PHIL 100
3 credits
Reasoning: An Introduction to Critical Thinking
Prerequisite(s): None.
Good reasoning is the basis for successful thought and action. This course introduces methods for creative and successful reasoning such as analyzing and evaluating evidence, recognizing different forms of arguments, and applying innovative, critical thinking to both practical and theoretical issues.
PHIL 110
3 credits
Introduction to Ethics and Moral Problems
Prerequisite(s): None.
Students think, talk, and write about what is morally right and wrong with a focus on the reasons that support moral judgments. A variety of ethical theories and issues are studied as part of an examination of how to act given that we live and interact with others.
PHIL 120
3 credits
Knowledge and Reality
Prerequisite(s): None
Many of the traditional problems and arguments in philosophy deal with the nature of human individuality. Individuality is acclaimed as one of the great achievements of western civilization. The progress of civilization has often been measured by how much individuality is allowed to flourish. What is individuality? What makes me a unique individual? In order to answer these questions, we also need to ask: When do I have free will to express my individuality? What is the relationship between my physical nature — my body — and my spiritual nature — my mind? Am I really anything more than a complicated thinking machine? What happens to me when I die?
PHIL 210
3 credits
Contemporary Issues in Morality and Politics
Prerequisite(s): 15 university-level credits.
Through seminars and directed reading, problems of current interest in moral and political philosophy are dealt with, including conflicts between dominant moral theories, between the demands of morality and of politics, and between theories of justice, freedom, and human nature.
PHIL 220
3 credits
Issues in Metaphysics and Epistemology
Prerequisite(s): 15 university-level credits.
Through seminars and directed reading, various issues in metaphysics and epistemology are examined, such as the nature of persons, theories of truth, free will and determinism, the nature of space and time, language and meaning, the relation of evidence to knowledge and belief, and the scientific method.
PHIL 230
3 credits
Philosophy of Law
Prerequisite(s): 15 credits of university-level course work
Our legal and penal systems are often severely criticized. We can better understand these criticisms and the issues they raise if we can answer a number of philosophical questions about the nature of law, punishment, and responsibility. Why do we have laws? What is law: is it essentially a constraining force or is it a force for freedom? What is the relationship of the law to morality: should the law enforce morality? When is a person responsible for an act and thus legally liable for punishment? Why do we punish criminals: to deter crimes, to rehabilitate the criminal, or to "pay back" the criminal? Is it ever justified to break the law?
Note: PHIL 230 (formerly 130) is the same as CRIM 130. Although the transferability may differ, credit cannot be obtained for both PHIL 230 and CRIM 130 at UFV.
PHIL 240
3 credits
Faith and Reason: Philosophy of Religion
Prerequisite(s): 15 university-level credits.
Examines central issues in the philosophy of religion, including the nature of ultimate reality or God, the challenge of religious diversity, arguments for and against the existence of God, the relationship between faith and reason, the possibility of an afterlife, and the relationship between morality and religion.
PHIL 250
3 credits
History of Western Philosophy: Ancient Greek Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 15 university-level credits.
Western philosophy began in Ancient Greece, and the questions and concerns that fascinated the Greeks are still with us today. Students will read the works of Plato, Aristotle, the Pre-Socratics, and the Hellenistic schools of Stoicism and Epicureanism.
PHIL 251A
3 credits
Rationalism and Early Modern Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 15 university-level credits
Rationalism, as a philosophical school of thought, originates in the 17th century with the work of Rene Descartes. Descartes presents his philosophy as a critical reaction to prior schools of thought. At the core of his objections is the claim that genuine knowledge is a result of operations of reason independent of experience. He contends that previous philosophies cannot meet the requirements imposed on knowledge by reason. In this course, we will explore how Descartes’ rationalism arises from his critique of philosophical traditions and how subsequent rationalist philosophies, such as those of Spinoza and Leibniz, are themselves predicated on a critique of Descartes’ arguments.
PHIL 251B
3 credits
Empiricism and Early Modern Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 15 university-level credits
For the Empiricist philosophers of the 17th and 18th centuries, anything that can be known about the world or about ourselves is said to be found in sensation and perception. However, this general agreement that knowledge is a function of experience gives way to disagreements regarding the nature of experience and what it actually enables us to know. In this course, we will examine the fundamentals of early modern empiricism, with a particular emphasis on how major philosophers of the time approached the question of knowledge, ethics, and politics. Philosophers to be covered include John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume.
PHIL 252
3 credits
History of Continental Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 15 credits of university-level course work
The real-life killers depicted in Orson Welles’ film Compulsion were said to have been inspired by the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche. Adolf Hitler was rumoured to have carried of copy of Arthur Schopenhauer’s The World as Will and Representation with him during World War I. These are just two examples of the intersection of 19th and 20th century philosophy and history. In this course we will examine the works of Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, and other European philosophers such as Hegel, Heidegger, and Sartre. The intent is to highlight the works of these thinkers so that the student can understand their importance to philosophy as well as the impact they had on the world.
PHIL 300
3 credits
Symbolic Logic in Context
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits
Symbolic logic is a formal reasoning system which has been influential in philosophy, computing, and mathematics. This course provides an overview of its most basic elements: propositional and predicate logic and their methods of proof. These elements are then critically analyzed to assess their strengths and weaknesses as a grounding for analytic philosophy and for rationality in general.
PHIL 305
3 credits
Philosophy of Decision Making and Dispute Resolution
Prerequisite(s): 60 credits of university-level course work. PHIL 100 and/or 110 recommended
Complex decisions and dispute resolution tax our reasoning skills to the limit and challenge our hopes and beliefs. This course reflects critically on the philosophical principles behind different models of decision making and dispute resolution currently in use in law, business, and social settings. It enables students to make informed judgements about how suitable these models are for their own professional and personal contexts.
PHIL 309
3 credits
Feminist Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including 9 credits of PHIL.
Investigates contemporary feminist thought from a variety of perspectives and theoretical orientations. Examines how issues of gender have entered into discussions within major fields of philosophy, including ethics, epistemology, metaphysics, and social and political philosophy. Explores the ways in which these issues intersect with race, class, and colonialism.
PHIL 310
3 credits
Ethics and Public Policy
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including 9 credits of PHIL.
Applies ethical principles to practical problems in public policy. Issues to be discussed include examining the ethical differences between individual and social decisions. Topics include healthcare, international relations, business and economic development, employment relations, government, and technological innovations.
PHIL 315
3 credits
Contemporary Ethical Theory
Prerequisite(s): PHIL 110 and six additional credits of Philosophy or Political Science courses.
Topics covered include contemporary meta-ethics and normative ethics such as recent consequentialist theories, deontological theories, virtue ethics, error theory, moral relativism, and moral realism.
PHIL 318
3 credits
Environmental Ethics
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including 6 credits of PHIL.
An exploration of ethical issues in the context of the environment. Topics include defining nature, animal rights and their use in scientific research, climate change and the politicization of science, pollution caused by human activities, and obligations to future generations.
PHIL 322
3 credits
The Philosophy of Mind
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits.
A critical exploration of contemporary views regarding the nature of mind and its relation to the brain, such as Functionalism and Eliminative Materialism. Some attention may also be given to traditional Dualism and early versions of Materialism as a means of setting historical context.
PHIL 323
3 credits
Philosophical Issues in the Social Sciences: Values, Objectivity, and Neutrality
Prerequisite(s): Six credits of philosophy or 45 credits of Arts and Applied Arts courses
The social and human sciences are highly influential in contemporary social and political life. To what extent are economics, sociology, archaeology, anthropology, psychology, and political science, truly "scientific"? Is it reasonable to expect them to lead to law-like conclusions about social phenomena? What is the role of interpretation in explanations of social events? How do the facts of cultural and gender diversity affect the capacity to understand social phenomena? Is there some cross-cultural rationality that can be applied to all societies? Is it possible for social scientists to maintain political and gender neutrality, or is social inquiry always tainted by the biases of the researcher?
PHIL 352
3 credits
History of Early Analytic Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including 6 credits of 100- or 200-level PHIL.
This course explores the main themes of the Analytic tradition, beginning with its emergence in the late 19th century and including its dominant forms to the middle of the 20th century. Philosophers to be covered may include Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, Quine, and Davidson.
PHIL 353
3 credits
Philosophies of India
Prerequisite(s): Six credits of Philosophy or forty-five credits in university-level course work
This course will examine Indian philosophy and its answers to fundamental and traditional philosophical questions regarding the nature and meaning of human existence, and the nature and limits of knowledge, and with practical questions concerning how one should live. Over the last 3,000 years a variety of schools have been developed to come to terms with these questions in the Indian context. PHIL 353 will introduce the principal schools of Indian philosophy, drawing attention to their importance in making sense of contemporary Indian society. Influences of Islam, Sikhism, Gandhi, and Aurobindo will be considered. The course will be of interest to students of philosophy who wish to explore an exciting and rich philosophical tradition that is in many ways distinct from that of the West, and to students who wish to develop understanding of Indian society and culture.
PHIL 360
3 credits
Special Topics: Contemporary Issues for Philosophical Analysis
Prerequisite(s): 45 credits from Arts, Sciences or Applied programs, including one of PHIL 100, PHIL 110, PHIL 120
The course will provide students with an opportunity to investigate contemporary cultural and social issues using the methods of philosophical analysis. The student will gain a broader understanding of modern problems and will acquire a greater appreciation for the practical application of philosophical techniques. Topics will vary with instructor but may include the status of gender in society, the concept of information, and the philosophy of technology.
PHIL 362
3 credits
Philosophy of Education
Prerequisite(s): PHIL 110 or forty-five credits of Arts and Applied Arts courses.
This course is an introduction to the ethical and philosophical dimensions of education. Topics to be examined concern the aims of education, autonomy, the justification of education, the value of knowledge, the distinction between education and indoctrination, the education of the emotions, the justification of educational authority, equality of educational opportunity, personal relationships in teaching, professional ethics in teaching, and moral education.
Note: Students with credit for EDUC 362 cannot take this course for further credit.
PHIL 364
3 credits
Philosophy of Childhood
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits.
What is a child? The concept of a child occupies a precarious position and has not always received the attention that it deserves. Not yet a fully rational agent, but endowed with the potential to become one, the child has a status that spells trouble for core philosophical concepts. Theories of rationality, freedom, personal identity, and responsibility all impact children and their caregivers, yet often ignore them. Delving into philosophical theory and the practical issues of childhood, this course is of great importance not just to philosophers but to anyone who works with children, has children, or was once a child.
PHIL 365
3 credits
Teaching Children Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 9 credits of PHIL, including PHIL 100 and PHIL 110.
Facilitate philosophical inquiries with children in educational settings such as school classrooms, summer camps, libraries, and art galleries. Study, apply, and broaden the “Philosophy for Children” methods of “community of inquiry” to foster and encourage critical, creative, cooperative, and caring thinking skills in children.
PHIL 367
3 credits
Philosophy for Counsellors
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits
This course is designed to enhance philosophical reasoning skills and increase knowledge of the content of philosophy in order to improve ability to deal with the issues and problems presented by patients and clients. The most successful methods in clinical psychology, psychotherapy, and counselling clinical methods, such as Rational Emotional Behavior Therapy, existential therapy, cognitive therapy, and Logo therapy, are largely fashioned after philosophy. Philosophical training is invaluable to clinical psychologists, therapists, and counsellors in their professional services to the public. This leaves them better prepared to deal with their clients’ philosophical issues such as ethical decision-making, sorting out confused reasoning, coming to terms with religion, defining reality, and determining what it means to be a healthy person within society.
PHIL 371
3 credits
Power, Knowledge, and Order: Early Western Political Thought
Prerequisite(s): One of POSC 120, POSC 270, PHIL 110, PHIL 210, or 45 university-level credits.
This course covers the history of Western political thought from Classical Greece through the Italian Renaissance. The course will focus on the writings of Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Augustine, Aquinas, and Macchiavelli. It provides a good overview for students in History, English, and other disciplines, as well as Political Science.
Note: This course is offered as POSC 311 and PHIL 371. Students may take only one of these for credit.
PHIL 372
3 credits
Order, Liberty, and Equality: Western Political Thought from the 17th Century to 1900
Prerequisite(s): One of POSC 120, POSC 270, POSC 311, PHIL 110, PHIL 210, or 45 university-level credits.
This course will cover the history of Western political thought from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. The course will focus on the writing of Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Bentham, JS Mill, Madison, Hegel, and Marx. It provides a good overview for students in History, English, and other disciplines, as well as Political Science.
Note: This course is offered as POSC 312 and PHIL 372. Students may take only one of these for credit.
PHIL 375
3 credits
Death, Desire, and Art in Continental Thought
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including one of PHIL 110 or PHIL 120.
An exploration of the connections made between death, desire, and art as definitive aspects of human nature. Philosophers covered may include Rousseau, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Zizek.
PHIL 412
3 credits
Corporations, Globalization, and Ethics
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including one of the following: PHIL 110, PHIL 210, PHIL 230, POSC 120, or POSC 270.
This course examines the roles of corporations within society and the impacts of their actions on various stakeholders, including indigenous populations. What limitations, if any, can rightly be imposed on these organizations? What are the rights and duties of employees?
Note: Students with credit for PHIL 312 cannot take this course for further credit.
PHIL 425
3 credits
20th Century Continental Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including 6 credits of 100- or 200-level PHIL courses.
20th century Continental philosophy is the source of phenomenology, existentialism, post-structuralism, and postmodernism. All of these have been profoundly influential on the humanities and on society. Philosophers covered in this course may include Heidegger, Sartre, Arendt, Foucault, and Derrida.
Note: Students with credit for PHIL 325 cannot take this course for further credit.
PHIL 426
3 credits
Contemporary Analytic Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including 6 credits of 100- or 200-level PHIL courses.
How does philosophy of language connect to philosophy of mind? Quine's "Word and Object" is a seminal work in analytic philosophy which deals with this question, meaning nihilism, and all the themes that are Quine’s legacy today. In addition to Quine, philosophers to be covered may include Davidson, Schiffer, Stich, Fodor, Boghossian, Burge, and Putnam.
Students with credit for PHIL 325 cannot take this course for further credit.
PHIL 480
3 credits
Selected Topics in Morality and Politics
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including one of the following: POSC 311, POSC 312, PHIL 305, PHIL 310, or PHIL 315.
A detailed exploration of one or more issues in moral or political philosophy.
PHIL 481
3 credits
Selected Topics in Epistemology and Metaphysics
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including one of PHIL 120 or PHIL 220.
A detailed examination of one or more topics in epistemology and metaphysics. The focus will vary with the instructor but could include cognitive philosophy, philosophy of mind, fundamental ontology, or skepticism.
PHIL 482
3 credits
Selected Topics in the History of Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 45 credits university-level credits, including one of the following: PHIL 120, PHIL 220, PHIL 250, PHIL 251, or PHIL 252.
Students will investigate a specific area in the history of philosophy. This course is primarily intended as an exploration of material not covered in other classes or for a more advanced study of a particular philosopher.
PHIL 483
3 credits
Selected Topics in Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 45 university-level credits including three credits of lower-level Philosophy.
Detailed investigation of topics not found in regular course offerings or more detailed study of problems or philosophers introduced in other courses. Topics covered will vary according to instructor and may include such areas as philosophy of art philosophy of language or hermeneutics and phenomenology.
PHIL 490
3 credits
Directed Studies in Ethical and Political Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 12 credits of Philosophy or Political Science, and written consent of the faculty member, the department head, and the College of Arts Associate Dean of Students.
In-depth independent study of a particular issue, problem, or topic in ethical or political philosophy. The student must, in consultation with a faculty member, develop an individual course proposal.
PHIL 491
3 credits
Directed Studies in Philosophy
Prerequisite(s): 9 credits of Philosophy, and written consent of the faculty member, the department head, and the College of Arts Associate Dean of Students.
Independent study of an issue, problem, or topic in any area of philosophy. The student must, in consultation with a faculty member, develop a detailed individual course proposal.
PHIL 495
3 credits
Honours Tutorial
Prerequisite(s): Acceptance into the Philosophy Honours program.
This course is an intensive independent study course for students pursuing the Honours option that will result in a substantial research essay.