PHIL 112
Introduction: Ethics and Society (GE)
1. Catalog Entry
PHIL 112
Introduction: Ethics and Society (GE)
Credit hours (3)
This course introduces students to philosophy through the study of ethics. Readings
                                    from major philosophers focus questions about value in human life and actions. Topics
                                    covered may include the nature of ethical reasoning and moral obligation, the value
                                    of morality to the individual and society, how ethics helps us understand our place
                                    in the universe, and how ethical ideas clarify moral problems facing society.
Note(s): General Education and Humanistic or Artistic Expression designated course.
2. Detailed Description of Course
This course introduces the major Western approaches to moral theory as it acquaints
                                    students with some of the main figures and schools of thought in this tradition. The
                                    works of thinkers such as Plato, Aristotle, Mill, Kant, and Rawls are considered.
                                    This course also familiarizes students with the process of applying ethical theories
                                    to current social issues including problems relating to rights, war, euthanasia, and
                                    the death penalty. In this applied portion of the class, multicultural approaches
                                    to social problems may be considered, such as feminist, African, or Eastern perspectives.
                                    Throughout the course students are encouraged not only to understand the authors’
                                    positions about ethical theory and social problems, but to evaluate them in a process
                                    of developing their own viewpoints.
Students will explore questions such as the following:
Questions about the nature of ethical reasoning and moral obligation - Can ethical
                                    disputes be solved rationally? What roles do reason and emotion play in ethical decision
                                    making? What, if any, are our moral obligations? Are there absolute moral rules? Does
                                    morality depend upon religion?
Questions about the value of morality to the individual and society - Why should we
                                    care about ethics? Are values relative?
Questions about how ethics helps us understand our place in the universe - What sort
                                    of life is worth living? What, if anything, is our purpose in life? Who constitutes
                                    my moral community?
Questions about how ethical ideas clarify moral problems facing society - How can
                                    health care be justly distributed? Is euthanasia morally permissible? Can the death
                                    penalty be morally justified? Is there such a thing as a "just war?" Is animal experimentation
                                    morally permissible?
3. Detailed Description of Conduct of Course
This course is taught through the use of various techniques, including lectures, collaborative
                                    learning activities, class discussions, writing assignments, and presentations. This
                                    course is taught by a variety of professors with different teaching styles, but each
                                    professor combines a number of these techniques within his/her particular style. Regardless
                                    of who teaches this course, it provides students with the opportunity not only to
                                    understand and evaluate traditional and contemporary ethical views, but also to explore
                                    and evaluate their own values. Basic research skills, including the use of computer
                                    technology, are emphasized through written assignments. Among the activities students
                                    can expect in this course are the following:
    1) Lecture and discussion led by instructor
    2) Small-group discussion
    3) In-class debates
    4) Individual and group presentations
    5) Informal writing assignments
    6) Keeping Journals
    7) Individual and group research projects involving library and Internet searches
    8) Written and oral analysis of texts
4. Goals and Objectives of the Course
Upon successful completion of this course, students should be able to demonstrate:
    1) a basic understanding of the nature and methods of philosophy as an academic
                                    discipline
    2) a basic understanding of the major figures and schools of thought in the Western
                                    ethical tradition
    3) an awareness of contemporary and multicultural perspectives in ethics
    4) an ability to apply ethical theory to current social problems
    5) an awareness of the importance of precision and clarity in thought and in the
                                    use of language
    6) an ability to use critical and constructive reasoning skills.
Broad General Education Goals
As part of the General Education program, this course is designed to help students
                                    achieve a number of broad learning goals in addition to the course-specific goals
                                    identified above.
Specifically, this course meets the learning outcomes for University CORE B, Goal
                                    7:
¸£Àûµ¼ÔÚÏß¹Û¿´ students will understand that human experience has given rise to
                                    significant questions and be aware of the nature and methods of inquiry in the humanities.
¸£Àûµ¼ÔÚÏß¹Û¿´ students will:
    1) Identify principles, concepts, or developments crucial to inquiry in a humanities
                                    discipline;
    2) Recognize how a method of inquiry in the humanities can be applied to a disciplinary
                                    question.
5. Assessment Measures
Student progress in achieving the course-specific objectives and the General Education
                                    goals established for this course will be measured in a variety of ways. Because this
                                    course is taught by several instructors, the specific assessment instruments employed
                                    may vary, but in every case the instructor will employ a number of the following methods
                                    to evaluate aspects of student learning:
    1) Graded and ungraded homework assignments may be used to measure the student's
                                    ability to read texts carefully, to identify
       underlying values and assumptions, to articulate central concepts, to analyze
                                    and construct logical arguments, and to employ
       basic research methods.
    2) Journals may be used to measure the development of self-reflection and progress
                                    in critical and creative thinking about the ideas,
       issues, and texts of the course.
     3) Class discussions, debates, and small group discussion may be used to measure
                                    the student's logical reasoning and oral
       communication skills as well as the student's ability to work with others in
                                    a shared process of inquiry.
    4) Individual and group oral presentations may be used to measure the student's
                                    understanding of particular philosophical positions or
       issues as well as the student's ability to present logical and persuasive arguments.
    5) Quizzes and objective tests may be used to measure the student's basic knowledge
                                    of the course material and the student's ability to
       read carefully and think with clarity.
    6) Essay exams may be used to measure the student's understanding of the nature
                                    and methods of philosophy, knowledge of the
       course material, ability to analyze and construct arguments, and ability to
                                    think and to write with clarity.
    7) Research reports may be used to measure the student's ability to employ appropriate
                                    research methods and technologies.
    8) Term papers may be used to measure the student's understanding of the nature
                                    of philosophical inquiry and knowledge of specific
       figures or issues addressed in the course, as well as to measure the student's
                                    ability to develop a sustained and persuasive
       argument, to think and write with clarity, and to demonstrate an appreciation
                                    of the significance of philosophy to his or her own
       life and concerns.
6. Other Course Information
None
Review and Approval
July 1991
May 1994
May 1995
January 27, 1997
April 17, 1998
March 31, 1999
September 18, 2001
June 20, 2015
March 01, 2021