2005 Summer
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Undergraduate Courses
Six-Week Session 1: May 9 - June 18
0427/06805 Myth and Science
Cross-listed with CLASS 0330/06986
1. How can we understand our world? In western culture, science dominates
all our answers to this question. But there are other ways. They can be
found in the mythologies of ancient and modern peoples. This course will
compare the scientific and mythological ways of seeing the world and their
more subtle connections. In particular, we will turn to the remarkable
events in Ancient Greece of 800-400 B.C. and discover how the scientific
approach actually grew slowly out of mythological thought itself.
2. Prerequisites: None.
3. Recitations: None.
4. Expected class size: 35 students in section 07205 and 30 students in
section 10049.
5. This course is offered on a regular basis.
0515/09610 Magic, Medicine and Science
Cross-listed with HIST 0089/09609
1. This course is a partial survey of some important strands in the Western
intellectual history. We will start with ancient Greek speculations in
cosmology, philosophy, and medicine. Then we will look at some important
subsequent developments in these areas and how they were influenced by
the Greek tradition. These include, among other topics, the magical tradition
that flourished during the Renaissance period. The latter half of the
course will focus on the profound intellectual transformations in the
17th century which constitute what we often call The Scientific Revolution.
The great scientific
achievements of figures such as Descartes, Kepler, Galileo, and Newton
will be discussed in detail. Overall, this course is meant to provide
a broad picture of some of the most important elements in the Western
intellectual tradition and their interactions in history.
2. Prerequisites: None.
3. Recitations: One hour per week for section 39710 only.
4. Expected class size: 120 for section 39710 other sections 40.
5. This class is offered on a regular basis.
0613/07850 Morality and Medicine
1. Ethical dilemmas in the practice of health care continue to proliferate
and receive increasing attention from members of the health care profession,
ethicists, policy makers, and the general public as health care consumers.
In this course we will examine a number of ethical issues that arise in
the context of contemporary medical practice and research by analyzing
articles and decision scenarios. Topics to be covered typically include
the physician-patient relationship; informed consent; medical experimentation;
termination of treatment; genetics; reproductive technologies; euthanasia;
resource allocation; and health care reform. Students who successfully
complete this course will be able to identify and analyze different philosophical
approaches to selected issues in medical ethics; have gained insight into
how to read and critically interpret philosophical arguments; and have
developed skills that will enable them to think clearly about ethical
questions as future or current health care providers, policy makers, and
consumers.
2. Prerequisites: None. However, this course is part of a core sequence
leading to certification in the Conceptual Foundations of Medicine Certificate
Program, and is a companion course to HPS 0612 (Mind and Medicine) but
may be taken independently. The course is of particular interest to pre-medical
and pre-health care students.
3. Recitations: None.
4. Estimated Class Size: 30 students.
5. This course is offered every term.
0621/08798 Problem Solving
1. A scientist announces that the sun contains a new, so-far unknown chemical
element, even though there is no hope of getting a sample. Another is
sure that a famous predecessor has faked his data, even though he has
seen nothing but the perfect, published results. Astonishingly, both claims
prove to be sober and sound. We will explore the approaches and methods
that make such miracles part of the routine of everyday science. This
course is intended for students with little or no background in science.
2. Prerequisites: None.
3. Recitations: None.
4. Expected class size: 30 students.
5. This course is offered every term.
0623 Explanations of Humans and Society
04-3 11937
1. This course will look at some of the original writings
of the three "giants" of modern psychology: Freud, Skinner and Piaget.
The three movements of psychoanalysis, behaviorism and developmental cognition
will be explored through their most articulate and well known proponents.
Topics to be discussed include the nature of the emotions, the structures
of behavior and the forms of human thought. Specifically, we will discuss
how the concepts of desire, love, jealousy, homosexuality, skilled actions,
language, and logical and moral reasoning can be used to understand human
beings.
2. Prerequisites: None.
3. Recitations: None.
4. Expected class size: 30 students.
5. This course is not offered on a regular basis.
Six-Week Session 2: June 20 - August 1
0515/10510 Magic, Medicine and Science
Cross-listed with HIST 0089/10507
See above.
0613/10452 Morality and Medicine
See above.
0621/10502 Problem Solving
See above.
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