All graduate students are required to attend the departmental colloquium as long as they are in residence. Advanced doctoral students may be excused after 3 years of residence. No degree credit is granted
This is a Public Health Course. Public Health classes are offered on the Health Services Campus at 168th Street. For more detailed course information, please go to Mailman School of Public Health Courses website at http://www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu/academics/courses
This course is designed for advanced graduate students in need of introduction to non-Buddhist as well as Buddhist sources for the study of pre-modern Japanese religion. The following represents a sample syllabus centering upon the themes of astrology and divination in early Japanese religion.
Prerequisite: the qualifying examination for the doctorate. Required of doctoral candidates.
Prerequisite: the qualifying examination for the doctorate. Required of doctoral candidates.
Prerequisite: the qualifying examination for the doctorate. Required of doctoral candidates.
Prerequisite: the qualifying examination for the doctorate. Required of doctoral candidates.
Prerequisites: The qualifying examination for the doctorate.
Required of doctoral candidates.
Prerequisites: The qualifying examination for the doctorate.
Required of doctoral candidates.
Prerequisites: The qualifying examination for the doctorate.
Required of doctoral candidates.
Each week invited speakers present seminars and have conferences with graduate students after each presentation.
This is a Law School course. For more detailed course information, please go to the
Law School Curriculum Guide
at:
http://www.law.columbia.edu/courses/search
Graduate research directed toward solution of a problem in mineral processing or chemical metallurgy
Department's permission.
A written report prepared by the prospective doctoral candidate defining the proposed research for the dissertation, and oral defense of the proposal at the time of the qualifying examinations.
A written report prepared by the prospective doctoral candidate defining the proposed research for the dissertation, and oral defense of the proposal at the time of the qualifying examinations.
A written report prepared by the prospective doctoral candidate defining the proposed research for the dissertation, and oral defense of the proposal at the time of the qualifying examinations.
Open only to students in the department. Presentation of selected research topics.
Close reading and discussion of Being and Time and selected secondary sources. Special attention to the question of being, the status of hermeneutical phenomenology, the project of fundamental ontology, the idea of an analytic of Dasein, the notion of being-in-the-world, authenticity, temporality, death, anxiety, guilty and historicity.
Discussion of selected issues and topics in social psychology.
Prerequisite:
member of the department’s permission
Prerequisites: Knowledge of Chinese or Japanese.
This course is designed for advanced graduate students in need of introduction to non-Buddhist as well as Buddhist sources for the study of pre-modern Chinese religion. The course may be repeated for credit.