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Philosophy
Program
Students completing a major with
a concentration in philosophy are expected to know the major
movements, problems, writings, concepts and terms in the history of
Western philosophy. The program concentrates on major figures such
as Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume and Kant; on
problems arising in contemporary movements such as analytic
philosophy, existentialism and American philosophy and on the major
subdivisions of philosophy, including logic, ethics, aesthetics,
philosophy and law, philosophy of science and philosophy of
religion. All students will take PHIL 475 as a capstone course. In
the capstone course, students will give an oral presentation of a
term paper, receive criticism from faculty and students and then
formally write the paper and submit it for use in assessment of the
major.
Course of Study in
Philosophy
Philosophy
Major: 33 Credit
Hours
PHIL
250. Introductory Logic
PHIL 330. Moral Theory
PHIL 340. Ancient Greek Philosophy
PHIL 341. Modern Philosophy
PHIL 475. Major Thinkers and Issues in Philosophy
One religion course that is not
crosslisted.
Five Electives in
philosophy (nine credits must be
at the 300-level or above)
Note: If the student takes GPHIL 101 as part of
Cluster 2 in the General Education program it can double count as one course of this elective section.
Philosophy
Minor: 18 Credit
Hours
GPHIL
101. Introduction to
Philosophy
TWO of the following four courses
PHIL 340. Ancient Greek
Philosophy
PHIL 341. Modern Philosophy
PHIL 342. Medieval Philosophy
PHIL/REL 375 19th Century Philosophy
and Theology
Three Electives in
philosophy (at least two must be
at the 300-level; one 400-level course is recommended)
Interdisciplinary
Philosophy Concentration
This option is designed for
students who want to concentrate in philosophy but also apply
philosophical ideas to work in other departments. Part of the
requirements for this concentration are 12 credit hours from a
different but related discipline.
Core
Courses
PHIL 250. Introductory Logic
PHIL 330. Moral Theory
PHIL 340. Ancient Greek Philosophy
PHIL 341. Modern Philosophy
PHIL 475. Major Thinkers and Issues in Philosophy
Three Electives in philosophy at 300-level chosen
in conference with the adviser.
A coherent set of four courses from one or more
disciplines chosen in conference with the adviser.
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