PHILOSOPHY
College of Arts and Letters

PROGRAM DESCRIPTION The subject of philosophy
encompasses such fundamental issues as the scope and limits of human knowledge,
the ultimate constituents of reality, the sources of value and obligation,
and the nature of logic and correct reasoning. Philosophy utilizes the
findings of many other academic disciplines and, in its method, it stresses
clear, rigorous, and systematic thought. The application of philosophical
ideas to the practical problems of life has always been a part of the
subject.
Sacramento State offers the Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in Philosophy as
well as a Philosophy minor. Philosophy is an excellent vehicle for refining
one's skills in critical reasoning and rational decision-making, making
it a useful major for a wide variety of career goals. For instance, Philosophy is good preparation for the study and practice of law. Philosophy majors
who plan a career in teaching at the college or university level must
commit themselves to a program of graduate study upon completion of the
BA.
Concentrations
- BA: General Major / Applied Ethics and Law / Logic
and Philosophy of Science
Special Features
- The Philosophy Department faculty are active scholars who have presented
many written papers and public lectures. Most have published important
articles and books in their respective areas of specialty.
- Flexible major and minor requirements allow students to choose electives
to fit their specific interests and career objectives. The minor offers
an excellent complement to many other majors. The Department has prepared
a brochure with recommended sequences of minor courses for various majors.
This brochure is available in the Department office. The Department
also prepares a free booklet describing the upcoming semester's courses
in detail, along with each professor's specific texts and course requirements.
These booklets are always made available prior to the registration period
before the end of each semester.
- Students are encouraged to take part in the Philosophy Club. Its
monthly meetings are designed to promote group discussions about philosophical
topics of interest. Club speakers have included students, philosophy
faculty, professors from other departments on campus, and professors
from other universities.
- The Philosophy Department is committed to a program of regular evening
and night class offerings. Students who attend exclusively in evening
or night hours will be able to complete general major requirements within
a three-year period. A three-year schedule of offerings is available
in the Department office. Some required courses will be offered only
once in a given three-year period.
- The Philosophy Department offers a Philosophy Major Honors Program for qualified students. This program provides motivated students with an opportunity to expand their philosophy education, develop their writing, pursue philosophical research, prepare for graduate studies or law school, or enhance their career preparations. Honors students will complete 9 units of 100 or higher level philosophy courses with at least 3 of those units at 190 or higher in addition to the major requirements, and they will write a supervised Honors thesis. They will be recognized with a certificate in the department, they will be acknowledged at graduation, and their transcripts will show an Honors designation. Students must apply and be accepted into the program and plan a course of study with the Department Honors Committee. Any Philosophy major who has a 3.5 or better cumulative GPA and a 3.7 or better philosophy GPA, and who has completed his or her lower division philosophy courses may apply. Honors students must maintain their 3.5 overall GPA and get a B or better in their Honors classes. Contact the Philosophy Department for further details.
UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS
REQUIREMENTS - BACHELOR
OF ARTS
Units required for the Major: 36-45
Minimum total units required for the BA: 120
Courses in parentheses are prerequisites.
Students should choose from one of the three concentrations below.
Seniors are required to submit a sample philosophy essay to the Philosophy
Department. This essay submission requirement is for the purpose of program
assessment, not individual assessment, so it is not graded. The essay
should be an example of the student's best work at Sacramento State. Ordinarily the
essay should have been written for an upper division philosophy course,
but an exception may be made for work done outside a course. The deadline
for submission is the end of the first week of student's final semester
or of the semester immediately following completion of 105 units, whichever
is first. Further information on this graduation requirement is available
at the Philosophy
Department Web page.
REQUIREMENTS - BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
CONCENTRATION - GENERAL MAJOR
Units required for the Major: 36
This general concentration forms an excellent basis for a broad liberal
arts education and has been the chosen mode of preparation for successful
careers in such diverse areas as university teaching, government, education,
medicine, consulting, publishing, business, and finance.
A. Required Lower Division Courses (9 units)
| (3) |
PHIL
20 |
History of Ancient Philosophy |
| (3) |
PHIL
21 |
History of Early Modern Philosophy |
| (3) |
PHIL
60 |
Symbolic Logic I |
B. Required Upper Division Courses
(9 units)
| (3) |
PHIL
112 |
History of Ethics (Passing score
on the WPE) OR |
| |
PHIL
152 |
Ethical Theory |
| (3) |
PHIL
180 |
Theory of Knowledge (6
units in philosophy or instructor permission) |
| (3) |
PHIL
181 |
Metaphysics (6 units in philosophy
or instructor permission) |
C. Electives (18 units)
Additional courses to a total minimum of 27 upper division units in
Philosophy. At least 9 units (of the additional 18 units) must be selected
from courses numbered 150 or above. Elective courses should be selected
in consultation with an advisor. REQUIREMENTS - BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
CONCENTRATION - APPLIED ETHICS
AND LAW
Units required for the Major: 36
The concentration in Applied Ethics and Law is designed as a preparation
for the study of law as well as for advanced professional study in applied
ethics. It is also intended to give undergraduates a foundation in rational
decision-making, embodying the conviction that such an intellectual capacity
has broad application.
The concentration gives students an understanding of the theories behind
moral and legal principles as well as training in the process of decision-making
applying those principles. Students will be called upon to make decisions
in particular cases; state the facts impartially; convey their decisions
and their reasoning cogently and persuasively; and justify their decisions
by showing how they are both a reasonable consequence of those principles
and not overturned by overriding conflicting principles. There will be
a particular emphasis on clear and effective writing.
A. Required Lower Division Courses (6 units)
| (3) |
PHIL
20 |
History of Ancient Philosophy OR |
| |
PHIL
21 |
History of Early Modern Philosophy |
| (3) |
PHIL
60 |
Symbolic Logic I |
B. Required Upper Division Courses (9 units)
| (3) |
PHIL
180 |
Theory of Knowledge (6
units in philosophy or instructor permission) |
| (3) |
PHIL
181 |
Metaphysics (6 units in philosophy
or instructor permission) |
| (3) |
Select one of the following: |
| |
PHIL
153 |
Philosophy of Mind (3 units in philosophy
or instructor permission) |
| |
PHIL
154 |
Philosophy of Language |
| |
PHIL
160 |
Symbolic Logic II (MATH
31, PHIL
60, or instructor permission) |
| |
PHIL
176 |
20th Century Anglo-American Philosophy |
C. Ethical and Political Theory (6 units)
| (3) |
PHIL
112 |
History of Ethics (Passing score
on the WPE) OR |
| |
PHIL
152 |
Ethical Theory |
| (3) |
PHIL
122 |
Political Philosophy OR |
| |
PHIL
155 |
Philosophy of Law |
D. Applied Ethics (6 units)
| (6) Select two of the following: |
| |
PHIL
100 |
Ethics and Personal Values |
| |
PHIL
101 |
Ethics and Social Issues (Passing
score on the WPE) |
| |
PHIL
103 |
Business and Computer Ethics |
| |
PHIL
104 |
Bioethics |
E. Electives (9 units)
| (3) Select one of the following: |
| |
PHIL
190 series cousre |
Seminar: Major Philosopher (6 units
in philosophy or instructor permission.) |
| |
PHIL
192 course |
Seminar: Philosophical Theme (6 units
in philosophy or instructor permission.) |
| |
PHIL
196 |
Experimental Offerings in Philosophy |
| (6) |
Choose some combination of the following: |
| |
- Up to six units of any upper division philosophy courses (including
courses listed above that have not been taken to satisfy the above
requirements).
- Up to six units of the upper division elective requirement may
be satisfied, with the prior approval of the student's advisor,
by taking concentration-related courses in disciplines other than
philosophy: business administration, government, sociology, environmental
studies, or other relevant fields.
- Up to six units of the upper division elective requirements
may be satisfied, with the prior approval of the program coordinator
or Department Chair, by participating in a relevant internship.
|
All students must have completed 9 units of philosophy courses numbered
150 or above, excluding PHIL
152, PHIL
180, and PHIL
181.
REQUIREMENTS - BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
CONCENTRATION
- LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Units required for the major: 36
The concentration in Logic and Philosophy of Science is designed for students
who are interested in the general nature of scientific inquiry and/or
philosophical problems that arise within specific fields like psychology,
biology, and physics. It is a good choice for the science-oriented philosophy
major and will help to prepare those who are interested in studying logic
and philosophy of science at the graduate level. This concentration also
provides an excellent double major opportunity for science students interested
in broadening and deepening their grasp of their chosen field.
The concentration gives students an understanding of logical theory and
how logic applies to scientific and philosophical reasoning. It will also
provide an understanding of issues in the philosophy of science. These
include the nature of scientific explanation, the nature of scientific
evidence, and the process of confirming and revising scientific theories.
Philosophy of science also explores traditional philosophical questions
as they arise in the context of scientific inquiry. Some of these are:
Do we really know that the theoretical entities of science exist? What
is the difference between science and pseudo-science? Do different sciences
give us fundamentally different ways of understanding the world? Is science
converging on truth or will it always undergo revolutionary changes that
reject widely accepted theories of the past? Does scientific inquiry have
intrinsic value or are there questions that scientists should not ask?
A. Required Lower Division Courses (6 units)
| (3) |
PHIL
20 |
History of Ancient Philosophy |
| (3) |
PHIL
21 |
History of Early Modern Philosophy |
B. General Upper Division Courses (9 units)
|
| (3) |
PHIL
154 |
Philosophy of Language OR |
| |
PHIL
176 |
20th Century Anglo-American Philosophy |
| (3) |
PHIL
180 |
Theory of Knowledge (6
units in philosophy or instructor permission) |
| (3) |
PHIL
181 |
Metaphysics (6 units in philosophy
or instructor permission) |
C. Logic (6 units)
|
| (3) |
PHIL
60 |
Symbolic Logic I |
| (3) |
PHIL
160 |
Symbolic Logic II (MATH
31, PHIL
60, or instructor permission) |
D. Philosophy of Science (9 units)
|
| (3) |
PHIL
104 |
Bioethics OR |
| |
PHIL
105 |
Science and Human Values |
| (3) |
PHIL
125 |
Philosophy of Science |
| (3) |
PHIL
153 |
Philosophy of Mind (3 units in philosophy
or instructor permission) |
E. Upper Division Electives (6 units)
Any courses listed above that are not taken to satisfy the above requirements;
other upper division philosophy courses; courses in other departments (with
consent of Department Chair or program coordinator).
REQUIREMENTS
- HONORS DEGREE OPTION
Total units required in addition to the required major units: 9 units Specific course requirements are:
A. Upper Division Courses (9 Units)
Select 9 upper division units in Philosophy. Three of these units must be from courses numbered 190 or above. Upon admission into the Honors program, students must have a course plan approved by the Department Honors Committee.
B. Honors Thesis
Students must also write and submit an Honors Thesis based on that approved proposal to the Department Honors Committee for approval.
Students must then write a supervised Honors Thesis based on that approved proposal and the thesis must be approved by the Department Honors Committee.
REQUIREMENTS
- MINOR
Total
units required for Minor: 18
Specific course requirements are:
A. Lower Division Courses (9-12 Units)
Select at least three of the following:
| (3) |
PHIL
6 |
Introduction to Philosophy: Knowledge, World and Self |
| (3) |
PHIL
20 |
History of Ancient Philosophy |
| (3) |
PHIL
21 |
History of Early Modern Philosophy |
(3) |
PHIL
60 |
Symbolic Logic I |
B. Upper Division Courses (6-9 Units) |
Select upper division courses in Philosophy to complete 18 units. These can include Philosophy courses taken for GE.
Note: Students who minor in Philosophy are free to plan a sequence of courses suited to their individual needs and interests. However, for a given major, the Department offers certain courses that have particular relevance. Contact Department advisors for course recommendations. |
CAREER POSSIBILITIES
Law
· Medicine · Government Administration · Labor Relations
· Ministry · Publishing · Literary Criticism · Social
Work · Educational Research · Educational Broadcasting · Library Science · Management · Teaching
· Journalism
| FACULTY
Clifford Anderson, Christina Bellon, Russell DiSilvestro, Bradley Dowden,
Gale Justin, G. Randolph
Mayes, Matthew McCormick, Patti Nogales, Thomas Pyne
CONTACT INFORMATION
- Thomas Pyne, Department Chair
- Donna Helgeson, Administrative Support Coordinator
- Mendocino Hall 3032
- (916) 278-6424
- dhelg@csus.edu
- www.csus.edu/phil
|
COMPLETE
COURSE LISTING | RETURN TO TOP |
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