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Philosophy of Human Nature
PHIL1000 L11
Session I, May 28-June 27
Lincoln Center: TWTh, 6-9 p.m.
3 credits, Schafer, CRN 10174
Introduction to the philosophical study of human existence, including consideration of freedom, mind-body, knowledge, etc. Texts include Plato, Augustine or Aquinas, and Descartes.
Philosophy of Human Nature
PHIL1000 R11
Session I, May 28-June 27
Rose Hill: TWTh, 1-4 p.m.
3 credits, Winegar, CRN 10177
Introduction to the philosophical study of human existence, including consideration of freedom, mind-body, knowledge, etc. Texts include Plato, Augustine or Aquinas, and Descartes.
Philosophy of Human Nature
PHIL1000 L21
Session II, July 2-August 6
Lincoln Center: TWTh, 1-4 p.m.
3 credits, Jaworski, CRN 10180
Introduction to the philosophical study of human existence, including consideration of freedom, mind-body, knowledge, etc. Texts include Plato, Augustine or Aquinas, and Descartes.
Philosophy of Human Nature
PHIL1000 R21
Session II, July 2-August 6
Rose Hill: TWTh, 9 a.m.-Noon
3 credits, Gadon, CRN 10186
Introduction to the philosophical study of human existence, including consideration of freedom, mind-body, knowledge, etc. Texts include Plato, Augustine or Aquinas, and Descartes. Fulfills EP 1 requirement in Fordham’s core curriculum.
Philosophical Ethics
PHIL3000 L11
Session I, May 28-June 27
Lincoln Center: TWTh, 9 a.m.-Noon
3 credits, Hromas, closed
Exploration of diverse approaches to the understanding of morality, including the study of value and obligations, the good and happiness, right and duty. Texts include Aristotle and Kant. Fulfills the EP3 requirement.
Philosophical Ethics
PHIL3000 R11
Session I, May 28-June 27
Rose Hill: TWTh, 9 a.m.-Noon
3 credits, Gregor, CRN 10178
Exploration of diverse approaches to the understanding of morality, including the study of value and obligations, the good and happiness, right and duty. Texts include Aristotle and Kant.
Philosophical Ethics
PHIL3000 L21
Session II, July 2-August 6
Lincoln Center: TWTh, 6-9 p.m.
3 credits, Lassiter, CRN 10182
Exploration of diverse approaches to the understanding of morality, including the study of value and obligations, the good and happiness, right and duty. Texts include Aristotle and Kant.
Philosophical Ethics
PHIL3000 R21
Session II, July 2-August 6
Rose Hill: TWTh, 6-9 p.m.
3 credits, Layton, closed
Exploration of diverse approaches to the understanding of morality, including the study of value and obligations, the good and happiness, right and duty. Texts include Aristotle and Kant. Fulfills the EP3 requirement.
Philosophy and Film
PHIL3936 R21
Session II, July 2-August 6
Rose Hill: MTWTh, 1-4 p.m.
4 credits, Mumm, CRN 10189
Survey of major texts in film theory and criticism as well as contemporary philosophical work. Topics will include the nature of cinema, cinematic realism, the status of film as an art form, cinematic authorship, the emotional response to films, and interpretation.
Fantasy and Philosophy
PHIL3942 L21
Session II, July 2-August 6
Lincoln Center: MTWTh, 1-4 p.m.
4 credits, Davenport, CRN 10184
An interdisciplinary study of moral themes in J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. The course focuses on Tolkien's artistic treatment of such philosophical questions as the lure of power, good and evil, freedom and fate, the nature of the divine, the natural environment, and the function of literature in human life. We may consider similar themes in the works of other prominent fantasy authors. Fulfills Senior Values in Fordham's core curriculum.
Environmental Ethics
PHIL4409 R11
Session I, May 28-June 27
Rose Hill: MTWTh, 6-9 p.m.
4 credits, Rice, CRN 10306
This senior values seminar surveys major theories in environmental ethics dealing with our moral duties regarding nature: for example, environmental stewardship, sustainable development, environmental justice, ecological virtue, ethics, animal rights, biocentrism, Leopold's land ethic, and ecological feminism. It has not only philosophical but also scientific, economic, political, and design dimensions as it deals with such topics as global warming, alternative energy, pollution control, suburban sprawl, deforestation, biodiversity loss, and the prospect of a sixth mass species extinction event threatening the future of human and nonhuman life as we know it. Fulfills the Senior Values/EP4 requirement in Fordham's core curriculum.
Environmental Ethics
PHIL4409 L21
Session II, July 2-August 6
Lincoln Center: MTWTh, 9 a.m.-Noon
4 credits, Storey, CRN 10307
This senior values seminarsurveys major theories in environmental ethics dealing with our moral duties regarding nature: for example, environmental stewardship, sustainable development, environmental justice, ecological virtue, ethics, animal rights, biocentrism, Leopold's land ethic, and ecological feminism. It has not only philosophical but also scientific, economic, political, and design dimensions as it deals with such topics as global warming, alternative energy, pollution control, suburban sprawl, deforestation, biodiversity loss, and the prospect of a sixth mass species extinction event threatening the future of human and nonhuman life as we know it. Fulfills the Senior Values/EP4 requirement in Fordham's core curriculum.
Religion and Morality
PHIL4413 W11
Session I, May 28-June 27
Westchester: MTWTh, 6-9 p.m.
4 credits, Lynch, CRN 10179
An exploration of religious life in terms of the question, What does it mean to be religious? The seminar will then study differing views of the relation of religious to the moral life, personal, and social, including the formation of conscience and moral judgment, from writers such as Augustine, Kierkegaard, Kant, Levinas, and Marx. Fulfills the Senior Values/EP4 requirement of Fordham's core curriculum.
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