Philosophy


Engaged in the Contemporary World

We offer a distinctive balance of work in the traditional areas of philosophy with research and teaching in the more directly practical areas of bioethics and social and political thought.

Faculty are producing important scholarship in traditional philosophical sub-disciplines. At the same time, we have established areas of concentration focusing on more immediate and practical concerns. In conjunction with scholars in MSU's medical schools, the Department has achieved national distinction in ethical and theoretical debates about healthcare issues. These efforts overlap with research and teaching in social and political thought, including race and gender issues, democratic theory, agricultural and environmental ethics, ethics and development, and critical social theory. With our commitment to this combination of problems, we are a distinctive program with a purposeful and diverse graduate student body.

The graduate program supports interdisciplinary work in such programs as Environmental Science and Policy; Gender, Justice, and Environmental Change; African American and African Studies; Ecology, Evolutionary Biology and Behavior; Cognitive Science; and the Women, Gender, and Social Justice program. The global dimension of the Department is illustrated by its Ethics and Development graduate specialization and the undergraduate specialization in Peace and Justice Studies. The faculty has been ranked among the most productive in the nation and our graduate students hail from around the world.

Led by neurosurgeon and philosopher of mind Grant Gillett, this workshop explores how to understand and care for people whose level of conscious awareness is real, but severely diminished. Dr. Gillett’s morning lecture will be followed by an afternoon round table discussion on the relationship between minds and the social world in which they are situated. 

 

Information about this event can also be found here:

Football on campus forced us to change the location of the workshop. The workshop will be held in the Heritage Room of the Kellogg Conference Center, 55 South Harrison Avenue, in East Lansing (west of campus, close to the I-127 Trowbridge Exit).

Animal ethics is a relatively recent phenomenon in philosophy and throughout society at large, but the questions are very old. Aristotle and the Stoics debated whether animals have a psyche or soul. This course is structured as a high-level philosophical introduction to the central questions in animal ethics. It is appropriate for graduate students or students preparing for graduate study in animal-related disciplines, as well as for undergraduates with well-developed skills in reading and analyzing philosophical texts.

The Zerby Essay Prize this year goes to Karl DeVries for his essay entitled Kant’s Refutation of the Ontological Argument. The following is taken from the selection committee’s report: “The winner of this year’s Zerby Prize tackled one of the most enduring and challenging arguments for the existence of God, namely the ontological argument.

The Philosophy Department selected  this year two outstanding students for the Benjamin Miller and Bruce Miller  Miller Award 2009: Ania Pathak and Mark Bogner.  [Read more] The award is presented to the most promising sophomore student in philosophy. Both Mark and Ania have demonstrated that they are diligient, curious, and self-responsible learners. Mark holds a GPA of 3.9, is a major in philosophy, and intends to add economics to his field of studies.

The minor in Philosophy and Law allows you to take classes that cover such issues as: What is the relation between law and morality? How do changes in technology contribute to changes in the law (e.g. regarding medicine or environmental issues)? Does the law help or hurt oppressed groups in society? How can international law contribute to peace?

The requirements for the philosophy and law minor are as follows:

 

At least 18 credit hours in Philosophy, including courses listed below

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12/04/2009 - 3:00pm - 5:00pm Special Lecture Hilde Lindemann Michigan State University Caring and Coercion: What Counts as Autonomy at the End of Life?
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