Biola_Catalog_19790101NA

Department of Philosophy

FACULTY

Professor: Hanson Assistant Professor: Ciocchi

Objective: The objective of this department is to acquaint the student with the principal problems and issues of philosophy; historical and contemporary. The courses of philosophy are designed to contribute to the general education of the student, to aid him in reflective thinking, to contribute to an understanding of the persistent problems of our culture and to compare, contrast, and integrate philosophical answers with those of the Christian philosophical orientation. Department Minor: 18 units, of which 12 must be upper division. The student must select 301 and two courses from 302, 303, or 404. Humanities Major: Philosophy Concentration. Philosophy may be used as the area of concentration for the Humanities Major (p. 55). This concentration is basically a Minor in Philosophy, but more flexibility is possible through departmental advisement.

religion, of crucial religious concepts, and of important religious systems. Alternate years, offered 1980-81. 311 THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE (3) An historical and critical examination of the nature, validity, and scope of human thought and knowledge. Alternate years , offered 1979-80. 313 THEORIES OF REALITY (3) An historical and critical examination of selected metaphysical systems and topics. Alternate years, offered 1979-80. 402 PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE (3) An historical and critical examination of the methodology, theory, and limits of science and its relationship to other fields. Alternate years , offered 1979-80. 404 CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY (3) Recent American philosophy and the analytic and speculative traditions. 440 PHILOSOPHICAL TOPICS (2-3) Special studies in the history of or problems of philosophy. Prerequisite: 202 or consent. Offered on sufficient demand. 458 PHILOSOPHY OF WORLD RELIGIONS (3) The philosophies and beliefs of the world's leading religions. 480 DIRECTED RESEARCH (1-2) Guided reading and research in philosophers or philosophical topics. Prerequisite: Consent.

202 INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY (3) The problems, methods, concepts, outlook, and divisions of philosophy. Either semester. 205 LOGIC (3) Deductive and inductive inference and the analysis of language.

301 GREEK AND ROMAN PHILOSOPHY (3) The history of philosophy through Neo-Platonism. 302 MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY (3)

The history of philosophy from Augustine to William of Occam with special emphasis upon Augustine and Thomas Aquinas. 303 MODERN PHILOSOPHY (3) The history of philosophy from the Renaissance through the schools of the nineteenth century. 305 ETHICS (3) Principal ethical theories and thinkers; basic problems and biblical teaching. 307 AESTHETICS (3) Principal problems and theories of art creation, appreciation, and criticism. 310 PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION (3) A critical examination of the relationship of philosophy to

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