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PHILOSOPHY
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

  

PHILOSOPHY

(Attention is called to the explanatory notes given below.)

Philosophy sB1-I. Deductive Logic.—First Term. 9:30 to 11:30; P.
H. B. 16. Credit, one session-hour. Mr. Swertfeger and Mr.
Dent.

After an introductory discussion of the standpoint, problems, and methods of
logic and a brief survey of the historical development of the science, the class will
be engaged with detailed study of deduction or the logic of proof.

Text-books.—Creighton's Introductory Logic; and, Introduction to Reflective
Thinking by Columbia Associates in Philosophy.

Philosophy sB1-II. Inductive Logic.—First Term. 9:30 to 11:30; P.
H. B. 16. Credit, one session-hour. Mr. Swertfeger and Mr.
Dent.

This course will be devoted to a study of inductive methods of reasoning as illustrated
in scientific inquiry.

Text-books.—Creighton's Introductory Logic; and, Introduction to Reflective
Thinking, by Columbia Associates in Philosophy.

Note.—The course in Deductive Logic will be taught two hours a day, from 9:30
to 11:30, during the first half of the first term. The examination in Deductive
Logic will then be given, and Inductive Logic will be taught two hours a day,
from 9:30 to 11:30, for the second half of the first term.

Philosophy sB1-III. Logic.—First Term. 12:30; P. H. B. 16. Credit,
one session-hour. Mr. Swertfeger and Mr. Dent.

A critical examination of various theories of knowledge.

Note.—This course will be given an hour a day throughout the first term of the
Summer Quarter.

Philosophy sB2-I. Ethics.—The Ethics of Sensibility.—Second Term.
9:30 to 10:30, 10:30 to 11:30, and 12:30 to 1:30; P. H. 3. Credit,
one session-hour. Mr. Lefevre.

Philosophy sB2-II. Ethics.—The Ethics of Reason.—Second Term.
9:30 to 10:30, 10:30 to 11:30, and 12:30 to 1:30; P. H. 3. Credit,
one session-hour. Mr. Lefevre.

Philosophy sB2-III. Ethics.—The Ethics of Personality.—Second
Term. 9:30 to 10:30, 10:30 to 11:30, and 12:30 to 1:30; P. H. 3.
Credit, one session-hour. Mr. Lefevre.

Note.—The Ethics of Sensibility will be given three hours a day during the first


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third of the term. The examination will then be held and the Ethics of Reason
will be given three hours a day for the middle third of the term. After the examination
in this course, the Ethics of Personality will be taught for the final third
of the term. The student will note that the three courses are not taught simultaneously,
but one after the other.

Philosophy sC1-I. History of Philosophy.—First Term. 8 to 9:30; G.
H. Upstairs. Mr. Balz.

Six undergraduate hours in Philosophy prerequisite.

An historical and critical study of the development of philosophy from its beginnings
with the Greeks to the Renaissance.

Philosophy sC1-II. History of Philosophy.—Second Term. 8 to 9:30;
G. H. Upstairs. Mr. Swertfeger and Mr. Dent.

Six undergraduate hours in Philosophy prerequisite.

Note.—The student taking the History of Philosophy in both terms will receive
credit for Philosophy C1, the History of Philosophy of the regular session.

The lectures will begin at 8 and close at 9:30.