This course is a systematic and historical study of the origin and general nature
of philosophy by means of an analysis of major philosophies and fundamental philosophical
problems.
Courses List:
Students successfully completing any section of PHIL 1010 will be able to:
- Explain the historical and individual origins of philosophical thinking
- Reflectively apply rational philosophical attitudes and standards to themselves and
their historical environment
- Identify and explain basic philosophical problems
- Evaluate one's own intellectual positions using relevant, informed, and credible evidence
- Practice autonomous critical reasoning in relation to uncritically acquired belief
systems and reasoning practices
- Articulate the meaning of basic philosophical concepts
This course examines major philosophers and problems in the philosophy of religion,
such as the nature of religion, the concept and existence of God, the problem of evil,
and philosophical atheism. Students are challenged to conceptually comprehend and
critically evaluate philosophical positions and arguments about religion.
Students successfully completing any section of PHIL 2020 will be able to:
- Define the basic nature of religion
- Elaborate on concepts and theoretical frameworks in the philosophy of religion
- Critically evaluate a variety of problems and arguments in the philosophy of religion
- Reflectively articulate a personal philosophy of religion
- Apply concepts and arguments in the philosophy of religion to the contemporary world
This course examines major philosophers and problems in philosophical ethics, such
as the theoretical justification of moral theories, critically evaluating systematic
orientations and arguments, applying diverse theoretical orientations to practical
problems, and developing ethical self-understanding and self-evaluation.
Students successfully completing any section of PHIL 2030 will be able to:
- Articulate fundamental theoretical orientations in philosophical ethics
- Explain and evaluate arguments in philosophical ethics
- Analyze basic concepts in philosophical ethics
- Identify and evaluate their own moral reasoning on the basis of philosophical theories
and standards
- Describe the complexity of practical moral problems in the context of contemporary
history and culture
- Critically examine different moral viewpoints and positions rationally and constructively
This course introduces students to the basic principles of critical thinking by examining
the general nature of logic, truth-value and propositions, deductive and inductive
arguments, and logical fallacies. The relevance of logical reasoning to various life
contexts is emphasized, including contemporary society and culture.
Students successfully completing any section of PHIL 2040 will be able to:
- Understand and apply logical standards to various practical reasoning contexts (everyday,
educational, professional, civic, private)
- Evaluate assertions and positions based on relevant evidence
- Recognize the semantic dimensions and avoidable imprecision of various types of language
use
- Analyze and diagram the logical structure of rudimentary arguments
- Describe and detect logical fallacies in themselves and others
- Mitigate illogical attitudes by cultivating local attitudes