PHIL 600s


PHIL 670 Fall Term Reading Course (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 010431
1 Sartre
2 Aesthetics
3 Epistemology
4 Ethics
5 Existential &or Phenomenology
6 History of Philosophy
7 Logic
8 Metaphysics
9 Philosophy of Religion
10 Philosophy of Science
11 Social & Political Philosophy
12 Studies in a Philosopher
13 Studies in a Phil Movemnt
14 Special Topics

PHIL 671 Winter Term Reading course (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 010432
1 Aesthetics
2 Epistemology
3 Ethics
4 Existential &or Phenomenology
5 History of Philosophy
6 Logic
7 Metaphysics
8 Philosophy of Religion
9 Philosophy of Science
10 Social and Political Phil
11 Studies in a Philosopher
12 Studies in a Phil Movemnt
13 Special Topics
14 Special Topics

PHIL 672 Spring Term Reading Course (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 010433
1 Aesthetics
2 Epistemology
3 Ethics
4 Existential &or Phenomenology
5 History of Philosophy
6 Logic
7 Metaphysics
8 Philosophy of Religion
9 Philosophy of Science
10 Social and Political Phil
11 Studies in a Philosopher
12 Studies in a Phil Movemnt
13 Emotional Consciousness
14 Special Topics

PHIL 673 Graduate Courses (0.50) LECCourse ID: 010434
Graduate level courses covering specialized topics in philosophy. These courses are often held in conjunction with 400 level philosophy courses, though of course the work requirements for graduate students are more stringent. Students must pay attention to the restriction on the number of these courses they are allowed to count toward their degree.
1 Mental Representations
2 Assertion
3 Cognitive Science
4 Substructural Logics
5 Cognitive Modelling
6 Recent Writing on Meta-Ethics
7 American Philosophy
8 Religious Experience
9 Aristotle's Psych (DeAnima)
10 Problems with Liberalism
11 Game Theoretical Analysis
12 Novick's "Invariences"
13 Neural Netwrks&Comp Foundation
14 Simulating Neurobiol Systems
15 William James
16 Plato's Late Dialogues
17 Problems of an Aging Society
18 Democracy, For and Against
19 Metaphysics Through Paradox
20 Philosophy of Logic
21 Modern Feminism
22 Dewey
23 Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics
24 Mind
25 Modularity & Pragmatics
26 Aristotle's Metaphysics
27 Life, Disease and Mind
28 Ethics and Reason
29 Ascribing Beliefs
30 Aristotle's Phil Psychology
31 Naturalizing Mental Meaning
32 Topics in Phil of Science
33 Classical American Pragmatism
34 Rlvnc, Intuitnstic & Linr Lgic
35 Methods of Ethics
36 Ontologies - Plato & Aristotle
37 Philosophy of Quantum Mechanic
39 Empathy
40 Natural Rationality
41 Cmnl Algncs & Femnst Intrvntns
42 Explanation
43 Spinoza's Ethics
44 Kantian Ethics
45 International Justice
46 Realism & Anti-Realism
47 Moral Phil of Harry Frankfurt
48 Descartes and the Cartesians
49 Anti-Realism
50 Mind and Society
51 Fminism, Librl Theory & Choice
52 Peirce
53 Philosophy of Quantum Physics

PHIL 674 Graduate Courses (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 011841
Graduate level courses covering specialized topics in the department's fields of research concentration.
1 Philosophy of Physics
2 Aristotle's Phil Psychology
3 Moral Truth
4 Logical Pluralism
5 Conditionals & Negations
6 Assertion:Pragmatics&Knowledge
7 Objectivity
8 A Priori Knowledge
9 Aristotle's Methodology
10 Unity of Consc&Achilles Infer
11 Phenomenology
12 Wittgenstein Infl Contemp Phil
13 Epistemic Normativity
14 Weakness of Will

PHIL 680A Departmental Graduate Seminar (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 011842
A graduate level survey which acquaints students with a number of issues under active investigation in the philosophical literature in a particular area of central importance to philosophy. Normally covers an area that falls within the department's identified fields of research concentration. The area will vary from year to year, but will always be one which is likely to inform students' research whatever their eventual specialization.
1 Truth
2 Rationality
3 Justification
4 Persons
5 Responsibility
6 Objectivity

PHIL 680B Departmental Graduate Seminar (0.50) SEMCourse ID: 011843
A graduate level survey which acquaints students with a number of issues under active investigation in the philosophical literature in a particular area of central importance to philosophy. Normally covers an area that falls within the department's identified fields of research concentration. The area will vary from year to year, but will always be one which is likely to inform students' research whatever their eventual specialization.
Prereq: PHIL 680A
1 Truth
2 Rationality
3 Justification
4 Persons
5 Responsibility
6 Objectivity

PHIL 696 Directed Research for MA Candidates (0.50) RDGCourse ID: 010435
A one-term course which involves the writing of a research paper. Non-thesis MA students must complete three such courses, each supervised by a different instructor, as part of the requirements for their degree. Thesis MA students must complete one such course, supervised by the instructor who will supervise the thesis, as a preliminary stage in their thesis preparation.
1 Research Paper I
2 Research Paper II
3 Research Paper III

PHIL 698 Research Area Tutorials for PhD (1.00) TUTCourse ID: 010436
PhD candidates select two of these tutorials on topics approved by the department, each to be taken with a different instructor, as part of their degree requirements. The goal of each area is to allow the student to reach a point where she or he is ready to make a research contribution to a particular area of philosophy. One of the areas will normally be in the subject the student intends to pursue for the dissertation.
Department Consent Required
1 Aesthetics
2 Epistemology
3 Ethics
4 Exist Phil Phenomenology
5 History of Philosophy
6 Logic
7 Metaphysics
8 Philosophy of Religion
9 Philosophy of Science
10 Social & Political Philosophy
11 Studies in a Philosopher
12 Studies in Philosophical Movmt
13 Special Topics
14 Feminist Philosophy