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Catalog Year 2026-2027

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PhilosophyCredits

Topics in normative, meta-ethical and applied ethical theory.

Prerequisites:
Select one course: PHIL 120W, PHIL 222W, PHIL 224W, or PHIL 226W
Graduation Requirements:
Writing Intensive
Programs:

This course will introduce students to important texts in moral and social philosophy that provide the foundation for modern economics. In addition, we will discuss philosophical accounts of rationality, well being, and freedom and their relevance to economic analysis.

Graduation Requirements:
Writing Intensive
Programs:

Philosophers of Ancient Greece, Rome and the early middle ages: The presocratics, Plato, Aristotle, Hellenistic and Roman philosophers, St. Augustine.

Graduation Requirements:
Writing Intensive
Programs:

Late Medieval Philosophy and its influence on the Renaissance, Descartes, Spinoza, Leibnitz and Continental Rationalism, Locke, Berkeley, Hume and British Empiricism, and Kant.

Graduation Requirements:
Writing Intensive
Programs:

Critical discussion of the topics chosen from the Asian philosophical traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, and Daoism.

Graduation Requirements:
Diverse Cultures - Purple | Writing Intensive
Programs:

Theories of knowledge and justification, skeptical attacks on the possibility of knowledge, and anti-skeptical defenses.

Programs:

An investigation of the most fundamental concepts of reality, including the nature of things, identity over time, modality, causation, free will, space and time, and universals and particulars.

Programs:

Discussion of philosophical issues in law by way of connecting legal problems to well-developed and traditional problems in philosophy, e.g., in ethics, political philosophy, and epistemology, and investigates the philosophical underpinnings of the development of law. The course takes an analytical approach to law (as opposed to historical sociological, political, or legalistic approaches) and devotes a substantial part of the semester to a major work on law written by a philosopher.

Programs:

Intensive study of a single philosopher or topic.

Programs:

In-depth analysis of major European existentialists such as Kierkegaard, Heidegger, and Sartre.

Programs:

Aesthetic principles, theories, and the creative process. Theories of visual arts, music, literature, dance, etc.

Programs:

This course investigates some of the central philosophical issues in our thinking about film, including questions about narrative, ontology, ethical criticism of film, the role of artistic intentions in interpretation, artistic medium, and the art/entertainment distinction.

Programs:

This course examines the conceptual and philosophical complexities of efforts to understand the mind in science. Topics include the difference and similarities between humans and other animals, the nature of psychological explanation, and reductive strategies for explaining consciousness, intentionality and language. Fall

Programs:

Cognitive and epistemic issues surrounding sensory perception, including the nature of perception, its immediate objects, and its ability to deliver knowledge of the world.

Programs:

This course examines conceptual and philosophical issues in biology, the nature and scope of biological explanation and conflicts between evolutionary and religious explanations for the origin of life.

Programs:

Special event of less than semester duration.

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Restricted to Cognitive Science Majors in their final year.

Programs:

Individual study of a philosopher or problem.

Programs:

This course will undertake a close reading and study of Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and other texts.