May 03, 2024  
University of Alberta Calendar 2016-2017 
    
University of Alberta Calendar 2016-2017 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Listings


 

Details of Courses

Courses taught at the University of Alberta are listed alphabetically. All courses, except those taught by Faculté Saint-Jean, are described in English.

Each course is designated by its computer abbreviation and a number. Students should use this abbreviation and number when completing any form requiring this information.

Courses are numbered according to the following system:

000-099 Pre-University
100-199 Basic Undergraduate. Normally requires no university-level prerequisites. Designed typically for students in the first year of a program.
200-299 Undergraduate. Prerequisites, if any, are normally at the 100-level. Designed typically for students in the second year of a program.
300-399 Undergraduate. Prerequisites, if any, are normally at the 200-level. Designed typically for students in the third year of a program.
400-499 Advanced Undergraduate. Prerequisites, if any, are normally at the 300-level. Designed typically for students in the fourth year of a program.
500-599 Graduate. Designated for graduate students and certain advanced or honors undergraduate students in their final year.
600-799 Graduate Courses
800-899 Special Registrations
900-999 Graduate Thesis and Project Numbers

For the purposes of program descriptions and prerequisite designation, courses numbered 100-199 are designated as Junior Courses and courses numbered 200-499 are designated as Senior Courses.

Note: Some exceptions to the course number system described above have been granted to the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry.

Course Description Symbols and Figures

Several symbols and figures are used to indicate the type, duration, and weight of courses.

  1. ★—Indicates “units of course weight,” and usually follows the course title. The accompanying number indicates the weight of the course as used in computing grade point averages and for meeting degree requirements.
    A course which runs throughout the Fall/Winter (i.e., from September through April) is usually weighted ★6. A course that runs for only one term (i.e., Fall: from September to December, or Winter: from January through April) is usually weighted ★3. Certain courses are offered over Fall/Winter or Spring/Summer, or in one term, with weights of ★1, ★2, and ★4. These are considered as one-sixth, one-third, and two-thirds of a Fall/Winter or Spring/Summer course, respectively. Some honors and graduate courses involving research may vary in weight according to the length and difficulty of the project. Some clinical courses may vary in weight according to the length of clinical experience. Some courses, not included in the computation of grade point averages, are offered for credit only and either carry a weight of ★0, or are marked as “Credit.”
    Undergraduate students who take courses offered by the Faculty of Engineering but are not registered in Engineering will have a course weight assigned for these courses according to the protocol of their home Faculty.
  2. fi—Denotes: “fee index,” the value used to calculate the instructional fees for each course. The fee index is multiplied by the fee index value (given in the appropriate subsection of Fees Payment Guide ) to give the dollar value of instructional fees for the course.
    For normal courses, the fee index is twice the value of the units of course weight; for example, a course with ★3 normally has fi 6. In cases where exceptional fees considerations need to be made, the fee index is set differently by the Board of Governors.
    Note that certain programs (e.g., MD, DDS, etc.) are assessed on a program fee basis for all or certain years. In these cases, the fee index calculation does not apply.
  3. (x term, a-b-c)—These figures in parentheses give information on when the course is offered and the hours of instruction required by the course in a week, or in some cases the total time in a term.
    In the case of a single-term course, the term in which the course is given is mentioned (item x). The designation “either term” means that the course may be offered either in the first term or in the second term or in each term, at the discretion of the department concerned. The designation “variable” means that the course may be taught either as a single-term or as a full-session course.
    Item a indicates lecture hours. Item b indicates seminar hour(s), demonstration hours (d), clinic hours (c), or lecture-laboratory hours (L). Item c indicates laboratory hours. For two-term courses, the hours of instruction are the same in both terms unless otherwise indicated. The expression 3/2 means 3 hours of instruction every second week; 2s/2 means 2 seminar hours every second week.
    Examples:
    (first term, 3-0-3): a course taught in first term with 3 hours lecture, no seminar, and 3 hours lab per week.
    (second term, 0-1s-2): a course taught in second term with no lectures, 1 seminar hour, and 2 hours of lab per week.
    (either term, 3-0-0): a course taught in either first or second term, or each term, with 3 lecture hours per week, no seminar, and no lab.
    (two-term, 3-0-3): a course taught over both first and second term with three lecture hours, no seminar, and three hours lab per week.
    (variable, 3-0-0): a course which may be taught in either first or second term or over two terms with three lecture hours per week, no seminar, and no lab.
  4. Prerequisite—This provides information on courses which must be successfully completed before registering in the more advanced course.
    Corequisite—This provides information on courses which must be taken before or at the same time as the course described in the listing.
    Note: Departments are authorized to cancel the registration of those students registered in a course offered by the department if they do not meet the prerequisite and/or corequisite requirements stated in the course description in this Calendar.
  5. [Department]— This indicates the department responsible for registration for interdepartmental courses. Normally, courses will be credited to the discipline listed in the square brackets.
  6. Open Studies Courses indicates a course available to students of Open Studies.  indicates that a course is available to Open Studies students on a delayed registration basis only (see Registration ).
Important: Registration Procedures for Two-Term Courses

Students are strongly advised to refer to the Registration and Courses menu at www.registrarsoffice.ualberta.ca for details. Two-term courses are normally offered over two terms (either Fall/Winter or Spring/Summer). In a few instances, two-term courses are offered within a single term. In all cases these are identifiable in the Class Schedule because they consist of part A and part B (e.g., English 111A and 111B).

To successfully register in a two-term course, students, must do the following:

  • Register in both the part A and part B for all types of sections offered (Lectures, Labs, Seminars, etc.);
  • Register in the same section numbers for part A and part B of a course (e.g., Lecture A1 for both part A and part B, and Lab E3 for both part A and part B);
  • Register in all the appropriate sections on the same day.

All of the above must be done or the course registration is invalid and will be deleted. Invalid registrations will be deleted nightly. It is the student’s responsibility to attempt the course registration again, subject to availability.

Example: A student wishes to register in ABCD 101, a two-term course. It has a lecture and a lab section. Based on the student’s timetable planning, decides to take Lecture C3 and Lab C8. The student must add

In Fall Term ABCD 101A Lec C3 and ABCD 101A Lab C8,
and  
In Winter Term ABCD 101B Lec C3 and ABCD 101B Lab C8.

All these sections must be added on the same day to successfully register. Otherwise the registration in ABCD 101 will be deleted overnight and the student’s place in the course will be lost.

Course Renumbering

Over the years many courses have been renumbered. Old numbers can be found within individual course listings of previous Calendar editions.

Courses on Reserve

Courses not offered in the past four years are removed from this Calendar and placed on Reserve. These courses may be taught again in the future, in which case they would be brought back into the active Course Listings and placed in the Calendar. Information about Reserve Courses is available through the Registrar’s Office, the University Secretariat, and Faculty Offices.

Faculty Specific Regulations Regarding Courses

For specific Faculty regulations relating to courses and for a complete list of subjects taught by a Faculty, please consult the Undergraduate Programs section of the Calendar at the end of each Faculty section.

Physical Requirements for University Courses

The University has a commitment to the education of all academically qualified students and special services are frequently provided on campus to assist disabled students.

Nevertheless, some courses make certain unavoidable demands on students with respect to the possession of a certain level of physical skill or ability if the academic objectives of the course are to be realized. In case of doubt, students are advised to contact the Department concerned and Student Accessibility Disability Services (SAS), Office of the Dean of Students.

Because support services cannot be guaranteed for all off-campus courses, instructors may be obliged to refuse registration in such courses.

Course Availability

The following is a comprehensive course listing of all the approved courses that the University of Alberta may offer. The appearance of a course in this list does not guarantee that the course will actually be offered. The most current information on courses is available on Bear Tracks at https://www.beartracks.ualberta.ca

Course Listings

 

Philosophy: Undergraduate

Department of Philosophy
Faculty of Arts

Notes

  1. No junior course presupposes background in Philosophy. PHIL 101 , PHIL 102 , and PHIL 120  are recommended for all students intending to continue in Philosophy. Courses at the 200-level are intended to provide a foundation for further study in Philosophy.
  2. There are no formal prerequisites for 200- or 300-level courses (except for PHIL 220 ). Entrance to 400-level courses requires ★6 of prior courses in PHIL, at least three of which must be at the 200-level.

  
  • PHIL 101 - Introduction to Philosophy: Values and Society


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 2-1s-0) An introduction to the classical problems of philosophy through study and critical discussion of selected philosophical classics and contemporary works. Emphasis will be placed on questions of moral and other values and on the nature of society and justice.
  
  • PHIL 102 - Introduction to Philosophy: Knowledge and Reality


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 2-1s-0) An introduction to the classical problems of philosophy through study and critical discussion of selected philosophical classics and contemporary works. Emphasis will be placed on questions of the nature and extent of human knowledge and classic problems about the nature of reality and our place in it.
  
  • PHIL 103 - Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introduction to some central topics in philosophy, with frequent writing assignments and a minimum 30% of class time devoted to writing instruction. Note: Credit cannot be obtained for both PHIL 103 and any of PHIL 101, 102, or 125.
  
  • PHIL 120 - Symbolic Logic I


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A study of sentential logic, including translation, semantics, decision procedures and natural deduction followed by an introduction to predicate logic, concentrating on translation. Note: Not open to students with credit in PHIL 220.
  
  • PHIL 125 - Practical Logic


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Elementary methods and principles for analyzing reasoning as it occurs in everyday contexts. Topics may include informal fallacies, introduction to scientific method, elementary statistical reasoning, elementary sentential logic, as well as the study of argument in contemporary debates about issues of social concern.
  
  • PHIL 200 - Metaphysics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Basic questions concerning the nature of reality. Topics may include existence, materialism and idealism, freedom and determinism, appearance and reality, causality, identity, time and space, universals and particulars.
  
  • PHIL 205 - Philosophy of Mind


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Basic questions concerning the mind and our attempts to study it scientifically.
  
  • PHIL 215 - Epistemology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A study of such central topics in the theory of knowledge as truth and rationality, skepticism and the limits of knowledge, relativism and the objectivity of knowledge, the role of perception, memory and reason as sources of knowledge.
  
  • PHIL 217 - Biology, Society, and Values


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The philosophical and social impact of historical and contemporary topics in the biological sciences.
  
  • PHIL 220 - Symbolic Logic II


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A brief review of sentential logic followed by an intensive study of predicate logic with identity. Topics include translation, semantics, decision procedures, natural deduction systems, mathematical induction. Other topics include: theories of definite descriptions, elementary modal logic, formal axiomatic systems. Prerequisite: PHIL 120 or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 230 - Ancient Greek Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A survey of the thought of the ancient Greek world from its beginnings with the Pre-Socratics up to and including Aristotle.
  
  • PHIL 233 - Trial and Execution of Socrates


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A philosophical examination of Socrates’ death in its cultural, historical and political setting.
  
  • PHIL 240 - Descartes to Hume


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A survey of Philosophy in the 17th- and 18th centuries. Philosophers studied will include Descartes, Leibniz, Spinoza, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume.
  
  • PHIL 250 - Contemporary Ethical Issues


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An examination of questions of right and wrong, good and evil, and the application of ethical theories to practical issues.
  
  • PHIL 265 - Philosophy of Science


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introduction to the central issues in contemporary philosophy of science. Topics may include theory evaluation, paradigm shifts and theory change, laws of nature, causation and explanation, the rationality of science and its social and historical setting.
  
  • PHIL 270 - Political Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A survey of issues in contemporary political philosophy with attention to liberalism and communitarianism, sovereignty, feminism, entitlement and distribution, and global justice.
  
  • PHIL 272 - Feminist Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introduction to feminist issues in current philosophy. Note: Not open to students with credit in PHIL 332.
  
  • PHIL 280 - Philosophy of Art


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introduction to some of the traditional theories, such as the expressionist and the formalist theories, which investigate the nature and function of the arts. The nature of aesthetic experience will also be considered.
  
  • PHIL 291 - Existentialism


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introduction to the background and main themes of existentialist philosophy. Authors such as Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Sartre are considered.
  
  • PHIL 302 - Indian Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) This course focuses on the ancient and classical period of Indian philosophy (500 BCE-1500 CE); major metaphysical and ethical concepts within traditions such as Yoga, Advaita Vedanta, and Buddhism. Note: Not open to students with credit in PHIL 301 completed prior to 2012.
  
  • PHIL 305 - Philosophy of Psychology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Central topics at the interface of philosophy and psychology. Prerequisite: PHIL 205, or two courses in Psychology, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 317 - Philosophy of Biology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Core topics at the interface of biology and philosophy.
  
  • PHIL 325 - Risk, Choice, and Rationality


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A study of the formal theory of rationality including probability and induction, and elementary decision theory, with attention to the paradoxes of choice.
  
  • PHIL 333 - Aristotle


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An in-depth study of the philosophy of Aristotle.
  
  • PHIL 336 - Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A historical survey of western philosophy from the end of classical antiquity until the sixteenth century.
  
  • PHIL 343 - Kant to Nietzsche


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A survey of the philosophy of Kant and the 19th century. Philosophers studied will include Kant, Hegel, Marx, the Utilitarians, and Nietzsche. Note: Not open to students with credit in PHIL 245.
  
  • PHIL 345 - Humans and Animals


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Philosophical approaches to the question of comparative human and animal cognition, emotion, awareness, and language. The course will also address the problem of animal rights vis-à-vis individual and institutional human interests.
  
  • PHIL 350 - Foundations of Ethics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A philosophical investigation of theoretical questions about ethics, such as whether ethical values are objective or subjective, why we should be moral, whether virtues really exist, what role reason plays in ethical deliberation, and what constitutes the basis of our ethical obligations.
  
  • PHIL 355 - Environmental Ethics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Philosophical dimensions of issues raised by our relationship to the environment.
  
  • PHIL 357 - Philosophy of Religion


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) General topics in the Philosophy of Religion, which may include the concept of ‘religion,’ the existence of God, meaning and intelligibility in religious language, religion and morality, implications of the social scientific study of religion.
  
  • PHIL 365 - Philosophy of Computing


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Emphasis on artificial intelligence, artificial life, and virtual reality. No previous familiarity with computing is necessary.
  
  • PHIL 366 - Computers and Culture


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A philosophical examination of moral and social issues arising from the computer revolution. Possible topics include hacking, internet culture, smart environments and cyborgs.
  
  • PHIL 367 - Introduction to Philosophy of Mathematics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Overview of approaches to the foundations of mathematics and of philosophical issues concerning the nature of mathematical objects, mathematical theories and the special status of mathematics among the sciences and other areas of knowledge.
  
  • PHIL 368 - Topics in Social Justice


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Variable content course which may be repeated if topic(s) vary.
  
  • PHIL 372 - Philosophy of Sexuality


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Ontological, epistemological, political and ethical issues arising through readings of classical and contemporary texts.
  
  • PHIL 375 - Science and Society


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A broadly based introduction to the intellectual, cultural, and social dimensions of science and their implications. Topics may include the impact of the Newtonian revolution, mechanism, materialism and Darwinism, and the nature of objectivity and rationality.
  
  • PHIL 380 - Philosophy of Criticism


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introduction to the philosophical foundations of art criticism. Questions concerning the standards of interpretation and of evaluation of the arts will be given special attention.
  
  • PHIL 382 - Philosophy of Law: Theoretical and Social Issues


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 384 - Topics in Practical Ethics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Variable content course which may be repeated if topic(s) vary.
  
  • PHIL 386 - Health Care Ethics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A study of ethical issues that arising in health care and in the practice of health professions.
  
  • PHIL 396 - Third-Year Honors Seminar


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Note: For students in the third year of the Honors program.
  
  • PHIL 400 - Topics in Metaphysics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 401 - Topics in Epistemology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 405 - Topics in Philosophy of Mind


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 411 - Philosophy of Space and Time


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Selected theories and problems concerning the nature of space and time. A strong background in philosophy, mathematics, or physical sciences is desirable. Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 412 - Topics in Philosophy of Science


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 415 - Topics in Philosophy of Biology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of the Department.
  
  • PHIL 420 - Metalogic


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The theoretical study of formal systems of logic. Topics include formal axiomatic systems, formal syntax and semantics, soundness and completeness proofs for both sentential and predicate logic. Prerequisite: PHIL 220 or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 422 - Topics in Advanced Symbolic Logic


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: PHIL 220 or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 426 - Philosophy of Language


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Selected problems concerning the nature of language and meaning. Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 428 - Logic and Language


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Philosophical logic and its application to the semantics of natural language. Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 433 - Topics in Feminist Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: PHIL 272 or 332 (taken prior to 2006) or W ST 301 or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 436 - Topics in Medieval Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200 level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 438 - Topics in Indian Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200 level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 440 - Topics in Ancient Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200 level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 442 - 17th- and 18th-Century Continental Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Topics concerning the early modern philosophical tradition of Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz. Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 443 - 17th- and 18th-Century British Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Topics concerning the early modern British philosophical tradition of Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 444 - Kant


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 445 - Topics in 19th-Century Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 446 - Early Analytic Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200 level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 448 - Topics in 20th-Century Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 450 - Topics in Ethics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 451 - Topics in the History of Moral and Political Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 453 - Philosophy of History


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Study of one or more of the following themes: Speculative accounts of our historical being and of the sense of history as a whole; critical analysis of the scope and limits of historiographic knowledge and explanation; historicist theses that philosophy is essentially historical. Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 470 - Topics in Social and Political Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 480 - Topics in Aesthetics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 486 - Directed Reading I


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 487 - Directed Reading II


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 488 - Current Research in Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 492 - Topics in Phenomenology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 493 - Fourth-Year Honors Seminar


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (first term, 0-3s-0) Note: For students in the fourth year of the Honors program.
  
  • PHIL 498 - Honors Essay


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Preparation of the honors essay, required in the fourth year of the Honors program.

Philosophy: Graduate

Note: Only a selection of the courses listed below are offered each year.

  
  • PHIL 500 - Metaphysics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 501 - Epistemology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 505 - Philosophy of Mind


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 510 - Philosophy of Science


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 522 - Topics in Logic


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 526 - Philosophy of Language


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 536 - Topics in Medieval Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 540 - Topics in Ancient Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 546 - Topics in Modern Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 547 - Topics in 20th Century Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 550 - Moral Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 570 - Social and Political Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 572 - Feminist Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 580 - Aesthetics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 592 - Topics in Phenomenology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *6 in PHIL, *3 of which must be at the 200-level, or consent of Department.
  
  • PHIL 594 - Selected Problems in Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • PHIL 596 - Directed Reading I


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: Open only to graduate students beyond the qualifying year.
  
  • PHIL 597 - Directed Reading II


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: Open only to graduate students beyond the qualifying year.

Philosophy at St Joseph’s College: Undergraduate

Note: The following courses are offered by St Joseph’s College and can be used as Arts options.

  
  • PHIL 209 - The Human Person: Philosophical Issues


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Personal identity, interpersonal relationships, sex and gender, freedom and immortality in historical and contemporary contexts.
  
  • PHIL 239 - Greek Philosophy and the Christian Tradition


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Issues concerning human beings, knowledge, ethics and society among Greek thinkers and their impact on Christian thought. Note: Not available for credit with PHIL 139.
  
  • PHIL 249 - Medieval Philosophy and the Christian Tradition


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A survey of philosophy from the 5th to the 15th centuries; Philosophers from the Jewish, Islamic and Christian traditions.
  
  • PHIL 269 - Moral Issues in a Christian Context


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Analysis and evaluation of selected moral and social issues.
  
  • PHIL 279 - Philosophy of Hunting


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The moral, conceptual, existential, environmental, socio-political, and spiritual issues raised by the practice of hunting by humans.
  
  • PHIL 309 - Augustine


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *3 in PHIL or consent of the College.
  
  • PHIL 319 - Thomas Aquinas


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisite: At least *3 in PHIL or consent of the College.
  
  • PHIL 329 - Natural Philosophy and the Christian Tradition


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A critical study of physical reality, dealing with such concepts as nature, scientific knowledge, space, time, causality, biological life, and teleology, in traditional and contemporary contexts.
  
  • PHIL 339 - Contemporary World Views and Christianity


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Critical study of Christianity in dialogue with such worldviews as atheism, agnosticism, naturalism, materialism, existentialism, feminism, liberalism, postmodernism.
  
  • PHIL 359 - Topics in Christian Philosophy


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
 

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