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Section | Day | Time | Exam Date | Delivery |
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PHIL 100 - Introduction to Philosophy |
This introduction to philosophy will explore how philosophy can provide answers to some of the more profound questions we face, such as questions concerning knowledge, truth, mind and body, personal identity, free will, morality, politics, reasoning and the existence of God.
* Note: Topics will vary with sections of this course * |
397 |
|
- |
|
ONLNE |
991 |
W |
7:00pm - 9:45pm |
24-APR-24 |
|
C01 |
MWF |
2:30pm - 3:20pm |
22-APR-24 |
|
C02 |
MWF |
1:30pm - 2:20pm |
26-APR-24 |
|
L01 |
TRF |
09:30am - 10:20am |
16-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 150 - Critical Thinking |
An introduction to the systematic study of reasoning, this course will teach the theory and practice of good reasoning. It will provide students with reasoning skills that are useful in whichever discipline and career they may pursue. |
001 |
MW |
11:30am - 12:45pm |
29-APR-24 |
|
002 |
TR |
2:30pm - 3:45pm |
16-APR-24 |
|
C01 |
MWF |
09:30am - 10:20am |
17-APR-24 |
|
L01 |
TR |
7:00pm - 8:15pm |
16-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 211 - Aristotle and Later Greek Philosophy |
A critical survey of philosophy concentrating on Aristotle and later Greek philosophers such as the Stoics, the Epicureans, and Plotinus. Topics may include language, ethics, psychology, politics, and other major divisions of human thought.
*** Prerequisite: PHIL 100 or completion of 15 credit hours *** |
C01 |
MWF |
09:30am - 10:20am |
17-APR-24 |
HYBON |
C21 |
MWF |
09:30am - 10:20am |
17-APR-24 |
HYBRM |
PHIL 251 - Introduction to Symbolic Logic |
An introduction to the syntax and semantics of propositional and first-order predicate logic; natural language translations and logical form; truth tables; semantic trees, natural deduction systems.
***Prerequisite: PHIL 150, or PHIL 100, or a mathematics course, or permission of Department Head.***
*Note: Students can only receive credit for one of PHIL 250, PHIL 251, or PHIL 352. |
001 |
TR |
11:30am - 12:45pm |
23-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 270 - Ethics |
A critical introduction to the problems of moral philosophy, such as good and evil, virtue and vice, right and wrong, and related moral concepts. Readings will normally be selected from the following philosophers: Plato, Aristotle, St. Augustine, Aquinas, Hume, Kant, Hegel, Mill and Nietzsche.
*** Prerequisite: PHIL 100 or completion of 15 credit hours *** |
001 |
MW |
11:30am - 12:45pm |
|
|
PHIL 271 - Social & Political Philosophy |
A critical analysis and evaluation of selected philosophical writings on justice, liberty, happiness, and the rights and obligations of the individual as a member of society. Authors studied will usually be selected from Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Hume, Rousseau, Mill, Burke, Marx, and Marcuse.
*** Prerequisite: PHIL 100 or completion of 15 credit hours *** |
001 |
TR |
10:00am - 11:15am |
18-APR-24 |
|
001 |
TR |
10:00am - 11:15am |
18-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 272 - Contemporary Moral Issues |
A philosophical consideration of such contemporary moral issues as racism, sexism, abortion, the right to privacy, adultery, homosexuality, capital punishment, pacifism, the obligation to obey laws, and social justice.
*** Prerequisite: PHIL 100 or completion of 15 credit hours *** |
001 |
TR |
4:00pm - 5:15pm |
25-APR-24 |
|
001 |
TR |
4:00pm - 5:15pm |
25-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 276 - Professional Ethics |
Philosophical consideration of ethical problems which arise in the context of the conduct of various professions. Areas may include justice, business ethics, biomedical ethics, ethics of education, ethics of privacy and confidentiality (with applications to journalism, social work, psychology), and environmental ethics.
***Prerequisite: PHIL 100 or completion of 15 credit hours.***
*Note: Students may receive credit for one of PHIL 276 or JS 276.* |
991 |
R |
6:30pm - 9:15pm |
18-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 282 - Philosophical Issues in Sustainable Development |
This course critically examines sustainable development from a philosophical perspective clarifying its various meanings, coherence, and implications. Underlying principles (such as the precautionary principle), relationship to other concepts (such as sustainable growth), and implied ethical obligations are explored. The merits of different sustainable development strategies are philosophically examined.
***Prerequisite: PHIL 100 or completion of 15 credit hours.***
*Note: Students may receive credit for one of PHIL 282 or PHIL 290AF.* |
L01 |
TR |
1:00pm - 2:15pm |
18-APR-24 |
HYFLX |
PHIL 328AA - Kant's Critique of Pure Reason |
A Philosophical investigation of Kant and the Critique of Pure Reason.
***Prerequisite: One 200-level PHIL course or permission of the Department Head. PHIL 213 is recommended.***
*Note: Students may receive credit for one of PHIL 328AA or PHIL 428AA.* |
C01 |
MWF |
10:30am - 11:20am |
19-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 335CH - Law, Knowledge and Colonialism |
This course considers philosophical issues that arise at the intersection of the philosophy of law, epistemology and some philosophical accounts of colonialism. Questions that will be considered include: How does the domination of Indigenous legal and knowledge traditions contribute to colonialism? And, why is colonialism an unjust social formation?
***Prerequisite: One 200-level philosophy course or permission of Department Head.*** |
001 |
TR |
2:30pm - 3:45pm |
16-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 335CI - Feminist Epistemology |
This is an advanced-level course in feminist epistemology. We will read work on epistemic responsibility, epistemic location, situatedness, subjectivity and objectivity, the need for and limits of self-knowledge, collective epistemic practices, and critiques of rationality; this course centres the critical-creative epistemologies of women of colour, Latinx and Mestiza, postcolonial, and trans philosophers, and critical philosophers of disability.
***Prerequisite: One 200-level PHIL course, or permission of the Department Head.*** |
C01 |
|
- |
|
|
PHIL 344 - Philosophy of Mind I |
A critical examination of problems related to the nature of mind, through consideration of such theories of mind as dualism, behaviourism, materialism, functionalism, and eliminativism, or such problems as consciousness, intentionality, and privacy.
***Prerequisite: One 200-level PHIL course, or permission of the Department Head.***
*Note: Students may receive credit for one of PHIL 344 or PHIL 444.* |
001 |
TR |
1:00pm - 2:15pm |
|
|
PHIL 420 - Honours Paper |
This zero-credit, pass/fail course is a required component of the Philosophy BA Honours Program. Students work with a supervisor to complete an Honours paper. Further details, including deadlines, for this requirement are available from the Department of Philosophy and Classics. |
001 |
|
- |
|
|
C01 |
|
- |
|
|
C02 |
|
- |
|
|
PHIL 428AA - Kant's Critique of Pure Reason |
A Philosophical investigation of Kant and the Critique of Pure Reason.
**Permission of the Department Head is required to register.**
*Note: Students may receive credit for one of PHIL 428AA or PHIL 328AA.* |
C01 |
MWF |
10:30am - 11:20am |
19-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 435CH - Law, Knowledge and Colonialism |
This course considers philosophical issues that arise at the intersection of the philosophy of law, epistemology and some philosophical accounts of colonialism. Questions that will be considered include: How does the domination of Indigenous legal and knowledge traditions contribute to colonialism? And, why is colonialism an unjust social formation?
***Prerequisite: Permission of Department Head is required.*** |
001 |
TR |
2:30pm - 3:45pm |
16-APR-24 |
|
PHIL 444 - Philosophy of Mind II |
Seminar on Selected Topics in Philosophy of Mind.
**Permission of the Department Head is required to register.**
*Note: Students may receive credit for one of PHIL 444 or PHIL 344.* |
001 |
TR |
1:00pm - 2:15pm |
|
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