Courses
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CAS PH 413: Kant
An in-depth reading of several of Kant's works. -
CAS PH 415: Nineteenth-Century Philosophy
Study of the important themes in the philosophy of Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche. -
CAS PH 418: Marx and Marxism
Philosophical foundation of Marxism and its development. Critical study of Marx's writings stressing questions of philosophy, political economy, science, and history. Emphasis on Marx's theory of relation of praxis to conciousness. Later (including contemporary) Marxists and critics. -
CAS PH 419: Nietzsche
Examination of "Thus Spoke Zarathustra." The interpretation focuses on the concept of "eternal recurrence of the same"- in the context of the development of Nietzsche's philosophy, from "The Birth of Tragedy" to "Will to Power" as well as in the context of continental philosophy of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. -
CAS PH 420: Contemporary Philosophy
A survey of the main developments 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. -
CAS PH 422: Analytic Philosophy
Focus on the work of Q. V. Quine. -
CAS PH 424: Wittgenstein
An intensive (line by line) study of Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations. -
CAS PH 426: Phenomenology
Rigorous examination of foundations of philosophical phenomenology in Husserl and Heidegger. -
CAS PH 427: Heidegger and Existential Philosophy
A study of the main topics of Heidegger's philosophy against the background of his interpretation of Husserl's phenomenology, Kant's transcendental philosophy, and ancient Greek philosophy, with an emphasis on the concepts of being, time, and truth. -
CAS PH 430: American Philosophy
The American fascination with religion; Idealism versus Pragmatism in close readings of major texts from three or four among the folowing: Edwards, Emerson, James, Dewey, Royce, Hocking, Reinhold Niebuhr, Tillich. -
CAS PH 436: 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? -
CAS PH 440: Metaphysics
A study of the themes of Being, God, Space, Time, and Eternity as they should be treated for a contemporary philosophy. -
CAS PH 443: Philosophy of Mind
The topic is sentience, embodiment, and the brain. The aim is to develop a "neurophenomenological" approach to consciousness and embodied experience in cognitive science and the philosophy of mind. -
CAS PH 446: Philosophy of Religion
An examination of principal issues and topics in the philosophy of religion in the following two stages: first, a historical overview of the philosophy of religion as a discipline or subdiscipline of philosophy and theology; second, attention to the problems and challenges facing this discipline in the context of the comparative study of religions. -
CAS PH 450: Types of Ethical Theory
Topic for Fall 2012: TBA. -
CAS PH 451: Contemporary Ethical Theory
An examination of twentieth-century English and American moral theories including those of Moore, Foot, Williams, MacIntyre, and Rawls. -
CAS PH 452: 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. -
CAS PH 453: Theories of Political Society
An examination of recent political accounts of "modernity," that is, of the unique character of advanced industrial cultures. Readings include classic authors (Rousseau, Marx, Freud, Weber) and contemporary writers (Habermas, MacIntyre, Lyotard, Toulmin). -
CAS PH 454: Community, Liberty, and Morality
Traces the contemporary movement known as Virtue Ethics, which has revived a characteristic approach to ethics of ancient Greek philoosphers such as Plato and Arsitotle. Focus on understanding VE's critique of modern approaches and on evaluating its advocates' positive claims. -
CAS PH 455: Legal Philosophy
A critical examination of ideas about the nature of law, duties of obedience and resistance, and legal interpretation, with an emphasis on modern theories. Because this course meets with a Law School course, its schedule follows the Law School's standard academic calendar.

