
CURRENT COURSES
Spring 2009
PHI 333 Philosophy of Love and Sexuality - Dr. Rempel
This course is designed to serve as an introduction to the philosophy of love
and sexuality via classic texts by a handful of philosophers, religious thinkers,
poets, psychologists, etc. We will consider such matters as the nature and
origin of both love and sexuality; the relationship between love, sexuality,
and marriage; Christian love, feminist perspectives on love, etc.
PHI 372 - Philosophy of Religion - Dr. Holley
This course is a survey of philosophical reflection about religion. Topics
include the nature of ultimate reality, arguments for God's existence, the
problem of evil, non-evidential justifications of religious belief, religious
experience, life after death, and religious diversity. We will consider and
discuss ideas of historical and contemporary philosophers from both Eastern
and Western traditions on these topics as we explore the issues and try to
arrive at defensible positions of our own. The primary text is Andrew Eshleman,
ed., Readings in Philosophy of Religion: East Meets West, Blackwell
Publishing, 2008.
PHI 480 - Philosophical Discourse - Dr. Holley
This class is a capstone course for philosophy majors, focusing on preparing
and presenting philosophical work. In the course we will deal with such issues
as philosophical research, philosophical concepts and methods, the writing
process, and communicating philosophical ideas to professional and lay audiences.
During the course students will prepare a major paper as if for journal submission.
They will present a version of their work on the paper topic as they would
to a philosophic audience, and they will do a class presentation demonstrating
their ability to explain a philosophic issue to introductory students. Students
will share their work with the class at various stages and go through an extensive
critique and revision process. The topic for the class paper is in the area
of morality and self-interest. We will be reading some philosophical writing
on this issue that should serve to stimulate thinking, to initiate the research
process, and to exemplify various aspects of the nature of philosophic writing.
PHI 758 - Philosophy of Biology - Smithka and Curry
This course is about the nature of biological science. Basic notions such
as hypotheses, theories, laws, models, perception, knowledge, evidence, falsification,
the nature of truth, teleology, etc., are explored under major biological
topics including the nature of life, ecology, systematics, developmental biology,
and evolutionary theory. The course will contain some lecture components but
will be largely group discussion. The course is team-taught by Paula Smithka
(Philosophy) and Kenneth Curry (Biological Sciences) on TR 2:25-3:40.
REL 424/524 Religion and Healing - Dr. Capper
This course studies several examples of religious healing practices found
in ethnographic literature. Emphasis will be placed on understanding indigenous
theories and practices of illness and cure within the context of wider social
systems and processes. Classic Western theories of religious healing such
as those of Freud, Jung, Turner, and Lévi-Strauss will be explored along with
the ethnographic material, allowing us to create a dialogue between indigenous
and academic theories of religious healing. The approach will be interdisciplinary,
drawing from psychology, anthropology, and religious studies. Students should
leave the course with a better understanding of issues regarding human curing
and transformation, the roles of myths and rituals within cultures, the roles
of dreams for individuals and societies, and the applicability of Western
modalities to non-Western cultures.
REL 445 Islam and Politics - Dr. Hardman
This course will offer the student an historical approach to Islamic thought
from the end of the 18th century to our times. Two of the basic themes that
arise are Islam and Modernity. We will begin with
a brief attempt to come to grips with both concepts before proceeding to an
historical survey of 19th and 20th century thought. We will finish with an
examination of some contemporary views of the Islam and the future. By the
end of the course, the student should be able to appreciate the complexity
of Islam(s) and the vitality of Muslim approaches to contemporary issues.
REL 480 Senior Capstone in Eastern orthodox Christianity
- Dr. Slagle
This capstone course is an introduction to the history, doctrine, and ritual
complexes of Eastern Orthodox Christianity from its beginnings in the early
church to the present. Particular attention will be paid to the cultural and
devotional aspects of Orthodox belief and practice such as its iconography,
liturgy, and rich monastic and ascetic heritages. The development and interplay
of Orthodoxy's many national churches including the Greek, Russian, and Serbian
as well as those comprising the growing Orthodox "diaspora" in North
America and Western Europe will be highlighted in this course.
Fall 2009
PHI 412/512 Modern Philosophy - Dr. Bruton
This class is an introduction to one of the most important periods of western
philosophy - the "modern" period, defined roughly as 1600 - 1800. Significant
figures to be discussed include Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz (the "rationalists"),
Locke, Berkeley, and Hume (the "empiricists"), and Kant, who is often regarded
as having synthesized insights from the rationalist and empiricist traditions.
The emphasis will be on these thinkers' metaphysics and epistemology. Specific
topics include: the self, God, knowledge of the external world, free will,
and causation.
PHI 450 /550 Existentialism - Dr. Rempel
This course is designed to serve as an Introduction to Existentialism via
the study of classic philosophical and literary texts by Dostoevsky, Kierkegaard,
Nietzsche, Sartre, de Beauvoir, Camus and Frankl. We will also examine several
cinematic depictions of existential themes. Topics to be considered will include:
Freedom, Absurdity, Responsibility, Faith, Death, Authenticity, the Self,
Woman, Morality, God, and Religion.
PHI 480 Philosophical Discourse - Dr. Holley
This class is a capstone course for philosophy majors, focusing on preparing
and presenting philosophical work. In the course we will deal with such issues
as philosophical research, philosophical concepts and methods, the writing
process, and communicating philosophical ideas to professional and lay audiences.
During the course students will prepare a major paper as if they were doing
a submission to a philosophical journal. They will present a version of their
work on the paper topic as they would to a philosophic audience, and they
will do a class presentation demonstrating their ability to explain a philosophic
issue to introductory students. Students will share their work with the class
at various stages and go through an extensive critique and revision process.
Specific tasks along the way will allow students to demonstrate competency
in using computers, as it relates to philosophical research and writing.
REL 303 Introduction to Islam - Dr. Hardman
This course looks at the development of Islam as both an historical and a
spiritual phenomenon that has both shaped and been shaped by its intellectual
and physical environment. We begin with an exploration of the life and circumstances
of the Prophet Muhammad and the emergence of Islam as a distinct monotheistic
tradition. We then trace the development of the faith in light of the emergent
events that create both orthodoxies and heterodoxies, with special attention
to Islamic philosophy, science and mysticism. The final part of the examines
the major cultural spheres of the "Islamic World" in Arabia, Turkey,
Persia and India, culminating in the interaction of Islam with colonialism
and the West and the various strands of "modernist" movements.
REL 320 Tibetan Religions - Dr. Capper
This course explores the traditional Tibetan cultural dialogue between folk
religiosity, the Bön religion, Islam, and Buddhism. These four interpenetrating
religious styles are highlighted primarily within a religious-historical survey
from pre-Buddhist Tibet to the present. Complementing this historical approach
is a more typological one, singling out aspects for investigation such as
shamanism and spirit possession, Tantric Buddhist theory and practice, reincarnate
leaders, models of sainthood, devotionalism, and magic and divination.
REL 326 Religions of India - Dr. Capper
India, one of the great cradles of religion in the world, offers an unrivaled
environment of religious diversity and intensity. This course studies this
environment by examining ancient Indian religion, Zoroastrianism, Hinduism,
Buddhism, Jainism, Islam, Sikhism, and Christianity.
REL 335 The Life of Jesus - Dr. Slagle
This course is a cultural and historical exploration of the different portraits
of Jesus of Nazareth produced and circulated from the first to the twenty-first
centuries. Beginning with the political and religious context for the "historical
Jesus," we will study how authors of the New Testament, extra-canonical
Christian literatures, church doctrine as well as modern scholarship responded
to cultural expectations and pressures in crafting their various, often conflicting,
portrayals of Jesus. In this course, special attention will be paid to the
place of Jesus in non-Christian religions as well the different Jesuses that
appear in art and film.
REL 350 Religion and Violence - Dr. Eickelmann
This course addresses the global phenomena of religiously motivated violence
by tracing its history, assessing the current situation and considering prospects
for the future.
Spring 2009
PHI 151 Introduction to Philosophy - Dr. Floyd
What is knowledge? What is the difference between truth and justification?
How do you determine what is real? What does it mean for something to be real
in the first place? How ought one to live? What really matters in life? These
are the kinds of questions that students will explore in this introductory
course focused on philosophical ideas about knowledge, reality and value.
Other topics may include free will, the existence of God, personal identity,
and faith and reason.
PHI 171 Ethics and Good Living - Dr. Rempel
In this course we will consider questions such as: What kinds of choices are
"moral" choices, and how can we best make moral choices? Who decides
if a behavior is "moral" or "immoral"? Why should I follow
moral rules? Is morality a matter of the head, the heart, or both? What is
"conscience" and where does it come from? Does following my conscience
necessarily mean I do the right thing? What gives life meaning? What qualifies
as a "good life"?
PHI 253 Logic - Dr. Smithka
Developing good critical thinking skills is useful for clarity of reasoning
and evaluating the views of others both in philosophical studies and everyday
life. In Logic, students will learn the importance of having evidence or reasons
to support one's views, how to evaluate arguments for their strength and cogency,
and how to construct good arguments. Students will not only learn what constitutes
a good/strong argument, but will also examine common mistakes in reasoning.
The reasoning skills that students begin to develop by taking a logic course
will aid them in whatever academic or professional directions they choose.
PHI 372 - Philosophy of Religion - Dr. Holley
This course is a survey of philosophical reflection about religion. Topics
include the nature of ultimate reality, arguments for God's existence, the
problem of evil, non-evidential justifications of religious belief, religious
experience, life after death, and religious diversity. We will consider and
discuss ideas of historical and contemporary philosophers from both Eastern
and Western traditions on these topics as we explore the issues and try to
arrive at defensible positions of our own. The primary text is Andrew Eshleman,
ed., Readings in Philosophy of Religion: East Meets West, Blackwell Publishing,
2008.
PHI 407/507 The Critique of Christendom - Dr. Rempel
Towards the end of their careers, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Freud all turned
increasing attention to religion in general, and Christianity in particular.
This course will focus on the very different critiques of Christianity and
Christian belief advanced by these three thinkers. We will also examine like-minded
texts by Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, and Marx.
PHI 411/511 MUS 411/511 - Philosophy of Music - Dr. Bruton
This class examines various answers to two broad and deceptively simple questions:
What is music?, and Why does it matter? Works of music - unlike paintings
or sculptures, which can be identified with particular physical objects -
seem elusive. Is a musical work an idea in the composer's mind, a score, a
performance, or something else?
Moreover, since music lacks obvious semantic content, how can it be meaningful?
Many have answered this question by appealing to the relationship between
music and the emotions, but the precise nature of this relationship is puzzling
and controversial. One need not be sad to write or perform sad music, for
example, and neither does sad music necessarily make its listeners sad. Music
matters to us partly because it can be really good, but what makes music good,
and how can evaluative judgments about music be justified? Although much that
has been written about the philosophy of music focuses on classical music,
the questions raised in the class will also be applied to jazz, pop and rock.
PHI 480 - Philosophical Discourse - Holley
This class is a capstone course for philosophy majors, focusing on preparing
and presenting philosophical work. In the course we will deal with such issues
as philosophical research, philosophical concepts and methods, the writing
process, and communicating philosophical ideas to professional and lay audiences.
During the course students will prepare a major paper as if for journal submission.
They will present a version of their work on the paper topic as they would
to a philosophic audience, and they will do a class presentation demonstrating
their ability to explain a philosophic issue to introductory students. Students
will share their work with the class at various stages and go through an extensive
critique and revision process. The topic for the class paper is in the area
of morality and self-interest. We will be reading some philosophical writing
on this issue that should serve to stimulate thinking, to initiate the research
process, and to exemplify various aspects of the nature of philosophic writing.
PHI 735 - Research Ethics and Skills - Dr. Bruton
This is a 1 hour class focusing on the ethics of academic research. It will
meet once a week for 6 sessions (1 hr. and 45 minutes each) followed by a
final. The readings and class discussions will be oriented towards the sciences;
topics will include research misconduct, conflicts of interest, whistleblowing,
intellectual property, collaborative research and mentoring. Students will
be required to take a final exam, write a short (4-5 page paper) and complete
a small number of short writing assignments.
REL 432/532 - Mysticism - Dr. Capper
Mysticism might be defined as the direct experience of ultimate sacredness
and the doctrines and techniques designed to foster such experience. Mystical
practices are central to many different religious traditions and are found
all over the world. This Religion capstone course will explore some of these
mystical practices and experiences as found in anthropological literature.
An interdisciplinary approach that combines anthropology with religious studies
perspectives regarding mysticism will be pursued. Goals of the class include
defining mysticism, gaining an appreciation for the wide variety of mysticisms
found in the religions of the world, and understanding the roles of these
different forms of mysticism within their respective religious and cultural
contexts.
Fall 2008
PHI 333 Philosophy of Love and Sexuality - Dr. Rempel
This course is designed to serve as an introduction to the philosophy of love
and sexuality via classic texts by a handful of philosophers, religious thinkers,
poets, psychologists, etc. We will consider such matters as the nature and
origin of both love and sexuality; the relationship between love, sexuality,
and marriage; Christian love, feminist perspectives on love, etc.
PHI 451/551 - Philosophy of Politics - Dr. Bruton
This class examines classic and contemporary discussions of some of the central
questions in political philosophy, such as: What justifies state authority?
Why should one obey the law? What are the limits of legitimate state regulation?
What is justice? What kind of political equality is morally defensible and
desirable? We will also consider several "applied" topics; for example,
issues connected to the "war on terror."
PHI 458/558 Symbolic Logic - Dr. Smithka
In this course we will study the aspects of all languages, namely, the syntax,
semantics, and pragmatics, but in particular as they apply to formal languages
in logic. The course incorporates some proof theory, i.e., deriving conclusions
from premises, in two different, but compatible, formal language systems.
Thus, there is "formalism" in the course, but we also focus on the
philosophy of logics. We will also ask interesting philosophical questions
about formal systems, such as: How does one generate a formal system? Can
logic lead us to falsity? What is the nature of logical thought? Are logical
systems decidable and complete? How does a formal logical system deal with
fictional beings? No previous logical experience required! We will be beginning
at the beginning.
REL 303 Introduction to Islam - Dr. Speegle
This course examines the development of Islam from its origins in sixth-century
Arabia to its various manifestations in the modern world. Classical Islamic
civilization will be our initial focus. After delving into the sacred biography
of the Prophet Muhammad and the Qur’an, Islam’s Holy Scriptures, we will study
the rise of an Islamic Empire over much of Asia and Africa. The diverse academic,
aesthetic, and devotional paths through which medieval Muslims interpreted
their religious heritage will then be addressed. The conflicts, accommodations,
and syntheses that emerged when Arab Islam encountered other cultures will
be our next broad rubric of inquiry. We will then study Islam in non-Arab
societies, paying special attention to the case of Islam in the African-American
community. Finally, Islam’s encounter with modern Europe will be discussed.
REL 322 Native American Religions - Dr. Capper
This class pursues an introductory understanding of the different myths, concepts
of the sacred, religious practices, and lifestyles found among indigenous
North American peoples. Emphasis will be placed on the varieties of traditional
religious experiences, including shamanism, art, ceremonies, vision quests,
and dances, as well as cultural backgrounds of these experiences. Issues arising
from contact between traditional forms of religiosity and Euroamerican culture
will also be addressed. Readings include secondary academic resources and
Native American primary texts. Students should come armed with healthy curiosity
about and respect for others ways of life.
REL 334 The New Testament - Dr. Slagle
This course is an historical study of the contents and development of the
New Testament within their social and religious contexts. Through a close
examination of the New Testament itself in addition to relevant pagan, Jewish,
and extra-canonical Christian literatures, we will investigate the ways in
which the New Testament came to be forged against a backdrop of multiple,
competing Christianities. We will pay particular attention to the varied and
evolving ways in which early Christian writers understood and portrayed the
figure of Jesus as well as interpreted the Jewish origins of their religion.
The life and teachings of the Apostle Paul in addition to early Christian
attitudes towards women and the body will also stand as significant course
themes.
REL 430/530 Buddhism - Dr. Capper
This course offers an introductory survey of Buddhist religion and culture.
Topics discussed include the birth of Buddhism in India, essential Buddhist
philosophical positions, historical transmission to other countries, basic
institutions, doctrinal schools, various practices such as meditation and
devotion, concepts of sainthood, and the transmission of Buddhism to the West.
Effort will be made to ground local manifestations of Buddhism in their respective
social and cultural environments. Readings include Western secondary scholarship,
ethnographic accounts, and Buddhist sacred texts. This course might appeal
to students in religion, philosophy, anthropology, history, or international
studies. Prerequisite: Religion 131.
Spring 2008
PHI 635 Ethics Seminar - Dr. Bruton
This class focuses on three great traditions in ethical theorizing: 1) virtue
ethics, 2) consequentialism, and 3) deontology. We will begin by exploring
Aristotles Nicomachean Ethics, the most important text in the
virtue ethics tradition. Next, we will examine J.S. Mills classic Utilitarianism.
Finally, we will focus on Kants seminal Groundwork Metaphysics of
Morals, a work which articulates what is often taken to be the most philosophically
significant deontological view. All three texts have had an extraordinary
influence on philosophical ethics in the Western tradition and continue to
shape contemporary debates.
PHI 735 Research Ethics and Skills - Dr. Bruton
This is a 1 hour class focusing on the ethics of academic research. It will
meet once a week for 6 sessions (1 hr. and 45 minutes each) followed by a
final. The readings and class discussions will be oriented towards the sciences;
topics will include research misconduct, conflicts of interest, whistleblowing,
intellectual property, collaborative research and mentoring. Students will
be required to take a final exam, write a short (4-5 page paper) and complete
a small number of short writing assignments.
PHI 658 Philosophy of Biology - Dr. Smithka
In this graduate-level course we will investigate topics that address life,
ecology, systematics, developmental biology, and evolution. Among the questions
we will ask are: What is life? Does the concept of 'artificial life' make
sense? Exactly what constitutes a niche? What is 'a species'? What is the
unit of evolution, if there is one? The course will contain some lecture components,
but will be largely group discussion. It is a team-taught course by Paula
Smithka (Philosophy) and Kenneth Curry (Biological Sciences) and meets TR
2:25-3:40.
PHI 436/536 Aesthetics - Dr. Smithka
'Aesthetics' is the philosophy of art and beauty. In this class, we will investigate
the various connections and "disconnects" between the artwork, artist,
and "perceiver." Some of the questions we will investigate include:
What constitutes art? What are the standards for beauty, if there are any?
What is the nature of 'the aesthetic'? Does the artist's intention matter?
Does art convey truth? Can one have an aesthetic experience of nature, or
only of human-made art? How does the horrific, the ugly, and the grotesque
figure in "art"? This class will include some lecture components,
but will largely be discussion oriented. The course is taught by Paula Smithka
and meets Wednesdays, 3:30-6:15.
REL 424/524 Religion and Healing - Dr. Capper
This course studies several examples of religious healing practices found
in ethnographic literature. Emphasis will be placed on understanding indigenous
theories and practices of illness and cure within the context of wider social
systems and processes. Classic Western theories of religious healing such
as those of Freud, Jung, Turner, and Lévi-Strauss will be explored along with
the ethnographic material, allowing us to create a dialogue between indigenous
and academic theories of religious healing. The approach will be interdisciplinary,
drawing from psychology, anthropology, and religious studies. Students should
leave the course with a better understanding of issues regarding human curing
and transformation, the roles of myths and rituals within cultures, the roles
of dreams for individuals and societies, and the applicability of Western
modalities to non-Western cultures.
Fall 2007
PHI 412/512 Modern Philosophy - Dr. Bruton
This class is an introduction to one of the most important periods of western
philosophy - the "modern" period, defined roughly as 1600 - 1800. Significant
figures to be discussed include Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz (the "rationalists"),
Locke, Berkeley, and Hume (the "empiricists"), and Kant, who is often regarded
as having synthesized insights from the rationalist and empiricist traditions.
The emphasis will be on these thinkers' metaphysics and epistemology. Specific
topics include: the self, God, knowledge of the external world, free will,
and causation.
PHI 656 Seminar in Philosophy of Science - Dr. Smithka
There is a commonly held view that the nature and practice of science is "cut
and dried." In other words, science gives us exactly one right picture
of the world and that scientific theories are not up for debate. The philosophical
side of science shows otherwise. Scientists employ different methodologies,
prefer different explanatory models, argue about the nature of scientific
theories and which ones should be chosen among rivals, and even have different
views regarding the nature of reality. In this seminar, we shall investigate
this philosophical side of science, addressing such questions as: What is
the nature of experimental (empirical) evidence and how does it relate to
scientific theories? What criteria are used for choosing among rival scientific
theories and explanations? What is scientific knowledge and is there only
one such "body of knowledge"? Do scientific theories give us "the
truth" about the world or are they pragmatic means for understanding
the phenomena around us? In addition, we will investigate some areas of applied
philosophy of science, such as philosophy of biology, philosophy of physics,
and philosophy of psychology.
PHI 333 The Philosophy of Love and Sexuality - Dr. Rempel
This course is an introduction to the philosophy of love and sexuality via
the study of classic texts by a handful of philosophers, religious thinkers,
poets, psychologists, etc. We will consider such matters as the nature and
origin of both love and sexuality; the relationship between love, sexuality,
and marriage; Christian love, romantic love, feminist perspectives on love,
etc.
REL 446 Women in Islam - Dr. Wagner
Some argue that women are the primary focus of the ongoing clash between Islam
and the West. This course will address Muslim views of women and gender. We
will begin by examining scripture (Quran), religious law (shariah)
and early Islamic history with an eye towards the changing roles of women.
We will then address the attitudes towards women espoused by reformers in
Egypt, Iran, and South Asia. Contemporary Islamic political groups efforts
to enshrine their views of women in law will be a recurring theme in this
course, as will the question of the universality or cultural specificity of
feminism. The course will construct its picture of womens status in
the Islamic world using religious, legal, historical, cinematic, and novelistic
sources in translation.
REL 447 Dreams in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam - Dr.
Wagner
Dreams are a facet of human experience as mysterious to modern people as they
were to people in antiquity and the Middle Ages. Dreams occupy a prominent
place in the religious imaginations of Judaism, Christianity and Islam where
they were seen as potential means for communication with the divine. In this
class, students will learn to distinguish between dreams, their representation,
and theories of dreaming. The course will focus on the dreams of medieval
Jews, Christians, and Muslims, as described in primary sources in translation.
In order to understand such dreams and their context, we will study influential
theories of dreams and dreaming, including those of Freud, Aristotle, and
modern science. The subject matter is perhaps unique in that it will allow
students to apply these theories, as well as the writings of medieval people
about their dreams and ideas about dreams, to their own dreams. This is a
capstone course for the religion major. As such it involves substantial writing
assignments and two oral presentations.
REL 320 Tibetan Religions - Dr. Capper
In this course we examine some of the varieties of religious forms found in
Tibetan culture areas following historical, anthropological, and philosophical
approaches. We will explore the traditional Tibetan cultural dialogue between
folk religiosity, the Bön religion, Islam, and Buddhism. These four interpenetrating
religious styles are highlighted primarily within a religious-historical survey
from pre-Buddhist Tibet to the present. Prerequisite: REL 131.
Spring 2007
REL 334 The New Testament - Dr. Eickelmann
This course provides the beginning student with a historical and literary
survey of the New Testament, including its composition and compilation. Specific
areas to be covered will be the synoptic problem, the quest for the historical
Jesus, the process of canonization, early forms of Christian mysticism and
the challenge of Gnosticism. In addition, the student will become familiar
with the varying theological themes present in the New Testament.
REL 350 Religion and Violence - Dr. Eickelmann
This course addresses the global phenomena of religiously motivated violence
by tracing its history, assessing the current situation and considering prospects
for the future.
PHI 735 Research Ethics and Skills - Dr. Bruton
This class focuses on the ethics of academic research. While it would be of
interest to any graduate student involved in research, the readings and class
discussions tend to be oriented towards the sciences and social sciences.
It may be taken for either 1 or 3 credit hours. Students taking the course
for 1 credit hour study the topics of research misconduct, conflicts of interest,
whistleblowing, intellectual property and mentoring, and are required to take
the midterm exam, write a short paper (4-5 pages) and complete several short
writing assignments. Students taking the course for 3 credit hours study (in
addition to the previously mentioned topics) human subjects experimentation,
animal experimentation and genetics, and are expected to complete a midterm,
final exam and a term paper in addition to several short writing assignments.
The class regularly features provocative discussions, guest speakers, interesting
in-class group assignments, and students from a variety of academic disciplines.
PHI 333 Philosophy of Love and Sexuality - Dr. Rempel
This course is designed to serve as an introduction to the philosophy of
love and sexuality via classic texts by a handful of philosophers, religious
thinkers, poets, psychologists, etc. We will consider such matters as the
nature and origin of both love and sexuality; the relationship between love,
sexuality, and marriage; Christian love, feminist perspectives on love,
etc.
REL 430/530 Buddhism - Dr. Capper
This course offers an introductory survey of Buddhist religion and culture.
Topics discussed include the birth of Buddhism in India, essential Buddhist
philosophical positions, historical transmission to other countries, basic
institutions, doctrinal schools, various practices such as meditation and
devotion, concepts of sainthood, and the transmission of Buddhism to the
West. Effort will be made to ground local manifestations of Buddhism in
their respective social and cultural environments. Readings include Western
secondary scholarship, ethnographic accounts, and Buddhist sacred texts.
This course might appeal to students in religion, philosophy, anthropology,
history, or international studies. Prerequisite: Religion 131.
Fall 2006
PHI 451/551 Philosophy of Politics - Dr. Bruton
This class examines classic and contemporary discussions of some of the central
questions in political philosophy, such as: What justifies state authority?
Why should one obey the law? What are the limits of legitimate state regulation?
What is justice? What kind of political equality is morally defensible and
desirable? We will also consider several issues connected to the ongoing "war
on terror," such as the moral justifiability of the Bush doctrine of
"preventive" war and state sponsored torture.
PHI 458/558 Symbolic Logic - Dr. Smithka
In this course we will study the aspects of all languages, namely, the syntax,
semantics, and pragmatics, but in particular as they apply to formal languages
in logic. The course incorporates some proof theory, i.e., deriving conclusions
from premises, in two different, but compatible, formal language systems.
Thus, there is "formalism" in the course, but we also focus on the
philosophy of logics. We will also ask interesting philosophical questions
about formal systems, such as: How does one generate a formal system? Can
logic lead us to falsity? What is the nature of logical thought? Are logical
systems decidable and complete? How does a formal logical system deal with
fictional beings? No previous logical experience required! We will be beginning
at the beginning.
PHI 460/560 Contemporary Philosophical Issues: The Modern
Critique of Christendom - Dr. Rempel
Towards the end of their careers, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Freud all turned
increasing attention to religion in general, and Christianity in particular.
This course will focus on the very different critiques of Christianity and
Christian belief advanced by these three thinkers. We will also examine like-minded
texts by Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, and Russell. Though the majority of readings
will be drawn from the continental philosophical tradition, the analytic tradition
will not be ignored.
PHI 480 Philosophical Discourse - Dr. Holley
This class is a capstone course for philosophy majors, focusing on preparing
and presenting philosophical work. In the course we will deal with such issues
as philosophical research, philosophical concepts and methods, the writing
process, and communicating philosophical ideas to professional and lay audiences.
During the course students will prepare a major paper as if for journal submission.
They will present a version of their work on the paper topic as they would
to a philosophic audience, and they will do a class presentation demonstrating
their ability to explain a philosophic issue to introductory students. Students
will share their work with the class at various stages and go through an extensive
critique and revision process. Specific tasks along the way will allow students
to demonstrate competency in the use of computers, as it relates to philosophical
research and writing.
The topic for the class paper is some issue related to the good life. We will be reading some philosophical writing on this topic that should serve to stimulate thinking, to initiate the research process, and to exemplify various aspects of the nature of philosophic writing. Students will be assigned to present the readings on specific days, bringing out what they notice both about the content of the material and about what might be learned from the piece about writing philosophically (e.g., how to argue, how to organize a paper, how to fit what you say into an ongoing conversation, how to consider objections, etc.).
REL 333 The Old Testament - Dr. Eickelmann
This course provides the beginning student with a historical and literary
survey of the Hebrew Bible, including its historical context, theological
themes and literary sources. Special attention will be given to the institution
of kingship and the social role of the Hebrew prophets.
REL 351 Theories of Religious Experience - Dr. Eickelmann
This course deals with the nature of the religious phenomena as it is reflected
in collective human experience, especially as that experience must strive
to address the critiques of both modernism and postmodernism.
Department of Philosophy and Religion
Last modified:
October 16, 2009
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The University of Southern Mississippi
/ URL: http://www.usm.edu/philrel/intro.html
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