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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 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. -
GRS PH 656: Topics in Philosophy and Religion
Topic for Fall 2012: God and the "End" of Art: Aesthetics, Value, and Transcendence in the Modern Age. Examines the relation between aesthetic and other forms of value in the modern world, including the question of whether art has come to an "end." Featuring visiting lecturers in fall Institute for Philosophy and Religion lecture series. Also offered as GRS RN 697. -
GRS PH 657: Action, Interpretation, and Narrative
What is the relationship between understanding behavior and understanding texts? What is the role of narrative in interpretation? Using philosophical reflections on narrative from Plato to MacIntyre, the course studies philosophy and tragedy as two--perhaps antithetical--traditions of interpretation. -
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: Political and Legal Philosophy
Examination of the individual's responsibilities under law, specifically of the idea that there is a general moral obligation to obey the law, including unjust law, and the contrasting idea of civil disobedience-- the possibility of morally justified resistance to law. -
GRS PH 660: Epistemology
An examination of some of the central questions concerning the nature, scope, sources, and structure of knowledge. -
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. -
GRS PH 662: Foundations of Mathematics
Axiomatic set theory as a foundation for, and field of, mathematics through to the consistency results. -
GRS PH 663: Philosophy of Language
The most representative problem areas in contemporary philosophy of language are discussed, criticized, and put into a new perspective. They include Frege's sense-reference theory, quantification and anaphora, theory of truth, the semantics of intentional and epistemic concepts, strategic aspects of language use, identification and individuation, metaphor, demonstratives and indexical, discourse and dialogue theory, and selected language disturbances (dyslexia, autism). -
GRS PH 665: Philosophy of Cognitive Science
Can humans be thought of in analogy with machines? The course examines questions of natural and artificial intelligence in light of traditional theory and of recent research in computer science and artificial intelligence. -
GRS PH 668: Philosophical Problems of Logic and Mathematics
Selected traditional metaphysical and epistemological problems in the light of modern logic and various studies in the foundations of mathematics, including the nature of axiomatic method, completeness in logic and mathematics, and the nature of mathematical truth. -
GRS PH 670: Philosophy of Physics
Philosophical problems concerning the interpretation of physical discoveries. Elementary particles, the anomalies of quantum mechanics, some modern problems of space and time, and the problem of wholes and parts. -
GRS PH 672: Philosophy of Biology
Conceptual problems in biology; unity or pluralism of science; hierarchy theory; biological explanation; evolutionary theory, teleology and causality, statistical explanation; the species problem; mind and the brain; and language in animals and humans. -
GRS PH 682: Topics in Modern and Contemporary Philosophy
Topic for Fall 2004: The historical development of selfhood, and more specifically self- consciousness, from the early modern period into the twentieth century. An emphasis on Romantic conceptions (Hegel, Schopenhauer, Feuerbach, Kierkegaard, and Marx) complemented with readings by Nietzsche, James, Wittgenstein, and Moran. -
GRS PH 683: Topics in the Philosophy of Religion
Focus on a specific topic in the philosophy of religion. Topic for Fall 2010: Problem of Evil. A philosophical and theological analysis of the problem of evil, as formulated in the Bible and other sacred texts, ancient and modern philosophy, literature, and cinema. Also offered as GRS RN 743. -
GRS PH 684: Topics in Speculative Philosophy
Topics for Fall 2007: A study of the metaphysics of being, God, time, eternity,nature and value through the works of Robert Neville (the instructor) and dialectical neighbors. -
GRS PH 686: Topics in Knowledge, Language, and Logic
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GRS PH 687: Top: Ph Science
This course description is currently under construction. -
GRS PH 699: Teaching College Philosophy I
The goals, contents, and methods of instruction in philosophy. General teaching-learning issues. Required of all teaching fellows.

