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Undergraduate Courses, classified as:

(a) Lower Division Courses.

(b) Upper Division Courses.

(1) Major Courses, designated by the letter M following the course number; for example, Economics 7M, Philosophy 5AM-5BM.

(2) Free-elective Courses in the Upper Division.

(a) A prescribed course is one that is required specifically or as an alternative by the curriculum for graduation in any particular college.

(b) An Upper Division course is one that is normally open only to students of the Upper Division, and to which the Junior Certificate is normally prerequisite. An Upper Division course taken by a Lower Division student is, for that student, a Lower Division

course.

(c) A Major course is an Upper Division course of advanced work in a department of study that has been pursued in the Lower Division, or of elementary work in a subject of such difficulty as to require the maturity of Upper Division students. Such courses will hereafter, for the sake of uniformity, be listed as major courses.

(d) A free-elective course in the Lower Division is any course that is not prescribed. A free-elective course in the Upper Division is a course for which the Junior Certificate is normally prerequisite, and which does not demand necessarily any elementary knowledge of the subject. All Lower Division courses may be taken as freeelective in the Upper Division so far as other regulations permit.

Graduate Courses, designated by the letter G following the course number; for example, Education 16, Philosophy 11AG-11BG.

Year Courses; Double Numbers. A course designated by a double number (for example, History 52AG-52BG) is continued through two successive half-years, that is, from August to May, or from January to December. The student will use the first number in registering for the course during its first half-year, and the second number during its second half-year. A final report will be made by the instructor at the end of each half-year: "provisional mid-year reports" in year courses will be discontinued. The student may discontinue the course at the end of the first half-year, with final credit for the first half of the course.

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION OFFERED IN THE

COLLEGES AT BERKELEY FOR THE

ACADEMIC YEAR, 1909-10.

PHILOSOPHY.

GEORGE H. HOWISON, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus. GEORGE M. STRATTON, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology.

MORTON PRINCE, A.B., M.D., Lecturer on Abnormal Psychology. CHARLES H. RIEBER, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Logic, on the Mills Foundation.

HARRY A. OVERSTREET, A.B., B.Sc. (Oxon.), Associate Professor of
Philosophy, on the Mills Foundation.

GEORGE P. ADAMS, M.A., Assistant Professor of Philosophy.
WARNER BROWN, Ph.D., Instructor in Psychology.
DEWITT H. PARKER, Ph.D., Instructor in Philosophy.

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.

1. Formal Logic.

Associate Professor RIEBER,

Assistant Professor ADAMS, and Dr. PARKER. Division; definition; the forms and transformations of judgments; the syllogism, deductive and inductive; and fallacies.

3 hrs., either half-year. M W F. In six sections. Section I, 8; section II, 9; sections III, IV, 1; sections V, VI, 2.

2A. General Psychology.

Professor STRATTON.

The facts of consciousness, their relation to each other and to the nervous system; with demonstrations in neural anatomy and in psychological experiment.

3 hrs., either half-year. M W F, 3. This course is prerequisite to all other work in psychology except courses 2B and 24м. Course 3A-3B is recommended as an accompaniment.

2B. Applied Psychology.

Professor STRATTON.

Lectures and reading on the bearing of certain results of modern psychology upon the work of the lawyer, the physician, the teacher, and the minister.

3 hrs., second half-year. M W F, 3. Courses 2A and 2B are planned to supplement each other, but either may be taken independently.

3A-3B. History of Philosophy.

Associate Professor OVERSTREET. 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, 9. This course is not open to Freshmen. Though not a prerequisite, course 1 is strongly recommended to all students intending to take course 3A-3B, as an almost indispensable preliminary.

4A-4B. Ethics, Theoretical and Practical.

Associate Professor OVERSTREET and Assistant Professor ADAMS. History and criticism of the chief ethical theories, followed by an application of the result to the main problems of conduct, individual and social. Lectures, with reading of the principal ethical classics.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Tu Th, 9, with an additional hour for conference on the readings, in sections. This course is not open to Freshmen.

· UPPER DIVISION COURSES.

Normally, free elective courses in the Upper Division are restricted to students holding the Junior Certificate. But other students whose record gives 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 officer in charge of the course sought, prior to its opening.

*5AM-5BM. The Philosophy of Kant.

Associate Professor OVERSTREET. The cardinal distinctions and doctrines of the system expounded and criticized.

2 hrs., throughout the year. Prerequisite: courses 1, 3A-3B, and 4A-4B; and the course should, if possible, be supplemented by course 23M. (Course 16AM-16Bм should also accompany this course, if not previously taken.)

6м. Introduction to Psychological Experiment.

Dr. BROWN.

Characteristic groups of experiments, with individual practice. Sensation, Emotion, Perception; with especial reference to psychological analysis.

This course can be taken in either of the two following arrangements, as students may need, viz.:

*Not to be given, 1909-10.

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