PHILOSOPHY PHA 5649 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Home Health Care. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5659 Clerkship-Research. Credits: 4. PHA 5670 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship- Dermatology. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5671 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Oncology. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5672 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Infectious Diseases. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5673 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Emergency Medicine. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5674 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Cardiology. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5675 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship- Developmental Disabilities. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5681 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Pediatrics. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5682 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Toxicology. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5683 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Ambulatory Medicine. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5684 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Electives. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5685 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Drug Information. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5686 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Total Parenteral Nutrition. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5687 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Ob-Gyn. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5691 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Pediatric Pharmacokinetics. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5692 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Pharmacokinetic-Ambulatory Care. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5693 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Pharmacokinetic Laboratory. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5696 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Psychiatry. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5697 Clinical Pharmacy Clerkship-Internal Medicine. F, S, SS. Credits: 4; Prereq: Permission from the department. PHA 5905 Clinical Pharmacy Research. F, S, SS. Credits: I to 6; Prereq: PH/PD or PH/PHA classifica- tion, and permission from the instructor. Credit variable and may be repeated up to a maximum of 6 credits. Individual study in areas of clinical practice or thera- peutics. INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF 1996-97 Biro, J., Chair; Auxter, T.; Baum, R.; D'Amico, R.; Hare, R.M. (Emeritus); Haring, E. (Emerita); Haynes, R.; Holly, M.G.; Liu, C.; Ludwig, K.; Ray, G.; Rogers, K.; Schutte, O.M.; Zeman, J.J. (Emeritus) Undergraduate Coordinator: K. Ludwig Graduate Coordinator: R. D'Amico Office: Griffin-Floyd 330 (392-2084) info@phil.ufl.edu. http://www.clas.ufl.edu/CLAS/Departments/Philo- sophy History of Philosophy PHH 3103 Ancient Greek Philosophy. F. Credits: 3. A sustained study of Plato and Aristotle with some consideration of pre-Socratic antecedents and Hellenistic successors. (H) PHH 3402 Moder Philosophy. S. Credits: 3. A survey of the work of major philosophers of the 17th and 18th centuries, from Descartes to Kant, in the primary texts. (H) PHH 3640 Existentialism. Credits: 3. An examination of the existentialist movement in phi- losophy through readings from such figures as Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre. (H) PHH 4930 Seminar in a Major Philosopher. Credits: 3. May be repeated with change of content up to a maximum of 6 credits. A variable topic seminar which focues on the work of a major historical or contemporary philosopher. Examples of philosophers who might be studied under this course number are Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Descartes, Hobbes, Leibniz, Spinoza, Berkeley, Hume, Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, Mill, Marx, Nietzsche, Husserl, Heidegger, Russell, Moore, Sartre, Wittgenstein, and Quine. A detailed course descrip- tion will be available in the philosophy department office prior to registration for terms in which the course is offered. (H) Philosophy PHI 2015 Introduction to Philosophy. Credits: 3. An introduction to philosophy through a study of a number of traditional central questions of philosophy, for example, questions about the existence of God, the nature of the mind, the definition of "good," freedom of the will, and criteria of truth and knowledge. The particular issues emphasized may vary with the instructor. (H) PHI 2100 Logic. Credits: 3. A survey at an elementary level of a variety of differ- ent methods of formal and informal analysis of the logical structure of propositions and arguments. Possible topics include syllogistic logic, propositional logic, quantification logic, inductive logic, informal fallacies, and probability. (M) PHI 2403 Science, Myth and Value. Credits: 3. An introduction to issues in philosophy of science covering the distinction between scientific and nonsci- entific reasoning, problems of scientific methodology, and science and ethics. (H) PHI 2630 Contemporary Moral Issues. Credits: 3. An introduction to moral philosophy through selected contemporary issues, e.g. abortion, euthanasia, capital punishment, pornography. Readings include histori- cal and contemporary philosophers. (H) PHI 3130 Symbolic Logic. F. Credits: 3. A systematic study of forms of deduction; techniques and topics include truth-functional analysis and quan- tification. (M) PHI 3360 Theory of Knowledge. Credits: 3. A study of the central topics and concepts of the theory of knowledge, including the analysis of the concepts of knowledge, truth, justification, and related concepts, the nature of empirical knowledge, the problem of skepticism, the nature of a priori knowledge, and the structure of the justification of our beliefs. (H) PHI 3400 Philosophy of Natural Science. Credits: 3. A study of central contemporary issues in the philoso- phy of natural science, e.g., the nature of laws, the logic of discovery, and the relationships between dif- ferent sciences. The sciences most used for illustration vary with the instructor. (H) PHI 3420 Philosophy of the Social Sciences. Credits: 3. A study of such issues as the possibility of social laws, the nature of social explanation and rationality, and the role of value judgements in social-scientific research. (H) PHI 3500 Metaphysics. Credits 3. A study of one or more of the problems of "first phi- losophy." For example, subjects of study might include the concepts of existence, essence, object, property, and event, universals and particulars, the nature of change, possibility, causation, space and time. Also, many traditional philosophical issues such as free will, the mind/body problem, personal iden- tity, and the existence of abstract entities (e.g. num- bers), fall in the domain of academic metaphysics, as do broad philosophical views, such as realism, ideal- ism, materialism, and relativism. Course focus may vary with the interests of the instructor. (H) PHI 3650 Moral Philosophy. Credits: 3. Analysis and criticism of various normative models of human conduct and standards for making moral deci- sions. Emphasis on historical development of moral theory. (H) PHI 3700 Philosophy of Religion. Credits: 3 A historical and textual approach to philosophies of religion and religious philosophies based on Hellenistic and Hebraic ways of understanding God, human beings, and world. (H) PHI 3800 Aesthetics. Credits 3. A study of the basic concepts in philosophical aesthitics including those of beauty, art, reference and expression. Art's moral and social function will also be considered. Authors studied will include Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Schelling, Wollheim, Danto and others. (H) PHI 3930 Special Topics. Credits 3. May be repeated with a change of content up to a maximum of 6 credits. Check the department office for a course description for the term in which it is given. (H) t+ Grading is on S-U basis only.