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GRS PH 603: Plato I
A careful study of one or several Platonic dialogues. Emphasizes both close reading of the text(s) and discussion of the deep philosophical issues raised by them. Frequent references to other Platonic dialogues as relevant. Knowledge of Greek is helpful but not required. Familiarity with Greek philosophy is helpful. -
GRS PH 605: Aristotle I
This course description is currently under construction. -
GRS PH 606: Aristotle II
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GRS PH 613: Kant
A single text constitutes the basis for this course - Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. Some of the great scholars of the past have devoted a lifetime to analyzing, explicating, and evaluating this work. We, alas, have only one semester. In this, the first of three Critiques, Kant introduced the idea of a critical self-examination of reason, and in the execution of this program he developed a unique new type of philosophy, called transcendental philosophy, which forever revolutionized philosophical throught. We shall examine the text carefully from beginning to end. Because Kant's thinking is enormously complex, intricate, and subtle, we shall make use of secondary sources and complement textual analysis by discussing helpful comments by some of today's finest Kant scholars. -
GRS PH 615: Nineteenth-Century Philosophy
Study of the important themes in the philosophy of Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche. -
GRS PH 619: Nietzsche
Reading and discussion of some of Nietzsche's major works and their influence on twentieth-century thought. Discussions go back to Hegel and forward to Heidegger. -
GRS PH 620: Contemporary Philosophy
A survey of the main development in recent philosophy in both the analytical and continental traditions, emphasizing the interrelations of the two. Philosophers covered include Frege, Moore, Russell and Wittgenstein, as well as Brentano, Husserl, Heidegger, and Sartre. -
GRS PH 622: Analytic Philosophy
A detailed examination of Wittgenstein later philosophy, focusing on his Philosophical Investigations, On Certainty and remarks on the philosophy of Psychology. -
GRS PH 624: Wittgenstein
This course description is currently under construction. -
GRS PH 626: Phenomenology
Rigorous examination of the foundations of philosophical phenomenology in Husserl and Heidegger. -
GRS PH 630: American Philosophy
Detailed analysis of William James and John Dewey and their theories of meaning, truth, consciousness, and experience. Consideration of these theories in connection with selected issues in Husserl, Wittgenstein, and Michael Oakeshott. -
GRS PH 633: Symbolic Logic
Study of methods characteristic of modern deductive logic including use of truth tables, Boolean normal forms, models, and indirect and conditional proofs within the theory of truth-functions and quantifiers. -
GRS PH 636: Gender, Race, and Science
Examines issues in feminist philosophy, philosophy of race, and philosophy of science. Is "race" a genuine scientific category or a social construct? How have views about gender and race changed? Why are there still so few women and minority scientists? -
GRS PH 646: Philosophy of Religion
An examination of the principal issues and topics in the philosophy of religion in the following two stages: first, an historical overview of the philosophy of religion as a discipline or subdiscipline of philosophy and theology; and, second, attention to the problems and challenges facing this discipline in the context of the comparative study of religions. -
GRS PH 651: Contemporary Ethical Theory
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GRS PH 652: Ethics of Health Care
Medicine and health care offer a unique opportunity to explore the nature of humanity and the world and to ask fundamental questions concerning the nature of birth, life, and death, and what it is to be a person. Readings from both classical and contemporary writings in ethics, medicine, law, and public health policy. -
GRS PH 655: Legal Philos
This course description is currently under construction. -
GRS PH 658: Crime and Punishment: Philosophical Perspectives
Study of fundamental issues in criminal law, including the theory and definition of crime; economic, utilitarian, and retributivist justifications of punishment; exculpating circumstances; the death penalty; and the relationship between law and politics. -
GRS PH 659: Pol&Legal Phil
This course description is currently under construction. -
GRS PH 661: Mathematical Logic
The syntax and semantics of sentential and quantificational logic, culminating in the Gödel Completeness Theorem. The Gödel Incompleteness Theorem and its ramifications for computability and philosophy. Also offered as CAS MA 531.

