PHIL-PHILOSOPHY
– 2005-07
Catalog
Philosophy Department
PHIL 126 Logic and Argumentative Writing (4) GE A3
Principles
of argument analysis, evaluation and construction. Deductive and inductive reasoning,
including analogical arguments, universal and statistical generalizations, and
causal inferences. Principles of organizing and
writing argumentative essays. Moral dimensions of
rational discourse. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Areas A1 and A2.
PHIL 225 Symbolic Logic (4)
The
nature of deductive logical systems.
Methods of notation, translation and proof in the sentential,
predicate and relational calculi including indirect and conditional methods of
proof. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of
GE Area A3.
PHIL 230 Philosophical Classics: Metaphysics
and Epistemology (4)
(Also listed as HNRS 230) GE C2 (Change effective Winter
2007)
Study of
several classic works from the history of philosophy on issues in metaphysics
and epistemology. At least one
will be from the Ancient period, and at least one from the Modern era. No more
than one from the twentieth century. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A.
PHIL 231 Philosophical Classics: Social and
Political Philosophy (4) (Also listed as HNRS 231) GE C2
PHIL 311 Greek Philosophy (4) GE C4
Beginnings of Western
philosophy and science. The Presocratics, Socrates,
Plato, and Aristotle. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and
PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 312 Medieval Philosophy (4) GE C4
Development of Western
philosophy from Augustine to Ockham, including Anselm, Abelard, Roger Bacon,
Bonaventure, Aquinas, and Duns Scotus. 4 lectures.
Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy
majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 313 Continental Philosophy: Descartes to Leibniz
(4) GE C4
Development of Western
philosophy from the late Renaissance through Leibniz, with special emphasis
upon the epistemology and metaphysics of the Continental Rationalists. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 314 British Philosophy: Bacon to Mill (4) GE C4
Development of Western
philosophy from the Renaissance through Mill, with special emphasis on British Empiricism.
4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 315 German Philosophy: Kant to Nietzsche (4) GE C4
Primary issues and
concepts found in German philosophy from 1780 to 1900, with emphasis on Kant,
Hegel, and Nietzsche. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and
PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 316 Contemporary European Philosophy (4) GE C4
Recent movements within
the Continental tradition, including French and German existentialism,
phenomenology, and post-metaphysical philosophy. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not
receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 317 Contemporary British and American Philosophy
(4) GE C4
Major developments within
20th century British and American philosophy, with focus chiefly
around Analytic philosophy. Other schools, such as Pragmatism, may be included,
as may some philosophers outside of
PHIL 320 Asian Philosophy (4) GE C4
Philosophies developed in
PHIL 321 Philosophy of Science (4) GE C4
The rational foundations
of inquiry and explanation in the physical, biological and social sciences.
Justification of scientific claims, the difference between science and
pseudoscience, the relationship between science and other fields of
investigation. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230
or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 331 Ethics (4) GE
C4
Analyses of various
traditional and contemporary positions on the difference between right and
wrong, if there is one. Theories of metaethics and
normative ethics including the divine command theory, relativism, intuitionism,
noncognitivism, virtue ethics, egoism, utilitarianism
and duty-based ethics. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and
PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 332 History of Ethics (4) GE C4
The history of moral
thought from Homer and the Pre-Socratics to the 20th century, and
focus on theories of moral goodness and rightness of action. Related issues and
areas of thought, e.g. metaphysics, theology, science, politics, psychology
freedom/determinism to be considered, where they shed light on moral thought. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 333 Political Philosophy (4) GE C4
Analyses of the philosophical
foundations of political ideologies, including theories of political authority,
legitimacy, obligation, and rights, and of the proper function of the state,
and the relation of these theories to issues in metaphysics, theory of
knowledge, and ethics. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and
PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 334 Philosophy of Law (4) GE C4
Normative and analytic
questions about law. Nature of law and legal systems. Justification of law.
Moral obligation to obey the law. Nature and justification of punishment. Guilt
and legal responsibility. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A,
PHIL 230 or PHIL 231, and POLS 112. Philosophy majors
will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 335 Social Ethics (4) GE C4 USCP
Examination of
contemporary moral problems, solutions to these problems, and the arguments for
these solutions, with emphasis on two or more of the following sample problem
areas: abortion, suicide and euthanasia, capital punishment, family ethics,
race relations, social justice, war, women’s issues. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not
receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 336 Ethics, Gender and Society (4) GE C4 USCP
Critical examination of the
relations between gender, ethnicity, society and ethics from feminist
perspectives, with special attention paid to problems in contemporary applied
ethics. Joint focus on theory and application. 4 lectures. Prerequisite:
Completion of GE Area A and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
PHIL 337 Business Ethics (4) GE C4
Critical examination of
ethical problems that arise in business. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion
of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE
C4 credit.
PHIL 338 Ethics and Education (4) GE C4
Critical discussion of
moral issues as a means to the educational goals of autonomy and freedom.
Critical examination of major ethical theories. Examination of classroom
approaches to discussions of ethical values and moral controversy in education.
4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 339 Biomedical Ethics (4) GE C4
Critical examination of problems
in biomedical ethics, proposed solutions to these problems, and the arguments
for such solutions. Emphasis on two or more of the following sample problem
areas: concepts of health and disease, human experimentation, informed consent,
behavior control, genetic intervention, new birth technologies, euthanasia and
physician-assisted dying. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A,
and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 340 Environmental Ethics (4) GE C4
Analyses of various
positions on the moral status of nonhuman entities and problems such as the
treatment of animals, wilderness preservation, population, pollution and global
warming. 4 lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL
231. Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 342 Philosophy of Religion (4) GE C4
Inquiry into the rational
and nonrational bases of religious claims. Arguments
for and against the existence of God. Discussion of miracles, revelation, the
definition of God, the problem of evil, the relation of faith and reason, the
nature of religious experience, the verification of religious claims. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 350 Aesthetics (4) GE C4
Critical examination of
philosophical views of art from both a historical and contemporary perspective.
Treatment of theories from Plato and Aristotle through those of the twentieth
century. Discussion of the problems raised by modern art. The relation between
aesthetic values and metaphysics, epistemology, ethics and politics. 4
lectures. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A, and PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
Philosophy majors will not receive GE C4 credit.
PHIL 400 Special Problems for Advanced Undergraduates
(1–2)
Individual investigation,
research, studies or surveys of selected problems. Total credit limited to 4
units, with a maximum of 2 units per quarter. Prerequisite: Consent of
department chair.
PHIL 411 Metaphysics (4)
Traditional and current
ideas and arguments about substance, the relation of universals to particulars,
space and time, events, causation and necessity, the self and free will. 3
lectures, research paper. Prerequisite: PHIL 230.
PHIL 412 Epistemology (4)
Analysis of the concept of
knowledge. Development of competing theories of epistemic justification and
truth. Inquiry into relationship between knowledge, belief, justification and
truth. Examination of skepticism. 3 lectures, research paper. Prerequisite:
PHIL 230.
PHIL 421 Philosophy of Space, Time and Matter (4)
Investigation of the
philosophical foundations and interpretation of relativity theory and
elementary quantum mechanics. Emphasis on philosophical issues relevant to contemporary
philosophy of science such as scientific realism. Some discussion of very
recent theories of space, time, and matter. 3 lectures, research paper.
Prerequisite: Completion of Area A and PHIL 230 or PHIL 321.
PHIL 422 Philosophy of Mind (4)
Classic and current work in
the problems and issues of the nature and unity of the self, consciousness,
mental representations, and action, and of the relation of philosophy of mind
to psychology, linguistics and computer science. 3 lectures, research paper. Prerequisite:
PHIL 230 or PHIL 231.
PHIL 429 Special Topics in the History of Philosophy
(4)
Advanced discussion of
selected topics in the history of philosophy. Examination and analysis of
important philosophical movements (e.g., positivism, postmodernism) or
alternatively, of particular philosophers or philosophical works of exceptional
importance (e.g., David Hume; Kant’s Critique
of Pure Reason). Class Schedule
will list topic selected. Total credit limited to 12 units. 3 lectures,
research paper. Prerequisite: PHIL 230.
PHIL 439 Selected Problems in Ethics and Political
Philosophy (4)
Advanced discussion of
selected topics in ethics and political philosophy. Examination and analysis of
significant ethical or political theories (e.g., utilitarianism, contractarianism) or alternatively, of particular
philosophers or philosophical works of exceptional importance (e.g., John
Stuart Mill; John Rawls’ A Theory of
Justice). Class Schedule will
list topic selected. Total credit limited to 8 units. 3 lectures, research
paper. Prerequisite: PHIL 231 and PHIL 331 or PHIL 333.
PHIL 449 Selected Topics in Recent Philosophy (4)
Advanced discussion of
selected topics in recent philosophy. Examination and
analysis of important recent movements in central philosophical areas (e.g.,
metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of science, philosophy of language,
philosophy of mind) or, alternatively, of particular philosophers or
philosophical works of exceptional recent importance. Class Schedule will list topic
selected. Total credit limited to 12
units credit; may be repeated in same term. 3
lectures, 1 research paper. Prerequisite: Completion of GE Area A and PHIL 230.
Change effective
Fall 2006.
PHIL 460, 461 Senior Project I,
II (2) (2)
Selection, development and
completion of a project under faculty supervision. Results presented in a
formal thesis. Minimum of 60 hours per quarter. Requirements for PHIL 460 must
be completed before student can enroll in PHIL 461. Prerequisite: Senior
standing, consent of instructor.
PHIL 470 Selected Advanced Topics (1–4)
Directed group study of
selected topics for advanced students. Class
Schedule will list topics selected. Total credit limited to 8 units. 1–4
lectures. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.