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45.201 Introduction to PhilosophyCredits: 3
Examines some of the typical approaches to philosophical questioning and the issues raised in such inquiry: what is true knowledge, what is reality, what is the good, what is the right political order, what is the nature of religious faith?
Studies the methods used to distinguish correct from incorrect reasoning. This course will aim at developing (1) an ability to express one's ideas clearly and concisely; (2) an increased skill in defining one's terms; and(3) a capacity to formulate arguments vigorously and to scrutinize them critically.
45.203 Introduction to EthicsCredits: 3
Examines the basic issues and problems of ethics and values and a survey of some important alternative answers to the questions raised, on both an individual and a social level, by our necessity to act and to live in a rational and human way.
45.206 Introduction to Political PhilosophyCredits: 3
Political philosohy is concerned with basic questions about community, public life, and social organization. This course will address issues such as the rights of the individual in relation to the power of the state and society; the nature and legitimacy of political authority and democracy; the significance of power, economics, justice and equality in social life; and the duties and responsibilities of citizens. We will also consider the philosophical meaning of communitarianism, liberalism, and republicanism, individualism, capitalism, and socialism, as well as the role of class, race, and gender in politics.
45.216 Plato and Beginning of PhilosophyCredits: 3
It is Plato who first uses the words 'philosopher" and "philosophy", and who, in his dialogs or dramatic discussions, establishes for all subsequent Western thought just was the enterprise of philosophy will be. In our study of these dialogs we will trace the origins in Plato of philosophy's primary questions concerning what is real and true as opposed to mere appearance (ontology, metaphysics), what is knowledge as opposed to mere opinion (epistemology), what is valid argument (logic), what is beautiful (aesthetics), and what is good, just and fair (ethics, politics). Plato foregrounds speech and language in all these considerations. Hence language, as the medium of thought and communication, will be a fundamental concern throughout our study.
45.285 Ancient PhilosophyCredits: 3
A survey of the beginnings of philosophy, mainly western, from the Presocratics to Augustine. Studies the emergence of philosophy out of mythical forms of thinking and the development of rational thought in the work of Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, the Epicureans, and the Neoplatonists.
45.296 Introduction to World ReligionsCredits: 3
A study of religious knowledge and the phenomena of religion from a philosophical standpoint. The course considers explanations for religious behavior, some central issues in religious belief, and the values and goals of religious systems. Various world religions provide specific data for these topics.
45.297 Philosophy of LoveCredits: 3
45.301 Ways of KnowingCredits: 3
Studies and analyzes various forms and expressions of human knowledge (perception, concept-formation and symbolic functioning, myth, aesthetic creation and interpretation, scientific discovery and understanding) and the individual, social, and historical conditions to which they are subject. The goal of the course is a comprehensive view of the structure of the human mind and its operations.
45.304 God and PhilosophyCredits: 3
Studies, historically and systematically, the following topics: a) the origin and content of the idea of God, b) the possibility of affirming God, philosophically and religiously, c) the complex nature of religious language and imagery, and d) God's relation to the world, history, and the individual.
45.305 Language Signs and SymbolsCredits: 3
An examination of the various grammars of human expressions from the point of view of a general theory of signs. Among the topics to be treated are: a) the nature of signs, symbols, and meaning; b) the structures and functions of language; c) the relations between language, thought, and reality, especially as manifested in metaphor; d) the social dimensions of signification and symbolization; and e) the relations between the different linguistic, sign, and symbol systems.
45.306 Feminist Theory PoliticsCredits: 3
What is sexist oppression? Is our culture still sexist, or is the need for feminism over? How should we respond to sexism in other cultures? Do men and women have different natures? Are our culture's sexual representations of women necessarily degrading, and if so, why? We'll consider these questions, and others, by examining the arguments and methodology of analytic feminism. We'll start by tracing the historical development of feminism in the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries, and then turn to several contemporary feminist analyses of sexist oppression. We'll then use these feminist frameworks to examine more specific issues. Possible topics include: feminist analyses of sexual objectification in pornography, feminist arguments in ethics and social theory, feminist analyses of science,and feminist criticisms of gendered labour.
45.307 Theories of JusticeCredits: 3
45.310 Philosophy of Creative ImaginationCredits: 3
Focuses first on imagination as a function of mind, placing it in relation to other functions such as perception, emotion, and conceptualization. Attention is then given to the difference between the reproductive and the creative imagination, with special emphasis on the psychological and social/political dimensions of creativity. Topics to be considered include poetical metaphor, theatrical performance, painting, architecture, or photography.
45.313 American PhilosophyCredits: 3
45.314 Philosophy of the Gothic ImaginationCredits: 3
A philosophical inquiry into science fiction, fantasy, and horror, with special emphasis on film. This course will attept to provide interpretations of some classic examples from these genres, as well as to inquire into the philosophical significance of these literary categories and their relation to mythology and religion. Questions to be addressed will include the problem of knowledge and rationality and its limits, the nature of the human being, and the moral problem of the role of violence in the social order. The class will attempt to identify a continuous tradition between these modern genres and ancient Greek tragedy and mythology.
45.315 Philosophical TopicsCredits: 3
A close study of some of the great texts of philosophical literature. In general, one or two major works are selected and subjected to a thorough reading.
45.316 Philosophy and FilmCredits: 3
This course examines the political and philosophical values and ideas which constitute cinema. It analyzes film as an historical, cultural, commercial, and artistic endeavor. Students will develop the skills to watch film actively and critically.
45.320 Philosophy Classics:KierkegaardCredits: 3
An exploration of the nineteenth-century Danish philosopher and religious thinker Soren Kierkegaard. Topics can iclude: the nature of self and subjectivity; erotic in contrast with altruistic love; individuality and the possibility of choosing how to live one's own life; the relation between time and eternity, the finite and the infinite, and art, ethics, and religion; the psychology of anxiety, despair, guilt, and sin; Kierkegaard's interpretation and defense of Christianity; his critique of established "Christendom"; and his use of indirect communication and pseudonyms.
45.323 PhilosophyClassics: NietzscheCredits: 3
A detailed introduction to Nietzsche's thought and its reception. This course will examine Nietzsche's most important works and central concepts such as the Dionysian and Apollonian, the last man, overman, eternal recurrence, genealogy, and will to power.
45.324 Plato: The DialogsCredits: 3
45.327 Environmental PhilosophyCredits: 3
An examination of the philosophical foundations of environmentalism. Addresses both the question of ethical duties we owe to animals and to nature, and also the question of man's relation to the natural world.
45.328 Justice, Trauma and WarCredits: 3
This interdisciplinary course considers particular cases of war, trauma, and recovery, including the Holocaust, the Cambodian genocide, and South African Apartheid, as well as current events in Darfur, Sudan, and Iraq. It examines the effects of political brutality; the function of discourse in political, philosophical and social contexts; and the capacity of interventions in the public sphere to respond to current traumas and prevent future ones.
45.330 Philosophy of Symbolic LogicCredits: 3
The first half of this course examines various axiomatic systems, and the student develops both intrasystematic and metasystematic techniques of proof. During the second half of the course, attention is given to certain important philosophical problems which arise from reflection on logical systems, e.g., the cognitive processes of abstraction and instantiation, the general notion of form, and questions of consistency and interpretation.
45.331 Philosophy of the MindCredits: 3
The status of consciousness is the central concern of a philosophy of mind. The course takes as its point of departure a reflection upon the nature and significance of consciousness from the perspective of its advocates (Husserl, Sartre) and its adversaries (Ryle, Skinner). The results of this preliminary inquiry is to provide a foundation for the exploration of other issues: the possibility of an unconscious; the temptation of bad faith; the dynamics of concept formation; and the nature
of emotion, imagination, and dreams.
45.334 Engineering and EthicsCredits: 3
A philosophical analysis of the ethical dimensions and responsibilities of the engineering profession. Specific case studies and ethical issues are analyzed through the application of some of the basic concepts and principles of traditional and contemporary ethical theories.
45.336 Early Modern PhilosophyCredits: 3
Examines Early Modern European Philosophy and its religious and scientific context, including movements such as the Mechanical Philosophy, Rationalism, Empiricism, and Transcendental Philosophy. Topics include knowledge and scientific understanding, the human mind and personal identity, and the debate between faith and reason.
45.337 Science & Meaning of NatureCredits: 3
The Scientific Revolution in seventeenth century Europe transformed our relationship to the world. This class analyzes the meaning of this transformation, inquiring into such questions as what defines science as a unique discipline, whether science and religion are intrinsically in conflict, and whether the lesson of science is that the universe is merely the result of impersonal laws and blind chance, or whether there is a place for meaning and purpose in the world.
45.339 Neoplatonism in Poetry & PhilosophyCredits: 3
After defining "Neoplatonism" with reference to Plato's Phaedo, Symposium, and Phaedrus, the course will consider the relationships among Homer's Odyssey, Plotinus's Enneads, Virgil's Aeneid, Augustine's Confessions, and Dante's Divine Comedy. The focus will be on coming home to the "source and origin" after having been away and, as the philosopher Plotinus puts it, having been "a stranger in something strange". Students will be invited to work on other literary and philosophical treatments of this theme in English, Irish or American poetry and writing. A principal concern of the course is language "sung, spoken, and written". Accordingly, the course will applicable to, and count for the Philosophy and Communications track.
45.340 Mysticism: East and WestCredits: 3
This course explores the religious and psychological phenomenon known as the mystical experience, both within the context of organized religion and outside it. We will approach this subject from a comparative standpoint, considering examples from Christianity, Judaism, and Islam and also from Eastern religions such as Buddhism and Taoism. We will make use of philosophy, psychology, theology and literature in order to try to understand mysticism and its relation to religion. Readings include The Upanishads, the Tao Te Ching, the Bible, and Plato.
45.342 Critical Theory & SocietyCredits: 3
The nature and methods of a critique of society that focuses on the conflicts between the various modes of rationality and rationalization.
45.346 Heidegger and ThoreauCredits: 3
The course, designed for students in any of the liberal arts disciplines, will first treat Aeschylus's Agamemnon and then turn to Nietzsche's account of the origins of Greek tragedy in the first nine sections of The Birth of Tragedy.Second, we will turn to Sophocles' Oedipus the King and Aristotle's account of tragedy in his Poetics, which takes Oedipus the King as its model. Third, we will turn to Sophocles' Antigony and Hegel's interpretation of it in The Phenomenology of Spirit. Finally, we will consider Euripides' Medea and then return to the Birth of Tragedy for Nietzsche's critical account of Euripides' dramas. Our task will be to learn what the uses of tragedy have been for philosophy, but also to see what understandings of human experience in tragic poetry are overridden and lost in philosophical interpretations of it. A principal theme of the course is language "poetic, rhetorical and philosophical". Accordingly, the course will applicable to, and count for the Philosophy and Communications track.
45.347 Greek Tragedy & PhilosophyCredits: 3
45.348 Eastern Philosophy and ReligionCredits: 3
A comparative study of the major strand and themes of Eastern thought and philosophies, encompassing principally the Japanese, Chinese, and Indian traditions.
45.349 Gender and Moral PhilosophyCredits: 3
45.350 World PhilosophiesCredits: 3
This course will fuse the historical and the thematic approaches in order to undertake a comparative examination of the relations of the great philosophical traditions (Chinese, Indian, Western, Islamic, and Japanese) to the perennial issues of philosophy. The main focus will be the continuing vitality and heuristic fertility of these traditions and their ability to define how human
45.351 Problem of EvilCredits: 3
Why is there evil and suffering in the world? This course looks at the explanations that have been given in the various religions of the world and considers the strengths and weaknesses of each approach.
45.352 Existence & AnxietyCredits: 3
Explores basic questions of human existence in 19th and 20th Century philosophy and literature. Topics include anxiety and alienation; freedom and responsibility; authenticity and bad faith; individuality and mass society; rationality and the absurd; values and nihilism; and God and meaninglessness.
45.354 Philosophy & RhetoricCredits: 3
Recent insights into the limits of traditional logic have confirmed that Aristotle was correct when, in distinguishing between the logical syllogism and the rhetorical enthymeme, he implied that in any field of argument outside the pure mathematical sciences there are no certain starting points and no final conclusions and, accordingly, the more useful model would be public speech and discussion, not inference and deduction. In examining the texts of the ancient masters of rhetoric, Aristotle, Cicero, and Quintilian, this course takes up their reflections on the nature of effective argument forensic, epideictic, and deliberative and thereby attempts to lay bare the foundations of contemporary rhetorical theories.
The course will use interactive television between UMass Lowell (origin) and UMass Boston (destination). Students will learn not only what the great rhetors from Demosthenes, Cicero, and Quintilian to Lincoln, Churchill and M.L. King can teach us about effective oral presentation, but also how to apply what they learn by practicing with the leading edge broadcast communications technologies available in our classroom. Both written examination papers and short presentations will be required.
45.357 Science and ReligionCredits: 3
A study of the multiple relations between science and religion focussing on the theme of creativity. The problem of the various truth claims of the two systems will be subjected to a close analysis and principles developed to understand how conflicts between the them can be understood and resolved.
45.358 Alternative Ethical TheoriesCredits: 3
This course will explore Continental (that is, European) alternatives to traditional(deontological and utilitarian) ethics. We will focus on four major figures, in this order:Luce Irigaray (drawing on Hegel's reading of Antigone), Emmanuel Levinas, Julia Kristeva and Jurgen Habermas. Instead of asking the question, Why be moral? as if we might avoid any ethical relation with others these continental philosophers tend to see the human condition as already in relation with others. Moreover, some Continental approaches tend to see our ethical relations as constitutive ofour identities. Other Continental approaches, namely Habermas's, try to develop alternative principles of universalizability in order to revive Enlightenment ideals of rationality. To close the course, we will also investigate how these approaches lend themselves to new understandings of community.
45.359 Nineteenth-Century PhilosophyCredits: 3
An introduction to central figures of 19th-century European philosophy such as Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche. Emphasis will be placed on the radical transformation of philosophical questions concerning truth and subjectivity, religion and morality, history and politics, and art and culture.
45.360 The Goddess in World ReligionCredits: 3
This course examines selected goddesses from prehistory to the present. We will locate the worship of each goddess in the original cultural context; analyzing the symbolism of each goddess in primary texts, acts of worship, and visual representations. We will also consider the influence of goddess worship on human gender roles and relations.
45.361 Equality, Justice and the LawCredits: 3
This class investigates the American fascination with the "rule of law." Questions to be considered include the following: What do we mean by the rule of law? What is the relation between law and morality? How does the rule of law promote justice, and what is its connection with the ideal of equality? What is the role of a written Constitution in protecting the rule of law? Special emphasis will be given to the Equal Protection clause of the Constitution and its role in prohibiting discrimination against disadvantaged groups, including racial minorities, women, and the handicapped. We will also consider in detail some theories of constitutional interpretation, including the Original Intent theory.
45.362 Democracy and Its CriticsCredits: 3
Explores the diverse roots of the democratic ideal and the opportunities and dangers associated with democratic politics. The arguments for and against democracy will be analyzed.
45.363 History of Political PhilosophyCredits: 3
This course explores the history of political philosophy by examining the writings of major ancient and modern political thinkers, including Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Aganis, Machivelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Moll, and Marx. We will focus in particular on the theme of the relationship between the concepts of human nature and political community, showing how different interpretations of human nature have led to different concepts of liberty, equality, and justice. We will also consider how the historical arguments fare in contemporary political debates.
45.364 Contemporary Political PhilosophyCredits: 3
This course explores the key concepts of political philosophy as discussed by the most prominent political philosophies of the twentieth century: John Rawls, Rober Nozick, Quentin Skinner, Philip Pettit, and others. The leading theme of the course will be the relationship between the individual and the state. From this perspective we will discuss the questions of justice, equaliy, liberty, democracy, and human rights.
45.365 Capitalism and Its CriticsCredits: 3
This course explores the historical evolution of capitalism, from its early beginnings in the Enlightenment to the most recent debates about the free market and globalization. The focus will be on the debate over the vitues and vices of capitalism as distinct from other modes of economic and political organization. Concepts to be discussed will include freedom, equality and the distribution of wealth. Readings include Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Max Weber, Joseph S, and others.
45.366 Globalization and Its CriticsCredits: 3
The course explores globalization as the process of transformation of regional and national phenomena into global ones, analyzing its social, economic, political, and cultural aspects. Supporters view it as the progress of liberalization and democratization that develop peaceful international cooperation; critics see globalization as the expansion of the profit-seeking global corporations that abuse the less developed and vulnerable regions. The course readings include the works of Amartya Sen, Samuel Huntington, Joseph Stiglitz, and other leading economists, sociologists, and philosophers.
45.367 Feminism and LiberalismCredits: 3
Liberalism stresses the importance of protecting individual people's right to live their lives however they see fit. Feminism strives to show that women are subject to a variety of injustices that prevent them from being able to live lives that are as good as men's. The aim of this course will be to consider whether liberalism and feminism are compatible, or whether the central ideals of liberalism--ideals like equality, automomy, and individual rights--actually function to entrench not just sexism but also racism, classism, and other kinds of oppression. Readings will include both historical and contemporary writers such as Isaiah Berlin, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Catherine MacKinnon, John Stuart Mill, Martha Nussbaum.
45.368 The Politics of FoodCredits: 3
This class will examine the moral and political implications of the food we eat. Topics we'll cover include genetically modified organisms, factory farming, animal rights and welfare, agricultural pollution, agricultural subsidies, third world hunger, the obesity epidemic, and the industrial food system and its alternatives.
45.369 History of Moral PhilosophyCredits: 3
This course explores the history of moral philosophy by examining the writings of key thinkers in the Western philosophical canon, including Leibniz, Hume, Kant and Hegal. We will focus on four basic types of moral reasoning: perfectionism, utilitarianism, intuitionism, and Kantian constructivism. Our goal will be to understand how these thinkers from the modern period of moral philosophy have influenced the way contemporary philosophers think about morality.
45.370 MetaphysicsCredits: 3
This course examines fundamental issues and topics in contemporary metaphysics. Broadly construed, metaphysics refers to the nature of existence and reality, or more basically, being. Topics in the course include: persistence, personal identity, human ontology, free will, possible worlds and modality, causation and paradoxes.
45.371 Buddhist and Zen PhilosophyCredits: 3
Explores Buddhist and Zen philosophy and practice from ancient India through its developments in China and Japan to contemporary America. Attention is given to significant philosophical movements such as Abhidharmika, Madhyamika, Yogacara, Huayen, and Chan (Zen).
45.372 Chinese PhilosophyCredits: 3
An introduction to the Chinese philosophical tradition in translation, especially the classical schools of Confucianism, Daoism, Mohism, and Legalism. Later developments in Buddhist and Neo-Confucian thought will also be explored.
45.373 Arabic and Islamic PhilosophyCredits: 3
An introductory survey of selected philosophical topics and figures in the Arabic-speaking world, focusing on the development of classical Arabic philosophy (falsafa) through its proponents and critics from al-Kindi (9th century) to Averroes (12th century). The course can also include speculative theology (kalam), mystical philosophy (Sufism), later developments, and contemporary issues.
45.374 Myth, Ritual and FestivalCredits: 3
This course aims to analyze the social, cultural, and religious phenomena of the festival or holiday in its connection with myth and ritual. We focus in particular on the groundbreaking work of the Russian literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin and his analysis of the cross-cultural features of the idea of the festival, for example the Roman Saturnalia, the British May Day festival, and our modern thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year festivals. We will also consider other important contributions to the study of ritual and festival, including those of James Frazer, mircea Eliade, and Joseph Campbell. A substantial part of the class will be focused on the sociological and historical aspects of the role of festival in modern society. We will also attempt to place the festival and holiday tradition within a larger framework of the role of myth and ritual in religion.
45.375 Philosophy of Sex and LoveCredits: 3
The aim of this course is to introduce students to both historical and contemporary discussions surrounding the topics of sex and love.
45.376 The Ethics of War and PeaceCredits: 3
This course examines theories about why human beings engage in mass killing, the history of moral deliberation about war in major religious traditions, and modern philosophical analyses of the diverse moral principles that those traditions have bequeathed to us. The course comprises three broad ethical questions. First when, if ever, is recourse to arms legitimate (jus ad bellum)? Second, what constraints should apply to military conduct (jus in bellos)? And third, how should wars end (jus post bellum)? These three questions will be systematically discussed by critically examining a selection of writings by historical and modern secular and religious thinkers.
45.383 Philosophy of Death and DyingCredits: 3
This course is a philosophical and interdisciplinary examination of prominent issues concerning the meaning of life and death and the ethical concerns involved with life, death and end of life issues. Topics in the course include: definitions of death, metaphysics and death, cultural meanings of death, the ethics of killing vs. letting die, euthanasia and suicide, and rights of the dying.
45.384 Philosophies of Art and BeautyCredits: 3
Examines the views of major philosophers on the beautiful and the nature of artistic creativity. An attempt is made to correlate the views of the thinkers with the works of poets, artists, and composers and the statements the latter have made about their work.
45.401 Bioethics and Genetics ResearchCredits: 3
45.402 Feminist Theory PoliticsCredits: 3
45.491 Directed StudiesCredits: 1-4
The student, through regular and frequent consultation with an instructor, pursues a special problem in philosophy, the results of which are presented in a 25-30 page paper.
