Apr 29, 2024  
2019-2020 Catalogue 
    
2019-2020 Catalogue [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Courses


 

 

 

Music

  
  • MUSC 29300 - Practicum I in Music Therapy

    Course Credit: 0.25
    (MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    PRACTICUM I IN MUSIC THERAPY Practical experience with clients in approved institutions, including a musical and behavioral assessment of the group or individual, the development and implementation of ongoing treatment procedures, and evaluation. To be taken in conjunction with MUSC 29100, 29200, and 39400. Required of all B.M.T. (Music Therapy) majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-19100 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 29400 - Practicum II in Music Therapy

    Course Credit: 0.25
    (MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    PRACTICUM II IN MUSIC THERAPY U Practical experience with clients in approved institutions. Continuation of MUSC 29300. Required of all B.M.T. (Music Therapy) majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-29300 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 29500 - Adv Practicum in Music Therapy

    Course Credit: 0.25
    (MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    ADVANCED PRACTICUM IN MUSIC THERAPY Practical experience with clients in approved institutions. Continuation of MUSC 29400. Required of all B.M.T. (Music Therapy) majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-29400 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 30100 - Theory of Music Since 1900

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    THEORY OF MUSIC SINCE 1900 Twentieth century techniques and related sightsinging/keyboard skills. Required of all majors in Music. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-20200; Minimum grade C-; and successful completion of the piano proficiency examination. Annually. [AH]
  
  • MUSC 30200 - Form and Analysis

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    FORM AND ANALYSIS Advanced harmonic, contrapuntal, and structural analysis of all types of musical composition. Required of all B.M. majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-20200 Alternate Years.
  
  • MUSC 30300 - Basic Conducting

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    BASIC CONDUCTING A course designed to introduce the fundamental skills of conducting, including basic symmetric and asymmetric patterns, expressive gestures, cues, fermatas, and the development of independence of the right and left hands. Attention is also given to transposition, instrumental score reading, score preparation, and ensemble rehearsal techniques. Required of all B.M., B.M.E. and B.M.T. majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-10200 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 30400 - Counterpoint

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    COUNTERPOINT Study of the basic polyphonic principles of the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, including species counterpoint, imitation, canon, invertible counterpoint, two- and three-part inventions, and fugue. Required of all B.M. majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-20200 Alternate Years.
  
  • MUSC 30500 - Orchestration

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    ORCHESTRATION A theoretical and practical study of instrumentation and scoring music for various instrumental combinations. Required of B.M. in Composition, and B.M.E. majors. Composition majors should take the course as early as possible. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-20200 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 30600 - Choral Conducting

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC)
    CHORAL CONDUCTING A course devoted to the specific skills and techniques required for choral conductors. Score preparation, gestures, text analysis, diction, and general aspects of good singing are among the several foci of this course. Two class hours per week. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-30300 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 30800 - Acoustic Composition

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    ACOUSTIC COMPOSITION Original writing for various instrumental and vocal media in small and large forms. Emphasis will be placed on acquiring a foundation in the basic compositional techniques and developing an ability to organize musical ideas into logical and homogeneous forms. One hour private lesson per week. Prerequisite: MUSC 10200. May be repeated. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-10200 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 30900 - Electronic Composition

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    ELECTRONIC COMPOSITION Original writing for electronic media. Emphasis will be placed on acquiring a foundation in the basic compositional techniques and developing an ability to organize musical ideas into logical and organic forms. One hour private lesson per week. May be repeated. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-10200, and either MUSC-18000 or MUSC-28000. Alternate Years.
  
  • MUSC 31100 - Seminar in Music Literature

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    SEMINAR IN MUSIC LITERATURE Selected historical studies. Topics have included The Song Cycle, Music of Living Composers, Bach, Haydn, Brahms, Piano Literature, and Romantic Concerto. Required of B.M. (Composition) majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-10200; or permission of the instructor. Annually. [AH, W]
  
  • MUSC 31106 - Music in the Twentieth Century

    Course Credit: 1
    MUSIC IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY This writing-intensive course will provide an overview of European and American art music since 1900. Our goal will be to “hear” the twentieth century’s history through its music. In this period, the composition and reception of classical music was powerfully shaped by tumultuous political events, cultural transformations, technological advances, and increasing global interconnectedness. As composers responded to these changes, they greatly expanded the range and means of musical expression, often in ways that rejected traditional assumptions of music as an art form and social practice. Using a combination of primary and secondary sources, we will examine the historical, cultural, and aesthetic challenges that twentieth-century composers faced and the strategies they adopted to address them. No prior training in music is necessary. [AH, W]
  
  • MUSC 31108 - Seminar in Music: the Romantic Concerto

    Course Credit: 1
    SEMINAR IN MUSIC: ROMANTIC CONCERTO This course will examine eighteen leading concertos of the 19th and very early 20th centuries by Beethoven, Chopin, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, Grieg, Bruch, Saint-Saëns, Tchaikovsky, Dvorak, Rachmaninoff, and Sibelius. Course activities to include listening, reading, discussion, and writing. [AH, W]
  
  • MUSC 31109 - Music & Culture in Fin-De-Siecle Vienna

    Course Credit: 1
    MUSIC AND CULTURE IN THE FIN-DE-SIECLE VIENNA In the years around 1900, a period commonly called the fin de siècle (Fr., end-of-century), Vienna was home to a remarkable concentration of great artists, thinkers, and composers. Their direct interaction, together with the city’s unique socio-political climate, generated a maelstrom of cultural activity that strongly shaped modernist culture in the twentieth century and continues to fascinate scholars and students of arts and letters today. This course will study the music of fin-de-siècle Vienna in relation to its broader social, political, and cultural context. It is also a writing-intensive course that fulfills in part the writing requirement for graduation. It will be conducted as an informal seminar. Class meetings will combine lecture, discussion, and occasional student presentations.
  
  • MUSC 34200 - Pre-K & Elementary Methods

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    METHODS AND MATERIALS FOR TEACHING PRE-K AND ELEMENTARY GENERAL MUSIC This course provides a study of specific methods of delivering standards-based instruction to children, ages 3-12, in pre-school and general music classroom settings. Included is significant use of the National Standards for Arts Education and the Ohio Academic Content Standards in Music. Emphasis is on specific teaching techniques in the implementation of curriculum, classroom procedures and materials, integration of technology, instructional strategies for special needs students, and the use of various assessment strategies. Field experiences in elementary general music and preschool settings are a major component of the course. Required of all B.M.E. majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-29000 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 34300 - Choral Methods

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    METHODS AND MATERIALS FOR TEACHING SECONDARY CHORAL AND GENERAL MUSIC This course addresses the role of choral and general music instruction in secondary public school education, techniques of teaching choral music, and the study of music from various cultures appropriate to students in choral ensembles. Included is significant use of the National Standards for Arts Education and the Ohio Academic Content Standards in Music. Emphasis is on literature selection, specific teaching techniques in the implementation of curriculum, classroom procedures and materials, integration of technology, instructional strategies for special needs students, and the use of various assessment plans. Field experiences in middle and high school choral and general music settings are a major component of the course. Required of all B.M.E. majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-29000 and MUSC-34200
  
  • MUSC 34400 - Instrumental Methods

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    METHODS AND MATERIALS FOR TEACHING INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC This course provides a study of specific methods of delivering instruction in instrumental music, covering band and orchestra instruments. Emphasis is on recruitment and retention of instrumental music students, appropriate teaching techniques for musical and technical concepts for instrumentalists from the beginning years through high school, integration of technology into the instrumental classroom, and differentiation of instruction for all students and especially for those with special needs. Administrative and organizational aspects are also addressed. Field experiences in grades 5-12 instrumental music settings are a major component of the course. Required of all B.M.E. majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-29000 and MUSC-34200
  
  • MUSC 37000 - Vocal Pedagogy

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    VOCAL PEDAGOGY Study of the anatomy and physiology of all singing voices. Examination of materials and methods relative to the vocal instrument. Required of all B.M.E., B.M.T. and B.M. Vocal Performance majors. May be repeated. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-17000; or 2 semesters of MUSC-14000 or MUSC-24000 Alternate Years.
  
  • MUSC 37100 - Instrumental Pedagogy

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    INSTRUMENTAL PEDAGOGY Study of the literature, instructional materials and procedures relative to the teaching of the major instrument. May be repeated. Annually.
  
  • MUSC 37200 - Functional Piano

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    FUNCTIONAL PIANO A course designed to give practical experience in sight-reading, transposition, accompanying, improvisation, and aural dictation, as required for certification to teach in Ohio public schools. Two hours per week. Required of all B.M.E. majors. Prerequisite: completion of all parts of the Piano Proficiency Examination. May be repeated. Annually.
  
  • MUSC 39200 - Psychology of Music I

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    PSYCHOLOGY OF MUSIC Study of the basic principles of musical acoustics and the relationship between the human apparatus of hearing and actual perception of music. Research literature is reviewed for the psychology of musical abilities, emotion and meaning in music, development of musical preference, and behavior of music listeners. Required of all B.M.T. (Music Therapy) majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-19100 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 39300 - Research Seminar in Music Therapy

    Course Credit: 0.5
    (MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    RESEARCH SEMINAR IN MUSIC THERAPY This course provides students with practical exposure to research methods. Students will pursue independent research projects using the critical review of literature completed by them in the preceding course and augmented by instruction in test design and the most common methods of data analysis: correlation, analysis of variance, non-parametric and parametric statistics. Also includes critique of several consumer-oriented periodicals and the benefit of these publications to public education about Music Therapy. Required of all B.M.T. (Music Therapy) majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-39200 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 39400 - Program Development and Administration, In Music Therapy

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC, MUTH)
    PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATION IN MUSIC THERAPY Program planning, scheduling, budgeting, and public relations strategies are main topics. Documentation procedures, including current standards for various types of agencies, and legislative issues relating to Music Therapy practice are also covered. Music Therapy in the milieu approach and the Music Therapist as a member of the treatment team. Structure and function of local, state, and national Music Therapy organizations, including Standards of Practice and Code of Ethics. Required of all B.M.T. (Music Therapy) majors. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-19100
  
  • MUSC 39500 - Special Topics in Music Education

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUED, MUSP, MUTC)
    SPECIAL TOPICS IN MUSIC EDUCATION (Two weeks) This course provides a study of the administrative responsibilities of music educators with a focus on projects that address the specific needs of students enrolled in the course. Topics include but are not limited to contemporary issues in education and music education; educational technology; budget and finance; facilities and equipment; music library and instrument inventory management; travel; design and purchase of uniforms; music support groups; professional development for teachers; philosophical foundations and advocacy; and relationships with parents, administrators, music dealers, and private teachers. Field experience in the student teaching setting is a strong component of the course. Required of all B.M.E. majors. May be repeated. Prerequisite(s): Take MUSC-29000, MUSC-34200, MUSC-34300, and MUSC-34400
  
  • MUSC 40000 - Tutorial

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    TUTORIAL Prerequisite: The approval of both the supervising faculty member and the chairperson is required prior to registration. May be repeated.
  
  • MUSC 40100 - Junior Independent Study

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    JUNIOR INDEPENDENT STUDY A one-semester, creative, individual program of study in music performance, music history and literature, or music theory-composition, corresponding to the student’s degree track. The Junior I.S. in music performance leads to the presentation of a public recital 25-30 minutes in length. The Junior I.S. in music history and literature emphasizes bibliographical and research methods, major library resources, and writing style, and results in a major paper. In music composition the Junior I.S normally consists of at least two pieces in small forms planned for public performance by performers or ensembles available at the College. Junior I.S. projects in music theory yield written analyses of music. Annually.
  
  • MUSC 41000 - Music Therapy Internship

    Course Credit: 0.25
    Maximum Credit: 1
    Music Therapy Internship-A 6 month full-time clinical placement of a nationally approved (AMTA) or university affiliated internship. Students will complete 1010-1040 hours under the supervision of a staff MT-BC. Involves general orientation to the institution, observation of the therapist, and personal involvement in observing, describing, and providing music therapy to clients. Documentation and special research projects are included according to the clinical internship training plan. Application for internship is generally initiated late in the junior year. The internship must be completed within two years of
    completing coursework. All degree coursework must be completed prior to the student beginning the internship. Required of all B.M.T. majors.
  
  • MUSC 45100 - Independent Study Thesis

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    SENIOR INDEPENDENT STUDY–SEMESTER ONE The first semester of the Senior Independent Study, in which the student engages in a creative, individual program of study in music performance, music history and literature, or music theory-composition, corresponding to the student’s degree track, which will be ultimately completed in the second semester of Senior Independent Study. The Senior I.S. in music performance leads to the presentation of a public recital 45-60 minutes in length, with a supporting document of ten pages length in the case of B.A. majors. The Senior I.S. in music history and literature emphasizes bibliographical and research methods, major library resources, and writing style, and results in a major paper at least 60 pages in length. In music composition the Senior I.S normally consists of one composition on a larger scale planned for public performance by performers or ensembles available at the College. Senior I.S. projects in music theory yield written analyses of music at least 60 pages in length. Prerequisite(s): MUSC-40100 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 45200 - Independent Study Thesis

    Course Credit: 1
    (MUSP, MUTC)
    SENIOR INDEPENDENT STUDY–SEMESTER TWO The second semester of the Senior Independent Study project, in which the student engages in and completes a creative, individual program of study in music performance, music history and literature, or music theory-composition, corresponding to the student’s degree track. Prerequisite(s): MUSC-45100 Annually.
  
  • MUSC 49600 - Multiage Student Teaching and Seminar

    Course Credit: 1
    MULTIAGE STUDENT TEACHING AND SEMINAR Placement consists of a full-time, 12-week supervised teaching experience in a local, approved multiage music setting (two different levels, divided among the pre-school, K-6, 7-8, and 9-12 environments). Annually.
  
  • MUSC 49700 - Multiage Student Teaching and Seminar

    Course Credit: 1
    MULTIAGE STUDENT TEACHING AND SEMINAR Placement consists of a full-time, 12-week supervised teaching experience in a local, approved multiage music setting (two different levels, divided among the pre-school, K-6, 7-8, and 9-12 environments). Annually.
  
  • MUSC 49800 - Multiage Student Teaching and Seminar

    Course Credit: 1
    MULTIAGE STUDENT TEACHING AND SEMINAR Placement consists of a full-time, 12-week supervised teaching experience in a local, approved multiage music setting (two different levels, divided among the pre-school, K-6, 7-8, and 9-12 environments). Annually.

Neuroscience

  
  • NEUR 20000 - Introduction to Neuroscience

    Course Credit: 1
    INTRODUCTION TO NEUROSCIENCE This course focuses on basic neuroanatomy, fundamental neuronal physiology and basic research methodology to provide foundational content knowledge related to neuroscience.
  
  • NEUR 38500 - Integrative Neuroscience Seminar

    Course Credit: 1
    INTEGRATIVE NEUROSCIENCE SEMINAR This course is intended for senior Neuroscience majors who have completed all core Neuroscience requirements associated with their track and Junior IS. This course will provide a common experience for all neuroscience majors that will encourage you to integrate coursework across the neuroscience curriculum and approach problems in neuroscience from multiple levels of analysis. We will read, discuss, and critically evaluate primary literature in the field of neuroscience on just one or two focused areas. Annually.
  
  • NEUR 41000 - Internship

    Course Credit: 0.25
    Maximum Credit: 1
    INTERNSHIP ***MUST VISIT REGISTRAR (APEX) TO ADD COURSE*** This course can only be added to your schedule by visiting the Registrar’s Office. If you do not visit the Registrar’s office, you cannot add this course to your schedule. May be repeated. S/NC

Philosophy

  
  • PHIL 10000 - Ethics, Justice, and Society

    Course Credit: 1
    ETHICS, JUSTICE AND SOCIETY Philosophy aims to understand and solve fundamental conceptual problems in all areas of human inquiry. Philosophical reasoning deals with such problems in a systematic and rigorous way. The aim of this course is to introduce the practice of doing philosophy. This course will focus upon questions relating to ethics and political philosophy, and will address methods of argumentation and critical reasoning. Annually. [AH, SJ]
  
  • PHIL 19901 - Intro to Phil Through Film

    Course Credit: 1
    INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY THROUGH FILM This introductory level course pairs classical and contemporary readings in philosophy with filmic treatments of fundamental philosophical problems and positions. Philosophical issues covered in this course will include the nature of knowledge, the problem of perception, theories of justice and morality, the existence and nature of god, and questions regarding the nature of art and aesthetic value both in general and as pertaining to film. Longer films will be screened outside of class, shorter film clips will be shown in class. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 21000 - Jurisprudence: Law & Society

    Course Credit: 1
    JURISPRUDENCE: LAW AND SOCIETY This course examines the nature of law, its relation to coercive power and to morality. How should one define law? In what way should precedent determine the decisions of judges? As well as investigating these classical questions of jurisprudence, it will also study contemporary criticism of legal theory, the relationship of the law to justice, and important legal cases. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 21200 - Race, Gender, and Justice

    Course Credit: 1
    (WGSS)
    RACE, GENDER AND JUSTICE This course examines various historical and contemporary attempts to theorize race and gender and answer the questions ‘what is race?’ and ‘what is gender?’ Further, we will look at the ways in which “race” and “gender” pose problems for traditional conceptions of justice and inquire into the degree to which these problems warrant substantive revision of our favored theories of justice. Authors discussed include W.E.B. DuBois, Alain Locke, Franz Fanon, Anthony Appiah, Iris Marion Young, and Nancy Fraser. [AH, C, D, SJ]
  
  • PHIL 21500 - Biomedical Ethics

    Course Credit: 1
    (NEUR)
    BIOMEDICAL ETHICS This course examines the ethical problems that arise within medicine and health care. Ethical questions relating to the physician-patient relationship, reproductive rights, abortion, AIDS, physician-assisted suicide, patient autonomy, and the allocation of resources are among possible topics to be addressed. [AH, SJ]
  
  • PHIL 21600 - Environmental Ethics

    Course Credit: 1
    (ENVS)
    ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS This course is an examination of the ethical obligations that humans have toward the environment. What is the nature and source of our obligations to animals, plants, and the environment as a whole? Can non-human entities have rights? We will evaluate various approaches to these questions including anthropocentrism, ecocentrism, ecofeminism and agrarianism. Alternate Years. [AH, SJ]
  
  • PHIL 22000 - Logic & Philosophy

    Course Credit: 1
    LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY This course examines the development of formal logic from categorical logic to sentential and predicate logic. In addition, the course evaluates the nature of formal logical systems and the philosophical issues related to them. Such issues include puzzles about sets, conditional statements, induction, contradiction, and the nature of truth and meaning. Annually. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 22100 - Philosophy & the Religious Life

    Course Credit: 1
    (RELS)
    PHILOSOPHY AND THE RELIGIOUS LIFE In one part of this course we will look at traditional issues in the philosophy of religion, the nature of religious experience, classical proofs for the existence of God and the problem of evil. In the second part of the course we will focus on issues in religious language, seeing God, the place of ceremony and liturgy in religious life and religious pluralism. [AH, R]
  
  • PHIL 22200 - Scientific Revolutions & Methodology

    Course Credit: 1
    (NEUR)
    SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTIONS AND METHODOLOGY The traditional view of scientific method, with its emphasis on observation, prediction, falsification, and hypothesis forming, is often thought to be a model of rationality. Yet there have been several conceptual revolutions in science that seem to challenge this view. The course will critically evaluate the scientific method, including empiricist, post-modern, and feminist critiques. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 22300 - Philosophy, Culture, and Education

    Course Credit: 1
    (EDUC)
    PHILOSOPHY, CULTURE, AND EDUCATION The philosophical study of education includes such issues as the formation of knowledge, curriculum rationale, conceptions of human nature, the requirements of citizenship, and the cultivation of intellectual and moral virtues. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 22400 - Art, Love, Beauty

    Course Credit: 1
    (THTD)
    ART, LOVE, AND BEAUTY What is the relationship between the artist, the work of art, and the audience? In this course, we will learn to say something meaningful about different forms of art, such as dance, music, architecture, and visual arts. What is it to appreciate them? What do we see, hear, feel? What is art’s relationship to culture, to perception, to judgment? How do classical theories of aesthetics interface with modern and post-modern views? Alternate Years. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 23000 - East/West Comparative Philosophy

    Course Credit: 1
    (EAST, SAST)
    EAST/WEST COMPARATIVE PHILOSOPHY This course is an examination of fundamental issues in philosophy, focusing on the work of philosophers in the Indian, Chinese, and Western traditions. Special attention will also be given to critical reflection on the project of comparative philosophy. [AH, C, GE, W]
  
  • PHIL 23100 - Indian Philosophy & Its Roots

    Course Credit: 1
    (SAST)
    INDIAN PHILOSOPHY AND ITS ROOTS This course is an examination of the unique Indian tradition of philosophy, including careful study and analysis of the Vedic and Upanishadic inheritance, “Heterodox” developments, such as the Buddhist and Jaina systems, and the “Orthodox” schools of Hindu philosophy, as well as later developments in Indian thought. Each offering of this course will focus on a distinct philosophical theme. [AH, C, W]
  
  • PHIL 25000 - Ancient Philosophy: Plato & Aristotle

    Course Credit: 1
    (AMST, CLST)
    ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY: PLATO AND ARISTOTLE This course examines the major philosophical texts of Ancient Greece and the Presocratic writings out of which they grew. The writings of these philosophers have implications for contemporary politics, education, morality, and knowledge. Annually. [AH, GE]
  
  • PHIL 25100 - Rationalism & Empiricism

    Course Credit: 1
    RATIONALISM AND EMPIRICISM During the period from about 1600 to 1800, modern science emerged, and the Medieval worldview receded. These deep changes led to a re-evaluation of our understanding of knowledge, God, and the human mind. This course focuses on the Empiricist philosophies of Locke, Berkeley, and Hume, and the Rationalism of Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, and Kant. Their work will be used to introduce some crucial debates in philosophy today. Annually. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 26100 - Themes in Continental Philosophy

    Course Credit: 1
    (GERS, GRMN)
    THEMES IN CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY This course focuses on themes in the Continental tradition or style of philosophy from the post-Kantian era to today. The specific focus of the course will vary by offering. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 26400 - Existentialism

    Course Credit: 1
    EXISTENTIALISM The philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre claimed that all existentialist philosophers, whether atheistic or theistic, share the belief that “Existence precedes essence.” By this unifying principle, Sartre meant that we must begin philosophizing by acknowledging the fact of the enigma of existence. In Sartre’s view, the history of philosophy has shown us that philosophical systems attempting to provide the meaning of existence necessarily fail. What philosophy, then will stand in place of failed essentialist philosophy? If life has no discoverable meaning, how should we live? In this course, we will examine primary texts of four existentialist philosophers, who wrestle with these and other questions. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 26600 - American Philosophy

    Course Credit: 1
    AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY This course offers a detailed examination of the central doctrines of two or more of the following American philosophies: transcendentalism, American idealism, pragmatism, and neo-pragmatism. General topics include: (i) the effects of evolutionary theories to our conceptions of reality and truth, (ii) the motivations behind individualism and collectivism, and (iii) melioristic faith in moral and religious ideals. Readings will be drawn from such writers as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Charles Sanders Peirce, William James, Josiah Royce, George Herbert Mead, John Dewey, Jane Addams, Alain Locke, Cornel West, and Richard Rorty. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 29910 - Wittgenstein

    Course Credit: 1
    Wittgenstein Prerequisite(s): Minimum of 2 Philosophy courses
  
  • PHIL 29912 - Ethical Issues in War

    Course Credit: 1
    ETHICAL ISSUES IN WAR An examination of philosophical issues arising from the uses and practices of the military as they relate to advancing to war, operating in war and treating surrendered individuals and nations.
  
  • PHIL 29913 - Phil, Science & Psyc of Intelligence

    Course Credit: 1
    (NEUR)
    PHILOSOPHY, SCIENCE AND PSYCHOLOGY OF INTELLIGENCE This course will examine key episodes in the history of philosophical and scientific thinking about intelligence, including cutting-edge debates in differential psychology and cognitive neuroscience. Topics will include conceptions of the intellect in ancient and modern philosophy, craniometry, IQ testing and the Flynn effect, mental chronometry, fMRI and PET studies of the neural correlates of intelligence, the nature and composition of intelligence(s), and the relationships between intelligence, know-how, rationality, and creativity. Our guiding question throughout will be how various technical notions of intelligence relate to lay talk about people being smart.
  
  • PHIL 29914 - Decolonial Philosophy

    Course Credit: 1
    DECOLONIAL PHILOSOPHY This course examines major texts in decolonial philosophy. Topics to be discussed include: (i) the post-1452 colonization of the “developing world,” (ii) the logic and knowledge/power that turn the natural environment, women, and other subordinated groups into exploitable materials, (iii) the potential of decolonial ecological knowledges and practices, (iv) the possibility of decolonial feminisms across difference, and (v) the conjuring of future decolonial, anti-capitalist modes of being human. Readings may include: Aime Cesaire, Michel Foucault, Sylvia Wynter, Vandana Shiva, Maria Lugones, Chandra Mohanty, Eve Tuck & K. Wayne Yang, and Kyle Powys-Whyte.
  
  • PHIL 30100 - Ontological Commitments

    Course Credit: 1
    ONTOLOGICAL COMMITMENTS Ontology, as part of metaphysics, investigates the general features of what there is, and takes up questions about topics as diverse and central as universals, particulars, space, time, causation, and persistence. This class undertakes a rigorous investigation of the ontological commitments we have - and works toward an understanding of which ones we should have. At the same time, it develops students’ skills in critical interpretation, analysis, argumentation, and expression. Prerequisite: a minimum of two Philosophy courses. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 30200 - Epistemology: Rationality & Objectitivty

    Course Credit: 1
    EPISTEMOLOGY: RATIONALITY AND OBJECTIVITY This course examines the nature and scope of human knowledge. What does it mean to be rational? What is objectivity? Can humans obtain knowledge and truth? We will critically examine answers presented by foundationalism, coherentism, reliabilism, and naturalized epistemology. Prerequisite(s): Take 2 courses from the Philosophy department [AH]
  
  • PHIL 30300 - Understanding Language

    Course Credit: 1
    UNDERSTANDING LANGUAGE What is meaning? How do we understand each other? To what do words refer? Formal theories of meaning and syntax offer one kind of answer to these questions. Other answers focus on communicative behavior and speech acts. Still others focus on the metaphorical use of language and context. We will critically evaluate these different approaches. Prerequisite(s): Take 2 courses from the Philosophy department [AH]
  
  • PHIL 30400 - Philosophy of Mind & Cognitive Science

    Course Credit: 1
    PHILOSOPHY OF MIND AND COGNITIVE What is the relation between the mind and the brain? Is consciousness a neurological function? What are the limits of artificial intelligence? During this century, there has been a dramatic revolution in our understanding of these and other issues. We will follow and critically evaluate some of these changes. Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 2 courses in Philosophy [AH]
  
  • PHIL 31000 - Seminar in Philosophy

    Course Credit: 1
    SEMINAR IN PHILOSOPHY This course is a special topics seminar. The content will vary by offering. Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 2 courses in Philosophy [AH]
  
  • PHIL 31003 - Marx’s Das Capital

    Course Credit: 1
    KARL MARX CAPITAL This class consists in a philosophical reading of Marx’s classic work Capital: A Critique of Political Economy. Our principle aim will be to try to understand Marx’s text on its own terms, and mainly as a philosophical work about political economy. We will also try to understand its relevance for today, and of course assess it critically as a piece of philosophical thinking. This course does not presuppose any previous classes in politics or economics. Prerequisite: A minimum of two Philosophy courses or consent of the instructor. Prerequisite(s): Minimum of 2 Philosophy courses [AH]
  
  • PHIL 31100 - Ethical Theory

    Course Credit: 1
    ETHICAL THEORY In this course, we will examine and compare the main theories of normative ethics (utilitarianism, Deontology, virtue ethics, care ethics) and address contemporary debates in metaethics. A central focus of this course will be on the foundations of moral principles. Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 2 courses in Philosophy Annually. [AH]
  
  • PHIL 31200 - Political Philosophy

    Course Credit: 1
    POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY 

    This course explores longstanding themes and fundamental questions of political philosophy. For example: What are the demands of social justice? What is the nature of and justification (if any) of democracy? What is to be said for reasonable pluralism as a governing ideal? What is the source of the state’s authority to coerce and exclude, if there is any such thing? What is systemic misogyny? What is the nature and justification (if any) of socialism? How should we confront, in thought and action, grave historical injustices linked to present systems of profound yet morally arbitrary disadvantage? How are we to understand the proper relations between our multiform identities and the institutions of our political life?  (A range of arguments and authors confronting some of these questions will be considered. Specific focus varies by instructor.)  Prerequisite: a minimum of two Philosophy courses.  

      Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 2 courses in Philosophy [AH]

  
  • PHIL 40000 - Tutorial

    Course Credit: 1
    TUTORIAL A tutorial course on a special topic offered to an individual student under the supervision of a faculty member. (.25 - 1 course credit) Prerequisite: The approval of both the supervising faculty member and the chairperson are required prior to registration. May be repeated.
  
  • PHIL 40100 - Junior Independent Study

    Course Credit: 1
    JUNIOR INDEPENDENT STUDY A seminar designed to help students further develop their ability to do independent research in philosophy and to write a philosophical thesis. In order to achieve this goal, the course will require students to examine questions about the nature and methodology of philosophy, engage in research using philosophical journals and electronic data bases, deliver oral presentations, participate in peer review of others’ writing, and plan and write a philosophical paper. Annually.
  
  • PHIL 41000 - Philosophy Internship

    Course Credit: 0.25
    Maximum Credit: 1
    INTERNSHIP May be repeated.
  
  • PHIL 45100 - Independent Study Thesis

    Course Credit: 1
    SENIOR INDEPENDENT STUDY–SEMESTER ONE The first semester of the Senior Independent Study project, in which each student engages in creative and independent research guided by a faculty mentor and which culminates in a thesis and an oral examination in the second semester. Prerequisite: PHIL 40100. Prerequisite(s): PHIL-40100 Annually.
  
  • PHIL 45200 - Independent Study Thesis

    Course Credit: 1
    SENIOR INDEPENDENT STUDY–SEMESTER TWO The second semester of the Senior Independent Study project, which culminates in the thesis and an oral examination. Prerequisite: PHIL 45100. Prerequisite(s): PHIL-45100 Annually.

Physical Education

  
  • PHED 10001 - Archery, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    ARCHERY, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 10002 - Archery, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    ARCHERY, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 10101 - Badminton, Beg, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    BADMINTON, BEGINNING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 10102 - Badminton, Beg, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    BADMINTON, BEGINNING, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 10301 - Basic Self Defense, Beg , 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    BASIC SELF DEFENSE, BEGINNING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER
  
  • PHED 10402 - Basic Self Defense, Int, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    BASIC SELF DEFENSE, INTERMEDIATE, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11001 - Fencing, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    FENCING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11101 - Golf, Beg, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    GOLF, BEGINNING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11102 - Golf, Beg, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    GOLF, BEGINNING, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11201 - Golf, Intermediate, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    GOLF, INTERMEDIATE, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11202 - Golf, Intermediate, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    GOLF, INTERMEDIATE, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11501 - Karate, Beg, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    KARATE, BEGINNING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11602 - Karate, Intermediate, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    KARATE, INTERMEDIATE, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11701 - Lawn Games, 1st Half of Semester

    Course Credit: 0.25
    PHED-11701. LAWN GAMES, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER
  
  • PHED 11702 - Lawn Games, 2nd Half of Semester

    Course Credit: 0.25
    LAWN GAMES, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER U
  
  • PHED 11801 - Personal Cond, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    PERSONAL CONDITIONING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11802 - Personal Cond, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    PERSONAL CONDITIONING, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11901 - Personal Cond, Adv, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    PERSONAL CONDITIONING, ADVANCED, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 11902 - Personal Cond, Adv, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    PERSONAL CONDITIONING, ADVANCED, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12001 - Plyometrics, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    PLYOMETRICS, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12002 - Plyometrics, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    PLYOMETRICS, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12201 - Scuba, Beg, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    SCUBA, BEGINNING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12302 - Scuba, Adv, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    SCUBA, ADVANCED, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12402 - Swimming, Beg, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    SWIMMING, BEGINNING, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12601 - Table Tennis, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    TABLE TENNIS, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12602 - Table Tennis, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    TABLE TENNIS, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12701 - Tennis, Beg, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    TENNIS, BEGINNING, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12702 - Tennis, Beg, 2nd Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    TENNIS, BEGINNING, 2ND HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
  
  • PHED 12801 - Tennis, Intermediate, 1st Half

    Course Credit: 0.25
    TENNIS, INTERMEDIATE, 1ST HALF OF SEMESTER Annually.
 

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