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PHILOSOPHY

GEORGE H. HOWISON, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus. 1MARY WHITON CALKINS, M.A., LL.D., Litt.D., Mills Lecturer in Philosophy for the first half-year.

FREDERICK JAMES EUGENE WOODBRIDGE, M.A., LL.D., Lecturer in Philosophy on the Mills Foundation for the second half-year.

PAUL SHOREY, Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D., Sather Professor of Classical Literature.

GEORGE M. STRATTON, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology

CHARLES H. RIEBER, Ph.D., Professor of Logic.

GEORGE P. ADAMS, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Philosophy.

ARTHUR U. POPE, M.A., Assistant Professor of Philosophy.
WARNER BROWN, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Psychology.

CLARENCE I. LEWIS, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philosophy.

JACOB LOEWENBERG, Ph.D., Instructor in Logic.

OLGA L. BRIDGMAN, M.D., Ph.D., Instructor in Mental Abnormalities of Childhood.

SPENCER W. SYMONS, A.B., LL.B., Assistant in Psychology.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

Although these courses properly fall within the first two years of undergraduate work, and are prerequisite, as specified below, to the major courses in the upper division, they are all open as free electives to any student in the University, unless restrictions are explicitly stated.

1A. Deductive Logic.

Courses in Philosophy

Professor RIEBER.

Division; definition; the forms and transformations of judgments; the syllogism, and the deductive fallacies.

3 hrs., either half-year. M W F, 1.

1B. Inductive Logic.

Professor RIEBER.

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The facts of consciousness, their relation to one another and to their physical correlates. Demonstrations, lectures and readings.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 3. The course is not open to freshmen; sophomores on completing this course may elect 2B.

1, in residence first half-year only; 2, second half-year only.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

Normally, free elective courses in the upper division are restricted to students holding the junior certificate. But other students whose records give evidence of proper qualification may be admitted, provided they have been in residence not less than a year. Such students must make application in person to the instructor in charge of the course sought, prior to its opening.

FREE ELECTIVE COURSES
Courses in Psychology

Professor STRATTON.

2B. Applied Psychology. Lectures and readings on certain results of modern psychology bearing upon the work of the lawyer, the physician, the teacher, and the minister.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 3. Open to sophomores who have completed 2A; and it is recommended that 2A precede 2в in the case of all students; yet upper division students without such preliminary training will be admitted.

10. Memory and the Process of Learning.

Assistant Professor BROWN.

The acquisition of habits and of skill, the formation of associations; economical methods of learning and studying; the training of Lectures and assigned reading.

memory.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 1.

36A-36B. Aesthetics.

Courses in Philosophy

Assistant Professor POPE.

First half-year: The fundamental principles of the fine arts. Analyses of illustrative material.

Second half-year: Nature, origin, and development of aesthetic experiences. Physiological and psychological basis; logical and ethical relations, and philosophical significance.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Tu Th, 11.

40. The Problems of Philosophy.

Assistant Professor POPE.

The aim and scope of philosophy; relations to science and religion. Discussion of characteristic problems. Outlines of typical solutions. 3 hrs., second half-year. Lectures, M W, 11; recitations and conferences in sections, hr., to be arranged.

45A-45B. Philosophies of Social Relations.

Assistant Professor LEWIS.

A critical survey of the philosophical basis of anarchism, individualism and socialism. Fundamental ethical problems of political and economic organization. Intended primarily for students who already have some knowledge of economic and social theory.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Tu Th, 2.

46. Literary Expressions of Philosophic Problems.

Dr. LOEWENBERG.

Analysis of fundamental philosophic problems through an interpretation of selected literary masters, such as Dante, Goethe, Schiller, Dostojeffski, Tolstoy, and others.

2 hrs., second half-year. Tu Th, 3.

50. Fundamental Problems in Philosophy.

Dr. CALKINS.

An introduction based on a study of Descartes and of Berkeley.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 4.

51. The Greek View of Life.

Dr. WOODBRIDGE.

The study of the Greek view of life as reflected in the historians, poets and philosophers of ancient Greece.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 4.

MAJOR COURSES
Courses in Philosophy

Assistant Professor LEWIS.

103A-103B. History of Philosophy.

Critical account in outline, of the course of Occidental thought, with references to the thought of the Orient.

3 hrs., throughout the year. M W F, 1.

104A-104B. Ethics, Theoretical and Practical.

Associate Professor ADAMS. History and criticism of the chief ethical theories, with an application of the results to the main problems of conduct, individual and social.

3 hrs., throughout the year. M W F, 2.

105A. The Kantian Philosophy.

Assistant Professor LEWIS.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 2. Prerequisite: course 103A-103B. *109A-109B. Symbolic Logic.

Assistant Professor LEWIS.

Graphic methods in logic, the elements of symbolic logic, and some applications.

3 hrs., throughout the year. M W, 11, and a third hour to be arranged. Prerequisite: course la and at least junior standing.

110A. Advanced Logic.

Professor RIEBER.

An intensive study of the morphology of the concepts, the import of propositions, and the principles of inference.

2 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th, 9.

111. Metaphysics.

Associate Professor ADAMS.

The relation between mind and body, the nature of consciousness and personality, the philosophy of evolution, and man's relation to nature.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 3. Prerequisite: course 103B.

* Not to be given, 1916-17.

112A-112B. Religion.

Associate Professor ADAMS. First half-year. The origin and development of religion, the chief types of ideas and practices in the historical religions.

Second half-year: Analysis and criticism of contemporary interpretations of religion, the truth of religious ideas, and the place of religion in modern life.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Tu Th, 10. Prerequisite: course 1A or 1B.

116. Plato. Assistant Professor POPE. 3 hrs., first half-year. Tu, 4-6; Th, 5. Prerequisite: course 103A-103B. This course may be counted as a major in Greek, for students who read the Plato and the Aristotle in the original.

117. Aristotelian and Hellenistic Philosophy.

Assistant Professor POPE.

3 hrs., second half-year, to be arranged. Prerequisite: courses 103A103B, 116, and one other course in philosophy.

123. German Idealism after Kant.

Dr. LOEWENBERG.

Fichte, Schelling and Hegel: a study of the development of the Kantian philosophy in Germany.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 2. Prerequisite: courses 103A-103B

and 105A.

125. Philosophic Theories of the Nineteenth Century. Dr. LOEWENBERG. Summary account of Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Herbert, Lotze, Comte, Spencer, Haeckel, Nietzsche, etc.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 2. Prerequisite: course 103B.

135. Contemporary Tendencies in Philosophy.

Assistant Professor LEWIS.

A critical discussion of contemporary realism, idealism, pragmatism, and the philosophy of Bergson.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 2. Prerequisite: course 103B.

Assistant Professor POPE.

136. Advanced Aesthetics The major problems of aesthetics in the light of recent contributions. Critical discussion of the work of Bosanquet, Croce, Lipps, Meumann, Vernon Lee, Puffer, with special reference to the problem of method. Applications of aesthetic principles to recent tendencies in art.

2 hrs., first half-year. Tu Th, 3. Prerequisite: course 36A-36B.

*137. Advanced Ethics.

Assistant Professor POPE.

The ethics of idealism, history; present meaning; applications. 3 hrs., first half-year. M, 5; F, 4-6. Prerequisite: course 104A-104B.

* Not to be given, 1916-17.

138. Continental Rationalism in the Seventeenth Century.

Dr. LOEWENBERG.

A detailed study of Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibnitz, with some attention to their contemporaries.

3 hrs., first half-year. M W F, 10. Prerequisite: course 103A-103в.

139. The Philosophy of Royce.

Dr. LOEWENBERG.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Tu Th, 1. Prerequisite: course 103A-103в or course 104A-104B.

History of Platonism. [See Greek 152.]

Professor SHOREY.

145. Social Psychology.

Courses in Psychology

Associate Professor ADAMS.

The basis of social relations and the social aspects of human nature. The application of social psychology to ethical, political and economic problems.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 3. Prerequisite: course 2A or 2B.

106. Introduction to Psychological Experiment.

Assistant Professor BROWN. Experiments in psychological measurement and analysis: sensation, perception, emotion, suggestion, movement, attention.

4 hrs., first half-year; 2 units. Hours to be arranged. Tu Th, afternoons. Prerequisite: course 2A.

107. Phases of Medical Psychology.

Assistant Professor BROWN.

Methods of psychological experimentation affecting the work of the physician. Bodily movements, fatigue, habituation, psychological expressions of emotion, association tests and other mental tests.

4 hrs., second half-year; 2 units. Hours to be arranged. Tu Th, afternoons. Prerequisite: course 2A or 2B.

*124A-124B. History of Psychology.

Professor STRATTON.

Psychological observations, theory, and method through early Hindu and Greek thought, and thence to the present time.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Tu Th, 3. Prerequisite: course 2A.

133. Advanced General Psychology.

Assistant Professor BROWN.

Lectures, recitations, and reports dealing with contemporary discussions of Sensation, Perception, Attention, the Self, the Will, and related topics.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 9. Prerequisite: course 2A.

* Not to be given, 1916-17.

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