College of Arts and Sciences
132 Park Hall
North Campus
Buffalo, NY 14260-4150
Phone: 716.645.2444, ext. 132
Fax: 716.645.6139
Web: wings.buffalo.edu/philosophy
Carolyn Korsmeyer
Chair
Philosophy studies the foundation of values, examines the nature of justice, knowledge, and reality; and sets the mind working with accuracy and imagination.
The student of philosophy learns the fundamental theories and concepts that have framed our intellectual heritage, and also learns the essential tools to investigate and develop the ideas that shape our lives today. Philosophy is especially well equipped to teach skills that are important for success in almost any endeavor: how to think critically, how to construct arguments and examine reasons, and how to formulate and express ideas clearly both verbally and in writing.
A major in philosophy provides a solid foundation for advanced study in almost any field, for entering a profession, or for entering the job market with confidence. Because it trains the student to think clearly and critically, it is excellent preparation for the many professions that require these skills.
Major in Philosophy. The undergraduate major includes study in each of the basic areas of philosophy—ethics, logic, metaphysics and epistemology, and the history of philosophy. There is a selection of electives that expand upon these, or that composes a concentration in a specific period, topic, or philosophical approach. For more information, see the Philosophy—BA chart. Students interested in exploring further a major in philosophy are invited to contact the director of undergraduate studies.
Honors. Philosophy offers an honors program for majors in their senior year of study. This is an opportunity to explore philosophical ideas and problems more deeply.
Concentration in Professional Ethics. This series of courses is available either as a major or as a minor in philosophy. The courses address ethical issues in the health sciences, biomedical research, law, communications, engineering, and architecture, and business. They include careful consideration of various approaches to ethics and their application to professional ethics questions.
Minor in Philosophy. A minor in philosophy can be a significant contribution to studies in many areas of the arts and sciences. Requirements for a minor include study of logic, of ethics, and in some areas of the history of philosophy. A minor also provides ample opportunity for selection of courses addressing issues of special interest to the student. For more information, see the Philosophy—Minors chart.
There are several areas in which the theories and approaches of philosophy are especially useful and in which philosophy offers specialized minors. These include the arts, law, logic, professional ethics, and philosophy of science. Each of these is designed for students majoring or planning postbaccalaureate study in that area. For more information, see the charts for Philosophy of the Arts—Minor; Philosophy of Law—Minor; Logic—Minor; Professional Ethics—Minor; and Philosophy of Science—Minor.
The minor programs are administered by the director of undergraduate studies.
Minimum GPA of 2.0 overall.
A minimum grade of C in the prerequisite course.
No more than two 100-level courses may count toward the total requirement of 36 credit hours.
Students interested in a philosophy major, honors, a specialized program in professional ethics, or a philosophy minor, as well as students interested in selected study of philosophical questions or issues, are invited to contact the director of undergraduate studies, Professor Baumer, at (716) 645-2444, ext. 134, or whbaumer@buffalo.edu to discuss their interests and receive additional information.
One philosophy course with a minimum grade of C.
Ethics
One of the following: PHI 107 Ethics, PHI 238 Philosophy of Law, PHI 335 Contemporary Ethical Theory, PHI 336 History of Ethics, PHI 337 Social and Ethical Values in Medicine
Logic
One of the following: PHI 215 Introduction to Deductive Logic, PHI 315 Symbolic Logic
Metaphysics and Epistemology
One of the following: PHI 108 Knowledge and Reality, PHI 329 Metaphysics, PHI 333 Epistemology
History of Philosophy
Two of the following: PHI 360 Ancient Philosophy, PHI 366 Medieval Philosophy, PHI 370 Early Modern Philosophy, PHI 380 Nineteenth-Century Philosophy, Kant to Nietzsche, PHI 388 Twentieth-Century Philosophy
Philosophy electives
Seven additional courses, of which four must be at the 300/400 level
Summary
Total required credit hours for the major: 36
See Baccalaureate Degree Requirements for general education and remaining university requirements.
FIRST AND SECOND YEARS
Required courses in ethics, metaphysics and epistemology, logic (three courses in total)
Optional: history of philosophy or elective at 200 level or higher (if general education requirements are also fulfilled)
THIRD YEAR
Required courses(s) in the history of philosophy
Two electives, preferably at the 300/400 level
FOURTH YEAR
Remaining electives at the 300/400 level
Minimum GPA of 2.0 overall.
A minimum grade of C in the prerequisite course.
Students interested in a philosophy minor, and students interested in selected study of philosophical questions or issues, are invited to contact the director of undergraduate studies, Professor Baumer, at (716) 645-2444, ext. 134, or whbaumer@buffalo.edu to discuss their interests and receive additional information.
One philosophy course with a minimum grade of "C".
LOGIC—MINOR
PHI 215 Introduction to Deductive Logic
PHI 315 Symbolic Logic
One of the following: PHI 415 Logical Theory I, PHI 416 Logical Theory II, PHI 418 Philosophy of Mathematics, PHI 419 Philosophy of Logic
Three additional courses, including two at the 300/400 level
PHILOSOPHY—MINOR
Logic—One of the following: PHI 115 Critical Thinking, PHI 215 Introduction to Deductive Logic
Ethics—One of the following: PHI 107 Ethics, PHI 238 Philosphy of Law, PHI 337 Social and Ethical Values in Medicine
History of philosophy—One of the following: PHI 360 Ancient Philosophy, PHI 366 Medieval Philosophy, PHI 370 Early Modern Philosophy, PHI 380 Nineteenth-Century Philosophy, Kant to Nietzsche, PHI 388 Twentieth-Century Philosophy
Philosophy electives—Three additional courses at the 300/400 level. No more than two independent study tutorials may count toward the fulfillment of this requirement.
PHILOSOPHY OF LAW—MINOR
PHI 115 Critical Thinking or PHI 215 Introduction to Deductive Logic
PHI 238 Philosophy of Law
PHI 338 Law and Morality
PHI 340 Law and Responsibility
PHI 341 Social Philosophy or PHI 342 Political Philosophy
One additional 300/400-level course
PHILOSOPHY OF PROFESSIONAL ETHICS—MINOR
PHI 115 Critical Thinking
PHI 117 Professional Ethics
PHI 337 Social and Ethical Values in Medicine or PHI 238 Philosophy of Law
PHI 335 Contemporary Ethical Theory or PHI 336 History of Ethics
Two additional 300/400-level courses
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE—MINOR
PHI 215 Introduction to Deductive Logic
PHI 315 Symbolic Logic
PHI 221 Introduction to the Philosophy of Science or PHI 321 Philosophy of Natural Sciences
PHI 370 Early Modern Philosophy
Two additional 300/400-level courses
PHILOSOPHY OF THE ARTS—MINOR
PHI 108 Knowledge and Reality
PHI 115 Critical Thinking
PHI 344 Aesthetics Theory and Criticism or PHI 345 Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art
PHI 360 Ancient Philosophy or PHI 354 Chinese and Japanese Philosophy
Two additional 300/400-level courses
Summary
Total required credit hours for the minor: 18
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines general topics in various areas of philosophy showing different sides of issues; develops critical thought and philosophical method. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces value theory, good and bad, justification of obligations to others, relationship of free choice and determinism, and contemporary moral problems analyzed by ethical principles. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces epistemology, metaphysics, knowledge as a reflection of the real world's properties and its relation to different viewpoints, the world as material objects, the mind and matter, and the role of scientific and technical knowledge in today’s world. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces philosophical views of being human and consequences of these for thought, action, and emotion. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines techniques of problem solving, decision making, and evaluating pros and cons of an issue; organizing data; forming strategies and giving reasons; perceptual, cultural, emotional, intellectual, and expressive blocks to thinking; and simple inductive reasoning and statistical fallacies. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces ethical issues encountered in such professions as medicine, engineering, public service, the media, business, social work, accounting, law, and manufacturing with an environmental impact, as well as the central concepts of professionalism. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
Provides for the teaching of various philosophical topics not covered in other 100-level courses. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Considers social and personal ethical issues of reproduction raised by medical, legal, religious, and philosophical sources and traditions; issues arising from reproductive and reproduction-affecting technology.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies selected issues of obligations and values: what are the bases of judgments of right, wrong, good and bad, and what are the applications of these? See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Explores spirit, thought, and action of Asians culled from the contemporary relevance of classical readings. Texts include Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, and Zen. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Enforcement of morals by law, the proper authority of the state or society over the individual. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces issues and questions in religion, including existence of a deity, religion and science, and functions of religion in personal life. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys major religions, including Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Covers the definition, formal and informal errors of reasoning, and principles of deductive reasoning; also examines the Aristotelian tradition. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Explores the philosophy and methodology of science, scientific experimentation, the problem of induction, nature of scientific explanation, basis of probability, and fundamental characteristics of scientific theories. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies selected issues of language’s structure, meaning and reference. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines current ethical positions and their applications to problems in business. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies conscientious violators, preferential treatment of minorities and women, and plea bargaining in light of ethical theories and legal cases; considers case studies related to questions of different theories of law and the nature of legal reasoning.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Selected issues in aesthetics, appreciation and evaluation of art, literature and drama. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Considers views of history’s meaning, patterns, and complexities of historical knowledge. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines selected philosophical views from China, Japan, India, or Southeast Asia; views may include classical or contemporary Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, or Taoism. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies a selected position, tradition or issue in the history of philosophy. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Analyzes selected concepts in religious thought. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces the formal techniques of deductive reasoning. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduction to the philosophy of mind, emphasizing contemporary discussion of the relationship between mind and the material world. Considers a number of different positions concerning this relationship and assesses the relative merit of each. Addresses questions such as: Are minds non-material entities, or is having a mind simply a matter of being a material entity with a certain type of complex organization? If having a mind is simply a matter of being a material entity of this sort, why do events such as pains and experiences of colors seem so different in kind from other material events? See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines the nature of theories within the physical sciences and the family of philosophical issues that surround their characterization; also explores causation, explanation, and induction. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Considers theories within the social sciences and the issues of how, if at all, they are fundamentally different from the theories of physical sciences. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Explores theories of reality; freedom and determinism; and the reality of the self, the mind, and the body. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester:
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Considers epistemology: The nature, sources, kind, scope, and certainty and validity of knowledge. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examination of how humans should interact with the environment, both as individuals and as members of groups or organizations. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines attempts in moral philosophy to find a justification for the basic ethical principles; also considers conception of an ethics based on natural law. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies the history of ethics from ancient times through the Enlightenment. Also covers ancient Hebrew, Greek, medieval, and modern moral theories. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines current ethical positions and their application to ethical and social questions in medicine. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Explores the moral status of legality and the legal status of morality, the status of unjust laws, and the role of moral judgments of lawmakers. Is a good law one that does good? See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Explores the legal notion of liability for actions, events, or states of affairs. On what basis does the law assign blame? Does this notion of blame accord with our moral or scientific notions of responsibility? See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines conceptions of the good society and programs for improving contemporary societies; also explores democracy, equality, discrimination, civil disobedience, revolution, liberalism, conservatism, communism, capitalism. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys political theories in a systematic or historical way. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys theories of art and their evaluation of works of art. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys historically or systematically various concepts of beauty and art. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Introduces philosophy through literature, such as Voltaire’s Candide and Sartre’s Nausea, which present philosophical issues in vivid forms. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
Critically considers a selected philosophical issue. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines early development of American philosophical thought; considers leading movements and thinkers, such as idealism, pragmatism (Peirce, James, Dewey), and realism. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Reviews the history of Greek philosophy from Pre-Socratic philosophers to the Hellenistics. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies the history of philosophy from Plotinus to the end of the Middle Ages. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Reviews the history of metaphysics and epistemology from the Renaissance to Kant. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Considers philosophy from Kant to the twentieth century; including idealism, post-Hegelian philosophies, positivism, utilitarianism, evolutionism, and intellectual movements at the close of the nineteenth century. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines representative movements and issues in present-day philosophy in Europe and America. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Surveys principal positions and traditions in contemporary philosophy in Latin America.
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
Provides for the teaching of various philosophical topics not covered in other 300-level courses. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 1 - 8
Semester: F
Prerequisites: permission of department
Corequisites: None
Type: TUT
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
Six credit hours of honors tutorial work in independent study are required for graduation with departmental honors. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 1 - 8
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: permission of department
Corequisites: None
Type: TUT
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
Six credit hours of honors tutorial work in independent study are required for graduation with departmental honors. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Performs advanced critical analysis of selected issues in religious belief. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Reviews modern studies in propositional logic, formal techniques that can be used to analyze inferences, and philosophical topics and problems related to propositional logic. Some acquaintance with logic desirable. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: PHI 315
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Continuation of PHI 415. Considers predicate logic, generalization, and related philosophical issues. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines philosophical topics and problems arising from modern studies in logic. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Explores philosophical topics and problems of mathematics and its logical foundations. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Reviews philosophical topics and issues of logic, both historical and contemporary. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester:
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Involves an in-depth critical examination of selected issues in philosophy of the natural or social sciences. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Addresses selected issues in ethics from a historical, contemporary, or thematic perspective. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Examines strengths and weaknesses of current social philosophy positions. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Considers philosophical issues in law, including theories of law, evidence, argument, punishment and penalties. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Considers in-depth selected theories of art. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Examines selected views, traditions or issues in Chinese, Japanese, Indian, or Southeast Asian philosophies. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines selected views, traditions or issues in Chinese philosophy. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Involves detailed consideration of central issues in Plato’s philosophy. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Involves detailed consideration of central issues in Aristotle's philosophy. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
Considers selected issues in ancient philosophy, including comparison of major positions. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Examines selected traditions or issues in philosophy from 500 to 1600 AD. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 3
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: SEM
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
Provides for the teaching of various philosophical topics not covered in other 400-level courses. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu.
Credits: 3
Semester: F
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: LEC
View Schedule
Studies Wittgenstein's philosophical development and positions. See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 1 - 8
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: TUT
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 1 - 8
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: TUT
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Credits: 1 - 8
Semester: F Sp
Prerequisites: None
Corequisites: None
Type: TUT
View Schedule
The content of this course is variable and therefore it is repeatable for credit. The University Grade Repeat Policy does not apply.
See the Philosophy Department website for details, at http://www.philosophy.buffalo.edu
Updated: Oct 24, 2006 1:40:07 PM