Prerequisites: the instructors permission. Individual research in all divisions of anthropology and in allied fields for advanced graduate students
You may be asked to serve as research subjects in studies under direction of the faculty while enrolled in this course. Participation in voluntary.
This course offers an advanced exploration of a theme, tradition, or figure in 19th-century philosophy. Depending on the semester, the course may be organized around one central figure/text, or around a theme or tradition (for example, post-Kantian German idealism, 19th-century social and political philosophy, 19th-century philosophy of religion.)
Required for all first-year PhD graduate students in the Biological Sciences program. The research of members of the faculty is presented.
Departments permission.
Prescribed for M.S. candidates; elective for others with the approval of the Department. Degree candidates are to conduct an investigation of some problem in chemical engineering. No more than 6 points in this course may be counted for graduate credit.
Students in the Biological Science PhD program only. Independent research in approved thesis sponsor laboratories.
Open only to certified candidates for the Ph.D. and Eng.Sc.D. degrees. Doctoral candidates in chemical engineering are required to make an original investigation of a problem in chemical engineering or applied chemistry, the results of which are presented in their dissertations. No more than 15 points of credit toward the degree may be granted when the dissertation is accepted by the department.
This proposed seminar is an investigation into the network of relations between three things: (I) the nature of a domain of entities, including their properties and relations; (II) the capacity to have mental states about them; and (III) the capacity to know and to make reasonable judgements about them.
As a subpart of this investigation, as a special case at one level up: we are sometimes concerned with the network of relations between: (I’) the nature of a domain of entities consisting of, or involving, intentional contents themselves, their properties and relations; (II’) the capacity of have mental states about them; and (III’) the capacity to know and make reasonable judgements about them.