to convey a sense of what philosophy has been and to engage the student in a philosophical dialogue concerning perennial and contemporary issues. Among topics dealt with are: freedom, God, knowledge, morality and justice.
Prereq: none
Introduction to a philosophical analysis of the idea of an ethical life: reading and critical discussion of both historical and contemporary sources.
Prereq: none
This is an introduction to a philosophical analysis of the idea of an ethical life: reading and critical discussion of both historical and contemporary sources.
Prereq: none
Reading and critical analysis of the texts of the philosophers of ancient Greece and Rome with an emphasis on Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
Prereq: none
Reading and critical analysis of the major philosophical issues of the middle ages, such as the relation of faith and reason and philosophy to theology, the interpretation of texts, and the conflict between the vita activa and the vita contemplative.
Prereq: none
Study of contemporary issues and methods in Philosophy, including , but not limited to, Phenomenology, Existentialism, Analytic Philosophy.
Prereq: none
This course will examine the concept of culture in the development of the individual, group or class, and of a whole society using works from Indian, Asian, Hopi, European, Slavic and Christian thinkers.
Prereq: none
The goal of this course will be to get clear on the aims, the methods and the good(s) of the sciences. Since it is usually the case that in a science course most of the focus is on the specific phenomena, theories, and experimental methods of the discipline itself, this course will examine the "why and wherefore" of scientific inquiry and progress.