course listing

PHI 101 — Introduction to Philosophy


PHI 200 COURSES — conversing with philosophers

PHI 200 level courses are Field 2 courses that cover a wide range of topics to enrich a sense of the importance and relevance of philosophy.  Each course broadens exposure to issues and deepens appreciation of philosophic analysis.  Many PHI 200 courses have an attribute attached — Ethics, Justice, Diversity, or Global Awareness.  At least one PHI 200 level course is prerequisite for upper level PHI courses.


PHI 201 — Philosophy of the Person
A study of various notions of person, human nature, and the relationship between persons and their natural and social environments.

PHI 205 — Philosophy of Nature & Reality
A study of philosophical notions of nature, treating such topics as substance and universals, change and causality, space, time and infinity, and freedom of the will and determinism.

PHI 211 — Philosophy of Religion
A study of principal contemporary and classical discussions about the existence and nature of God, God’s relationship to the world, the individual, and society.

PHI 221 — Critical Thinking
A study and exercise of forming good judgments for making decisions and for solving problems, considering evidence, context, relevant criteria, and argument theories.

PHI 225 — Logic
An introductory study of logic treating such topics as: deduction; techniques for evaluating reasoning; language and meaning; and various fallacies.

PHI 231 — Thinking, Knowing, and Believing
A study of epistemology, treating concepts and problems of such topics as sense perception, distinguishing knowledge and belief, the roles of necessity, universality, and truth in knowing.

PHI 241 — Ethics: Traditions in Moral Reasoning
A survey of principal traditions in moral reasoning with attention to moral principles and their applications to contemporary social realities.

PHI 242 —Ethical Issues in Business
A study of important concerns in business and market realities with special concern to applying moral principles in decision making.

PHI 243 — Bio-Medical Ethics
A study of important moral issues in relation to current concerns in medicine, medical technology, and the life sciences.

PHI 244 — Environmental Ethics
A study of classical and contemporary moral theories concerning the relationship of human beings to the manifold of their natural surroundings.

PHI 245 — Animal Ethics
An examination of the notion that animals are things, machines, commodities, or resources, and whether sentient beings have intrinsic value and should be respected.

PHI 251 — Love, Friendship & Moral Life
A philosophical study of the relationships among love, friendship, and a moral life that treats individuals in families and society.

PHI 252 — Happiness, Virtue & the Good Life
A study of the role of virtue and vice in the moral life, how they emerge from developments of personal character and relate to meaningful happiness and the good life.

PHI 261 — Philosophy of Law
A study of the nature, sources, and sanctions of law and legal theory, treating concerns of legal positivism, natural law theory, rights and justice, and the relationship between law and morality.

PHI 266 — Philosophy of the Family
A study of traditional and modern notions of the family with attention to challenges to the family in contemporary society.

PHI 267 — Catholic Social Thought
A study of the legacy of Catholic social teaching from official papal encyclicals of Leo XIII to the present, from unofficial vehicles of independent social thinkers and from social forces such as labor unions, journals, political parties, spiritual social justice movements.

PHI 268 — Catholic & Jewish Bioethics
A study of Catholic and Jewish thinkers working with shared values in addressing challenges in clinical medicine such as reproductive technology, beginning and end of life decisions, access to health and rationing.

PHI 271 — Philosophy of Human Rights
A study of various issues of human rights in global perspective to ask if human rights transcend political orders, whether they are universally applicable to all human beings or determined to be culturally relative.

PHI 272 — Gender & Philosophy
A study of feminist theories that analyzes the role that gender plays in society and in the formation of the masculine and feminine subjects; an examination of notions of power, structure and work; and gender as performance and representation.

PHI 273 — Race & Philosophy
A study of philosophical assumptions underlying concepts of race that treats designations of racial identities, the political effects of racial classification, the ethics of race, and the metaphysical legitimacy and social reality of racial designations.

PHI 274—Social & Political Philosophy

PHI 300 COURSES — philosophical challenges

PHI 300 level courses treat issues with greater attention to philosophic analysis and argumentation and expect students especially to demonstrate deeper capacity to compare and contrast the reasoning of different philosophers on a topic or theme.  These courses are consistently more specialized and focus examination on primary texts with special attention to identify and extract the principles and premises underlying a philosopher’s argumentation and then to reconstruct its chain of reasoning.  At least two PHI 300 level courses are prerequisite for PHI 400 courses and senior theses experiences.


SERIES in HISTORY of PHILOSOPHY

SERIES I

PHI 301 — Ancient Philosophy
An examination of principal trends in ancient philosophy in the West from the Preplatonic Greeks through Plato and Aristotle, to the beginning of the Medieval period.

PHI 302 — Medieval Philosophy
An examination of principal trends in Medieval philosophy from St. Augustine in the fifth century up to Renaissance philosophical explorations.

PHI 303 — Early Modern Philosophy
An in depth examination of major thinkers in the modern western philosophical tradition from Descartes to Kant. Renaissance & Enlightenment

SERIES II

PHI 304 — Nineteenth Century Philosophy
A study of principal trends of 19th century European philosophy beginning with Kant and leading up to developments in early 20th century thinking.

PHI 305 — Contemporary Continental Philosophy
An examination of principle philosophic trends emerging in Europe after the 19th century, treating such traditions as phenomenology, critical theory, structuralism, post-structuralism, deconstruction and postmodernism.

PHI 306 — Contemporary Analytic Philosophy
An examination of principal philosophic trends in the Anglo-American world including logical positivism, linguistic analysis, and ordinary language philosophy.


PHI 311 — God & the World

Philosophical exploration of the ways in which belief in divine or spiritual entities influences relations between humans, animals, and the environment.

PHI 312 — Time & Human Experience
What is time? How is it experienced? How does an appreciation of time affect self understanding? This course will explore the nature of time consciousness.

PHI 316 — Philosophy of Mind
A study of the nature of mental phenomena and their connection to behavior, artificial intelligence, personal identity, the mind-body problem, the unity of consciousness, the problem of other minds, action, intention, and the will.

PHI 318 — Indian Philosophy
An examination of different schools of Indian philosophy, including Indian views about dualistic and non-dualistic views of absolute reality relating to materialism and idealism, different moral systems, systems of logic and knowledge.

PHI 319 — Buddhism & Philosophy
A study of the core values and beliefs of Buddhism, making theoretical and practical comparisons between Buddhist ideas and Western ideas.

PHI 321 — Knowledge & Reality
An examination of principal philosophies of nature and being and various philosophic approaches to knowledge and understanding.

PHI 322 — Philosophy of Science
A study of the nature of scientific explanation, scientific method and scientific knowledge, confirmation of hypotheses, distinction between science and metaphysics, the structure and status observation statements, and the ‘unity of science’ thesis.

PHI 325 — Mathematical Logic
Advanced study of formal systems of logic, constructing artificial languages with a syntax, semantics and deduction system.

PHI 361 — The Individual & the State
Examines different conceptions of the relationship between the individual and the state.  Topics addressed will include the nature of power, freedom, justice, and citizenship.

PHI 363 — Catholic Philosophical Traditions
An introduction to Catholic philosophical traditions in metaphysics, epistemology and/or ethics through readings and discussion of figures and movements that span multiple historical periods – the Patristic era, the medieval era, the modern era, and the 20th Century.

PHI 367 — Advanced Topics in Catholic Philosophy
An examination of the philosophical principles underlying modern Catholic philosophy in dialog with contemporary political philosophies such as communitarianism, neo-liberalism, Marxism.

PHI 371 — Concepts of Race & Post Colonial Theory
Course will explore the ways in which concepts of race influence the construction of identity, foster rationales for the distribution of resources, and contribute to American and international social movements.

PHI 372 — Philosophy of Identity & Difference
Explores metaphysical, ethical, political, and social issues concerning sex/gender identity.

PHI 376 — Marx & Marxism
A study of classic texts of Marx, Engels, and Lenin and their influences on later 19th century and contemporary philosophy.

PHI 378 — Jewish Philosophers of German Ancestry
A study of some prominent Jewish philosophers who played an important role in the intellectual life of Germany from the 18th century until the beginning of the Nazi era.

PHI 387 — Phenomenology and Existentialism
A study of existential and phenomenological thought including views of the self, relationships to world, other people and God, responsibility, intentionality, and phenomenological method.

PHI 388 — Diasporic Philosophy
Investigates the philosophical heritage expressed in diasporic intellectual and social movements, treating thinkers in Latin America, Caribbean, and Africana traditions.

PHI 389 — Philosophy & Psychoanalysis
A study of the confrontation of the phenomenological and psychoanalytical notions of the development and structure of the subject and its desires, ethics, traumas, and confrontation with society.

PHI 392 — American Philosophy
A study of principal trends in American thinking with special focus on the pragmatic philosophers.

PHI 395 — Problems in Aesthetics
A critical examination of select problems in contemporary controversies in aesthetics treating the intersections of personal and social values and the production of art.

PHI 396 — Philosophy & Literature
A study of philosophical themes as expressed in literary texts to examine the propriety of literature as a medium for expressing philosophical ideas, and textual interpretation.

PHI 397 — Philosophy & Film
An examination of the basic issues in the philosophy of film, including its nature and social function as well as film's relation to authors, aesthetics, narratives, emotions and theories.

PHI 399 — Capstone Philosophy Thesis
A course recommended for students in the Hypatian or Associate programs and open to students in any major or minor program.  This course caps a student’s intellectual and philosophical studies by developing a thesis over a semester that results in a written project using both primary and secondary sources.  While a student works closely with a faculty advisor, most of the work is self-directed.  Often a capstone project has an oral component by which a student presents his or her work to the faculty.


PHI 400 COURSES — philosophical synthesis

PHI 400 level courses engage students in using their analytic skills to synthesize, evaluate, and critique philosophic discourse, especially to grasp the logico-philosophic consequences of foundational principles of human nature, being, nature, and society.  Students demonstrate mature understanding of philosophic analysis in scholarly papers, theses, or other appropriate projects.


PHI 401 — Seminar on Ancient Philosophy

PHI 402 — Seminar on Medieval Philosophy

PHI 403 — Seminar on Modern Philosophy

PHI 404 — Seminar on Contemporary Philosophy

PHI 405 — Seminar on Topics in Metaphysics

PHI 406 — Seminar on Topics in Epistemology

PHI 407 — Seminar on Topics in Ethics

PHI 408 — Seminar on Topics in Aesthetics

PHI 409 — Seminar on Topics in Social & Political Philosophy

PHI 451 — Senior Thesis — a capstone experience
An Ignatian Scholar successfully completes a senior thesis.  This is a culminating experience by which a student expresses mature habits of self-directed study, critical analysis, with an ability to integrate knowledge beyond the expectations of a seminar paper.  A senior thesis addresses a select philosophic topic and is especially concerned with philosophic argumentation.  An Ignatian Scholar demonstrates ability to exercise appropriate research methods, to provide critical assessment of issues, to assess theoretical presuppositions underlying a discourse, and to advance well-constructed argumentation.  A senior thesis ought to exhibit the values of the department mission.

PHI 499— Directed Readings in Philosophy