Graduate Courses

GROUP A

Note: Students may receive credit for more than one offering of a course in Group A provided that the emphasis is sufficiently different. Thus, for example, credit may be received for both PHIL-8700 Recent German Philosophy: Arendt and PHIL-8700 Recent German Philosophy: Habermas where these are entirely distinct course offerings.

The course will focus on the conceptual foundations of the human relationship to the natural and built environment. The course may adopt either an historical or contemporary emphasis depending on the decision of the instructor. (May be repeated for credit if content changes and with permission of the instructor.)

Learning Outcomes

The objective of this course is to introduce the student to contemporary issues concerning the philosophy of law, to include European and Indigenous law. Particular emphasis will be placed upon the presupposed relation of concepts to society. The course will examine such issues as the difference and relation of legitimacy to legality, the relation of legal analysis to social needs, the relation of morality and ethicality to the content of legal rules and legal reasoning (Prerequisite: MA Philosophy students or by instructor permission) (Cross-listed with PHIL-4260.) 

Learning Outcomes

The course will focus on the philosophical implications of the impact gender and sexuality have on major epistemological, scientific, normative, and political problems. The specific focus of each year's class will be determined by the instructor. (May be repeated for credit if content changes and with permission of the instructor.)

Learning Outcomes

The course will focus on selected contemporary movements and figures in Argumentation Theory and Informal Logic. The movement and figure studied in any given year will be determined by the latest developments in the field.

Learning Outcomes

 

A study of significant developments in recent Continental thought. The content of the course will vary according to the instructor’s interests and background. Traditions that might be examined include existential phenomenology, Marxism, deconstruction, and post-structuralism. Cross-listed with PHIL-4710.

Learning Outcomes

Advanced study of themes and trends in Analytic or Pragmatist philosophy. Ordinarily, the topic will rotate on a yearly basis between Analytic Philosophy, in which logic, language, and scientific evidence play central roles and Pragmatist Philosophy which takes practice, in a broad sense of the term, to have a central role in most if not all philosophical issues. Cross-listed with PHIL-4720.

Learning Outcomes

GROUP B

The following course must be taken by all MA students:

The aim of the seminar is to deepen students' sensitivity to the history of philosophy and help prepare them for the Master's examination in Philosophy. Each year a specific philosophical theme is traced through a number of key figures in the history of thought.

GROUP C