| Cat. No./Title |
Instructor |
Dates |
Location |
Days |
Time |
Cr |
Class No. |
Fee |
Register |
| PHIL100 Introduction to Philosophy | J Bayne | Jan 7 - Jan 25 | W-1-063
Wheatley Bldg, 1st Floor, Room 063
| MTuWThF | 8:30 - 11:00am | 3 | 1059 | $1020 | |
Description for PHIL100: An introductory examination of the problems and scope of philosophy.
Academic Information: Credits: 3 Diversity: HU |
| PHIL100 Introduction to Philosophy | M Gunning | Jan 7 - Jan 25 | W-1-041
Wheatley Bldg, 1st Floor, Room 041
| MTuWThF | 6:00 - 8:30pm | 3 | 1060 | $1020 | |
Description for PHIL100: An introductory examination of the problems and scope of philosophy.
Academic Information: Credits: 3 Diversity: HU |
| PHIL108 Moral and Social Problems | D Flesche | Jan 7 - Jan 25 | W-1-057
Wheatley Bldg, 1st Floor, Room 057
| MTuWThF | 12:00 - 2:30pm | 3 | 1061 | $1020 | |
Description for PHIL108: Important moral and social issues of current concern are examined and debated. The course covers several problems each semester from a list including criminal punishment, war, abortion, racism, violence, the death penalty, private property, sexism, animal rights, the environment, and hunger.
Academic Information: Credits: 3 Distribution: United States focus Diversity: HU |
| PHIL108 Moral and Social Problems | R Farion-Villano | Jan 7 - Jan 25 | W-1-058
Wheatley Bldg, 1st Floor, Room 058
| MTuWThF | 6:00 - 8:30pm | 3 | 1062 | $1020 | |
Description for PHIL108: Important moral and social issues of current concern are examined and debated. The course covers several problems each semester from a list including criminal punishment, war, abortion, racism, violence, the death penalty, private property, sexism, animal rights, the environment, and hunger.
Academic Information: Credits: 3 Distribution: United States focus Diversity: HU |
| PHIL120 Introduction to Logic | R Farion-Villano | Jan 7 - Jan 25 | W-2-127
Wheatley Bldg, 2nd Floor, Room 127
| MTuWThF | 12:00 - 2:30pm | 3 | 1063 | $1020 | |
Description for PHIL120: The study of valid reasoning using formal methods of proof with truth functions, deductions, and quantifiers. Analysis of the logical structure of language related to philosophical questions of truth, paradox, and reference.
Academic Information: Credits: 3 Diversity: MT |
| PHIL220 Environmental Ethics | L Rivera | Jan 7 - Jan 25 | W-2-158
Wheatley Bldg, 2nd Floor, Room 158
| MTuWThF | 12:00 - 2:30pm | 3 | 1065 | $1020 | |
Description for PHIL220: An examination of humanity’s place in the natural world and its implications for ethics. Topics include the environmental crisis and the need for a new environmental ethic, the ethical dimensions of environmental policy issues, human-centered ethics, obligations to future generations, the intrinsic value of the natural world, animal rights, wilderness, and preservation of species.
Academic Information: Credits: 3 Diversity: HU |
| PHIL222 Moral Issues in Medicine | D Flesche | Jan 7 - Jan 25 | W-1-057
Wheatley Bldg, 1st Floor, Room 057
| MTuWThF | 8:30 - 11:00am | 3 | 1064 | $1020 | |
Description for PHIL222: Concepts of health, illness and healing, under different paradigms of medicine. Is medicine an art or science? What is the impact of medical technology on human life and death? What is considered "natural"? Attention is given to issues in human reproduction (e.g. in vitro fertilization, conception, abortion). Questions of authority, accountability in doctor-patient relationships, patient advocacy, self help, right to health care or to refuse treatment. Social and political questions of health care organization.
Academic Information: Credits: 3 Diversity: HU |