BA in Philosophy Minor
Interested in
philosophy but already selected your major? Consider a philosophy
minor!
To receive a minor,
you need take only eighteen credits in Philosophy, or the equivalent of
six three-credit courses. Two of those courses will be in Ancient
Philosophy (Phil. 211), in which you will study the philosophers of ancient
Greece and Rome, and Modern Philosophy (Phil. 213), in which you will cover
the philosophers of the European enlightenment period. Three courses
must be taken in required group areas. A final course is a philosophy
elective. A sample minor program might look like this:
-
Phil 211 Introduction to Ancient
Philosophy
-
Phil 213 Introduction to Modern
Philosophy
-
Phil 224 Introduction
to Philosophy of Science
-
Phil 314 20th
Century Continental European Philosophy OR
- Phil 315 20th
Century Anglo-American Philosophy
- Phil 440 Theory
of Knowledge
- Phil 452 Aesthetics
Another might
look like this:
-
Phil 211 Introduction to Ancient
Philosophy
-
Phil 213 Introduction to Modern
Philosophy
-
Phil 313 19th
Century Philosophy
-
Phil 410 Plato
-
Phil 450 Ethical Theory
-
Phil 457 Political
Philosophy
If you want
to learn about the great thinkers--for example, Socrates, Plato and Aristotle
in ancient Greece, Descartes, Locke, and Kant in the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, Hegel, Marx and Nietzsche in the nineteenth century, Bertrand
Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Jean-Paul Sartre in our own century--as
well as contemporary thinkers such as Charles Taylor, Martha Nussbaum,
Hubert Dreyfus and Annette Baier, and if you want to join them in tackling
the
'big questions', then philosophy is the field for you.
Philosophy is
partly the historical study of human thought (and thus one of the best
ways to learn about our cultural heritage) and partly the critical analysis
of difficult questions and of proposed solutions to them.
Philosophy deals
with the big questions concerning the nature of the universe and humanity's
place in it. Some of these questions are: What is mind?
What is the relation of mind to body? Can computers think?
To what extent can people act freely? Are all our actions determined
by causes beyond our control? What is knowledge? How far can
we trust scientific claims about the world? What actions are morally
right and wrong? What gives government the right to make citizens
pay taxes, fight in wars, and obey laws, and what are the ultimate justifications
of these requirements?
Philosophy has
been defined as 'trying to get to the bottom of anything'. Traditionally,
many of the great thinkers have been philosophers attempting to understand
the foundations or justification of ethical and political claims, religious
beliefs, scientific results, artistic judgments, etc. Philosophers
ask 'Why?' in the search for deeper understanding.
Perhaps a better
definition is that philosophy is the attempt to see how things fit together.
The various sciences give us different and quite narrow answers to questions
about human nature and the universe. Philosophers try to see how
far these pieces can be fitted together into a larger, more coherent vision
of things.
Thus philosophy
is for people with broad interests, people who don't want to be locked
into a narrow specialty. You can even study the works of thinkers
associated with other fields, such as Thomas Jefferson, Sigmund Freud,
or Albert Einstein.
Besides ethics,
logic, metaphysics, and theory of knowledge, there is political philosophy,
philosophy of law, philosophy of religion, philosophy of science and mathematics,
philosophy of art--even philosophy of sex!
One branch of
philosophy--logic--is the study of good and bad reasoning. Taking
philosophy courses is one of the best ways to learn to read, write, and
think; that is to learn to read and listen critically and to write and
speak clearly and logically--and to think for yourself. These abilities
are valuable in themselves and also are highly valued by employers.
In addition to
the undergraduate minor in philosophy, the University of Nevada, Reno,
offers the bachelor of arts and master of arts degrees in philosophy.
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