Our Program Tracks

Choose from Intellectual Traditions; Society, Policy and Citizenship; or Innovations.

Honors students in class

Find Your Pathway

All three tracks follow our historical approach. They begin with the ancient world, with seminars on the “Origins of Philosophy” and “Polis, Republic, and Empires,” and then branch off into distinctive territories all their own.

While taking Honors seminars, students also can enroll in at least one class, depending on the track, outside of Honors every term—an ideal way to fulfill a foreign language requirement, complete the introductory Biology or Chemistry series, take courses within their majors, or simply explore other curricular interests.

About the Tracks

In all three tracks, through a series of engaging, interconnected seminars, students develop writing and communication skills essential for their intellectual and professional development. Each quarter concludes with an oral exam, in which each student meets with their Honors professors during the quarter all at once.

Through our Socratic seminars, our intensive writing and research instruction, and our oral exams, students graduate from the program with the poise they need to excel in their majors and as prospective job candidates in interviews.

Students often receive credit toward their major degrees through their Honors curriculum. Our Honors seminars offer in-depth disciplinary study, allowing many Honors students studying a variety of subjects, including Philosophy, History, Literature, Creative Writing, and Economics to receive credit discounts toward their chosen majors.

Learn more about each track.

Intellectual Traditions

Photo of Marc McLeod on rocky beach

The two-year Intellectual Traditions track is humanities-focused, engaging the study of philosophy, history, and literature alongside the social sciences disciplines and the history and philosophy of science. It firmly grounds students in the major intellectual traditions and debates that have informed the development of various cultures, the rise of diverse ways of thinking, and the advent of globalization. Students in this track are advised by Dr. Marc McLeod.

HONR 1010: Origins of Philosophy
With the beginnings of philosophy in Ancient Greece, China, and India, some of the great questions of culture and the life of the mind presented themselves. What is human excellence? What can we know? What makes a human life distinctively human? How should we live? In the dialogues of Plato, the treatises of Aristotle, as well as selected works from classical India and China, these questions and others are examined.

HONR 1110: Ancient Literatures
This seminar engages the creative imaginations of ancient peoples through their literature. It examines diverse forms of literary expression as pathways to the place lore and endured truths of these peoples as well as models for eloquence and for personal and cultural reflection. The literature of the Greeks and Romans receives special emphasis. Several Greek and Roman writers (e.g., Homer, Hesiod, Sappho, Sophocles, Virgil, Horace, Ovid, and others) are among the most influential in the history of the world and among the most widely translated. But the seminar also typically explores the work of writers from Asian and other ancient non-Mediterranean cultures, thereby enabling conversations about commonalities and divergences across cultures. In tandem with HONR 1010 and HONR 1210, this seminar introduces first-year Honors students to the Intellectual Traditions track of the University Honors Program.

HONR 1210: Polis, Republic, and Empires
The vast variety of human societies across the globe that existed thousands of years ago (roughly 3000 BCE - 500 CE) are a historical laboratory of experiments with government by relatively many, by relatively few, and by a sole ruler, among other systems. Along with these political questions, the dynamics of cultural expression, religious framework, economic organization, and social hierarchy in these communities of the remote past can be both familiar and strange to us. In this course you will encounter one or more of these ancient societies in historical context as you learn the theory and methods of historical inquiry. You will study critically the ways in which historical narratives are constructed from written and material evidence, and you will consider what understandings about the past are useful for improving the ongoing human experiment.

HONR 1030: Faith and Reason in Global Perspective
This course examines a variety of medieval traditions through the study of their critical appropriation and synthesis of classical philosophy with religion and theology. Some of the central questions considered are: What is the relationship between faith and reason and between theology and philosophy? Can the existence of God be proven? What is the nature of sin and evil? What does it mean to be human? Are human beings free? What is the soul? What role does embodiment play in being human? Authors studied include, for example, Augustine, Boethius, Avicenna, Anselm, Ibn Tufayl, Maimonides, Zhu Xi, Dōgen, Aquinas, and Christine de Pizan.

HONR 1130: Between Epic and Romance
In this course students read and study European, Middle Eastern, and/or Asian literary works composed between the 5th and the 15th centuries. As we read different literary texts, we will consider how and why they respond to or, alternatively, blur certain generic conventions that are tied to particular literary traditions and their predominant themes. Some of these themes raise fascinating questions about love, secular or religious, war, politics, and the like, which we will explore. We also will analyze how literary works construct or question notions of identity on the basis of gender and sexuality, nation, race or ethnic group, social status, or religious belief; and we will consider the tensions that often arise from different ways of understanding identity and their various configurations and intersections. Readings may include Dante’s Divine Comedy, selections from Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, Christine the Pizan’s Book of the City of Ladies, the Epic of the Commander Dhat al-Himma, Usama bin Munqidh, The Book of Contemplation, selections of Arabic and Hebrew lyric poetry, the Japanese poets of Heian Court (e.g., Ono no Komachi or Izumi Shikibu), and/or the Chinese poets of Tang and Sung Dynasties, among others.

HONR 1230: The Worlds of Medieval Europe
Medieval Europe was a complex, diverse, and sophisticated society composed of dozens of ethnicities speaking different languages and practicing at least four religions. Over the course of a millennium, it spanned a wide geography that ranged from Ireland to Russia and from North Africa to Scandinavia. This course begins with the origins and development of societies after the dissolution of the Roman Empire and is both a macroscopic and microscopic study of European society. We work with primary sources —including chronicles, legal documents, manorial accounts, literature, art, personal letters, biography, and autobiography and use theories on power, gender, economics, anthropology, and sociology as interpretive frameworks, The course begins with geography, topography, and archaeology as evidence for land and wealth as the determinants of status. It then studies Europe and its relationship with the neighbors—Vikings, Magyars, Huns, Arabs, Rus, Slavs, Mongols—in the context of political and economic expansion. The course material pivots on two problems. The first is how social hierarchy shaped the legal, economic, political, and personal experience of nobles, townspeople, peasants, women, the poor, and religious minorities. The second is how premodern Christian European societies interacted with Jews and Muslims, both peacefully in terms of trade and intellectual exchange, and violently in persecution and warfare. Throughout, we will keep an eye on how the modern configurations of these problems and issues arise from the medieval context.

HONR 2110: Literatures of the 16th through the 18th Centuries
The period widely called the Renaissance or Early Modern Period in the English-speaking world, witnessed tremendous religious, social, political, and cultural changes—and the upheavals that attended them. Perhaps because of the many conflicts that occurred during this period, it also featured a burgeoning of artistic and literary achievement as writers reshaped traditions in response to their turbulent times. This was the era of William Shakespeare, John Donne, John Milton, and Aphra Behn in England; Gaspara Stampa in Italy; Miguel de Cervantes in Spain; François Rabelais, Louise Labé, and Molière in France; Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz in what is now Mexico; and a host of others. This seminar will feature a selection of works by these and/or other writers of this period. It will consider such topics as the roles of literature in the public and private spheres; the ways in which the production and circulation of literary texts participated in intercultural encounters of various kinds; the operations of literary influence; and the rapid changes in literary style and aesthetic preferences that would lead subsequent poets and scholars to see these works as foreshadowing some of the concerns of modernity. In addition, the seminar will engage the work of major literary voices from non-European cultures—Hindu poet Mirabai, for example, or Ottoman poets Bâkî and Nejâtî, or Japanese poet and travel writer Matsuo Bashō. In this way, it will demonstrate the global importance of literature in the lives of diverse peoples from multiple cultures.

HONR 2210: Early Modern Culture and Global Expansion
This course will explore significant and selected developments in European culture and society from the Renaissance through the period of early globalization.  The approach will be one that seeks to discern the interconnections and tensions between the cultural, social, economic, and intellectual spheres that marked the transformation of Europe from the beginning of the fifteenth century through the end of the seventeenth century.  Points that will be highlighted include the development of the market and early consumer culture, the religious upheavals of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the development of the absolutist state and centralized political culture, and the early phases of European imperialism and colonialism.  Our intent in this will be to come to a better understanding of the manner in which early-modern European life was lived in terms of its values, beliefs, and ideals, so as to better define the nature of early modern European culture.

HONR 2300: The Rise of Science
This seminar examines the 16th- and 17th-century Scientific Revolution beginning with its roots in earlier Greek, Indian, Chinese, and Islamic scientific inquiry and culminating in the work of Kepler, Galileo, Hooke, and Newton. It includes laboratory experiments in 17th century physics and laboratory exercises in early astronomical reasoning. Topics include the sociology of early science and women in science.

HONR 2020: The Modern Age of Philosophy
Modernity is the age of deep tensions and contradictions: the rise of science, but also of distrust and loss of meaning; individual freedom and rights, but also colonialism and collective oppression; the age of universal reason, but also of skepticism towards God and tradition. By examining the writings of key thinkers from 17th century onwards, including Descartes, Hume, Locke, Douglass, Wollstonecraft, Kant, Baldwin and Nietzsche, this course will undertake a critical appraisal of the modern age. One main objective is to initiate a thoughtful evaluation of the “modern” ways in which we still understand the world and ourselves.

HONR 2120: Revolutions and Revivals in the Long 19th Century
Beginning with the events surrounding the French Revolution, and concluding with the first World War, artistic and cultural production in the long nineteenth century began to engage and thematize social and political issues of rupture and revival. This course will investigate how visual and literary artists used their various media to intervene in some of the tumultuous questions of their day: the limits of reason, the effects of industrialization, the landscapes of urban expansion, the rise of science and technology, the movements in human rights, and the relationship between aesthetics and social justice.

HONR 2510: Capitalism and Its Discontents
This course is a philosophical examination of capitalist economics. It first examines its classical defense (Adam Smith), and then examines figures who worry about it, including Thomas Piketty, Noam Chomsky, and Joseph Stiglitz. It also examines possible alternatives, including indigenous economics, Buddhist economics, communist anarchy (Kropotkin), and communism (Marx). It also examines the economics of the global ecological crisis as well as global economic inequality. This class is neither a dismissal nor a defense of the status quo, but rather an examination of a broad range of issues at the heart of this timely issue.

 

HONR 2030: Crises in Contemporary Thought
If the 18th and 19th Centuries produced some optimism about humanity and its prospects, the 20th and 21st centuries, with their unprecedented wars, ecological devastation, and global anxieties, led to grave doubts about the Western cultural heritage. Reading some of this period's most trenchant thinkers, we will examine some of its most vexing questions. For example: What remains of religion and the belief and trust in God? Is the humanistic heritage all it is cracked up to be? Does capitalism enhance the quality of life on earth or does it produce misery and ecological devastation? Do we any longer believe in progress and the goodness of life? Do the contemporary global crises provide any new openings for other ways of thinking and living?

HONR 2310: Electricity, Energy, Evolution
This multidisciplinary historical seminar examines the emergence of modern science and technology in the 19th century leading to Big Science institutional global impact in the 20th and 21st centuries. It includes the study of animal electricity, natural history in South America and early environmentalism, the history of invention in the Industrial Revolution, the content and impact of Darwin's theory of evolution, and selected topics of social or environmental impact in current science and technology.

HONR 2320: The Measurement of Inequality 
This course presents mathematical and statistical methods for measuring multiple dimensions of inequality. The course also looks critically at the assumptions and social constructs embedded in inequality metrics. Methodological discussion is accompanied with guided practices on real data using statistical software.  Students apply inequality metrics to data, gaining insight into past and present levels of inequality and into how policies to address inequality are empirically evaluated.  Topics include the distribution of income and wealth, racial inequality, gender inequality, and environmental inequality.

HONR 2130: Representation and Culture in 20th-21st-Century Literature/Art
This course starts roughly with beginning of the 20th century, around the crisis of WWI and culminates with the post-9/11 moment and the global resurgence of authoritarianism and political polarization in the 21st century. We will examine the literary and artistic responses to technological modernity, colonialism, historical trauma, and the rise of global capital. In this interdisciplinary course, we will consider how artists and writers engage crucial forces that structure our world today through a variety of techniques, practices, and media. Topics students will encounter include: aesthetic experiments in European and US modernisms; fragmentation, the stream-of-consciousness novel, and the ethics of representation after the Holocaust; photomontage and the representation of war; identity, race, and gender in the society of spectacle; postcolonial reassessments of history; climate fiction and ecological thought; the status of photography, painting, electronic media, and text in an era of intensifying identity politics. 

HONR 2250: Human Rights in the Modern World
This course will focus on one of the major problems afflicting the modern world – the widespread violation of human rights. The first part will examine the theoretical evolution and general history of the idea of human rights. We will consider the problem of human rights from historical, legal, philosophical, and theological perspectives and explore the nature of different types of human rights – including political rights, socioeconomic rights, women's rights, Indigenous rights, workers’ rights, children’s rights, and immigrant and refugee rights – as well as the relationships among them. The second part will analyze the historical reasons for the abuse and protection of human rights in the 20th C through several case studies. We will consider such themes as underdevelopment, democracy, dictatorship, revolution, genocide, global migrations, and globalization. The third and final part of the seminar focuses on human rights in the contemporary world, giving us the chance to analyze in greater depth the approaches, issues, and themes introduced earlier in the course and offering students the opportunity to pursue directed research on specific topics that are of particular interest to them.

HONR 2520: Modern Selves and Global Society
This course investigates a 20th/21st-century response to the Enlightenment ideas of freedom and rational autonomy. This response focuses on the rise of a class of questions that relate to ideas of the self, identity and community within society and society’s institutions. Particular attention is paid to the effects of modernization and globalization. Authors covered include such thinkers as Dewey, Du Bois, Freud, Levinas, Mead, Foucault, Nussbaum and Rawls.

Society, Policy and Citizenship

Photo of Allison Meyer

The two-year Society, Policy and Citizenship track begins with the same distribution of humanities seminars as the first year of Intellectual Traditions. The track then turns attention to the study of political economy and the social sciences in the second year, making it ideally suited for students interested in public policy solutions and social justice issues. Students in this track are advised by Dr. Allison Meyer.

HONR 1010: Origins of Philosophy
With the beginnings of philosophy in Ancient Greece, China, and India, some of the great questions of culture and the life of the mind presented themselves. What is human excellence? What can we know? What makes a human life distinctively human? How should we live? In the dialogues of Plato, the treatises of Aristotle, as well as selected works from classical India and China, these questions and others are examined.

HONR 1150: Foundational Fictions
Whether conquering or conquered, different peoples have relied on the creative imagination to construct a sense of themselves as a community in relation to and often at the expense of other groups. In this seminar we will explore how ancient and medieval authors constructed and debated stories about themselves. Starting with classical epics and other poetry, such as Homer’s Odyssey and Iliad, Virgil’s Aeneid, or Ovid’s Metamorphosis, we will explore how classical texts both constructed the history and values of Greece and Rome and at the same time raised complex questions about them. We will then explore how medieval authors adapted those histories and values to their own context by, for instance, rewriting the story of Troy and also by imagining their own stories, including the myth of Arthur. We will consider the conquerors, the conquered, and those whose stories were left on the margins or even unmentioned to raise new questions about the relationships between literary expression and identity. Throughout the quarter, students will hone their writing and speaking skills to become more adept participants in the public sphere of the Honors program.

HONR 1210: Polis, Republic, and Empires
The vast variety of human societies across the globe that existed thousands of years ago (roughly 3000 BCE - 500 CE) are a historical laboratory of experiments with government by relatively many, by relatively few, and by a sole ruler, among other systems. Along with these political questions, the dynamics of cultural expression, religious framework, economic organization, and social hierarchy in these communities of the remote past can be both familiar and strange to us. In this course you will encounter one or more of these ancient societies in historical context as you learn the theory and methods of historical inquiry. You will study critically the ways in which historical narratives are constructed from written and material evidence, and you will consider what understandings about the past are useful for improving the ongoing human experiment.

HONR 1030: Faith and Reason in Global Perspective
This course examines a variety of medieval traditions through the study of their critical appropriation and synthesis of classical philosophy with religion and theology. Some of the central questions considered are: What is the relationship between faith and reason and between theology and philosophy? Can the existence of God be proven? What is the nature of sin and evil? What does it mean to be human? Are human beings free? What is the soul? What role does embodiment play in being human? Authors studied include, for example, Augustine, Boethius, Avicenna, Anselm, Ibn Tufayl, Maimonides, Zhu Xi, Dōgen, Aquinas, and Christine de Pizan.

HONR 1220: From Polis to Subject to Citizen
This course traces the development of political institutions from the ancient world through the Renaissance. Significant attention is given to issues of religious identity (the position of Jews, Muslims and other religious groups in Christian Europe) and political rights. Debates about representation of various social groups in government decision-making as well as investigations of gender shaped political power will also be examined. The course concludes with a look at Renaissance Humanism and the way it shapes emerging notions of politics, society and rights in the modern world.

HONR 2150: Writers in the Public Sphere
From the beginnings of recorded history, people have carefully wrought language, in both oral and written forms, for a variety of social purposes. Some, like the bards of Celtic Ireland, or the shamans of various indigenous peoples, or the poet laureates of our more contemporary times, served as official spokespersons for their peoples and sought to memorialize the stories, beliefs, and customs of their times. For others, like Du Fu and the Confucian poets of T’ang Dynasty China, or John Donne and the Inns of Court coterie poets of Early Modern England, writing poems was a way to demonstrate one’s fitness for public office; it allowed prospective employers to gauge one’s wit and rhetorical savvy. Singers, lyricists, and writers of lays and other forms celebrated and challenged the cultural conventions and assumptions of their times. Dramatists from multiple time periods and nations treated the world as a stage onstage and so furthered the public discourse on a variety of subjects, from politics and religion to gender relations and social norms. For still others, like John Milton or the satirists of the 18th century, writing became a way of speaking truths the world may not wish to hear. This seminar introduces several significant voices to illustrate the range of ways writers participated in the public sphere right up to the age of revolutions that began in the late 18th century.

HONR 2020: The Modern Age of Philosophy
Modernity is the age of deep tensions and contradictions: the rise of science, but also of distrust and loss of meaning; individual freedom and rights, but also colonialism and collective oppression; the age of universal reason, but also of skepticism towards God and tradition. By examining the writings of key thinkers from 17th century onwards, including Descartes, Hume, Locke, Douglass, Wollstonecraft, Kant, Baldwin and Nietzsche, this course will undertake a critical appraisal of the modern age. One main objective is to initiate a thoughtful evaluation of the “modern” ways in which we still understand the world and ourselves.

HONR 2240: Revolution and Rebellion in the Early Modern World
Beginning with the theological, social and political unrest that resulted in the religious upheavals known as the Reformation this course will trace how these movements led to the political, cultural and intellectual revolutions of the 17th and 18th Century. In the first part of the course special attention will be given to the early history of the Jesuits and what this history tells us about the global impact of these religious upheavals. The second part of the course will compare revolutions in England, France and the Atlantic World in order to critique theories of revolution that have long dominated the discourse about this era.

HONR 2300: The Rise of Science
This seminar examines the 16th- and 17th-century Scientific Revolution beginning with its roots in earlier Greek, Indian, Chinese, and Islamic scientific inquiry and culminating in the work of Kepler, Galileo, Hooke, and Newton. It includes laboratory experiments in 17th century physics and laboratory exercises in early astronomical reasoning. Topics include the sociology of early science and women in science.

HONR 2160: Literatures of Resistance
Significant shifts in political and economic systems invite resistance in various forms, and yet many who dare to speak truth to power or express “subversive” points of view are silenced and/or persecuted. This course will examine various literatures that were considered subversive, dangerous, or in violation of dominant doctrines of a particular time and place. We will explore the contexts that influenced writers to engage in literary acts of resistance, and we will consider why and how writers subverted prevalent ideologies. Many writers risked their lives to demand that readers see the limitations of a particular worldview and shift perspectives, and we will consider the legacies of writers who dared to challenge dominant ideologies of their time.

HONR 2250: Human Rights in the Modern World
This course will focus on one of the major problems afflicting the modern world – the widespread violation of human rights. The first part will examine the theoretical evolution and general history of the idea of human rights. We will consider the problem of human rights from historical, legal, philosophical, and theological perspectives and explore the nature of different types of human rights – including political rights, socioeconomic rights, women's rights, indigenous rights, workers’ rights, children’s rights, and immigrant and refugee rights – as well as the relationships among them. The second part will analyze the historical reasons for the abuse and protection of human rights in the 20th C through several case studies. We will consider such themes as underdevelopment, democracy, dictatorship, revolution, genocide, global migrations, and globalization. The third and final part of the seminar focuses on human rights in the contemporary world, giving us the chance to analyze in greater depth the approaches, issues, and themes introduced earlier in the course and offering students the opportunity to pursue directed research on specific topics that are of particular interest to them.

HONR 2530: 18th- and 19th-Century Social Theory
The main goal of this course is that you become well acquainted with the intellectual tradition known variously as The Age of Reason/Classical Liberalism/Modernity. This intellectual heritage is the basis of the legal, educational and social institutions in this country. It is not possible to participate intelligently in current discussions about government, economics, the family, crime, “political correctness,” sex, science, religion or any form of social morality without first understanding this intellectual tradition. In this course we will explore these historical discourses and trace the implications to contemporary intellectual debates. The world we live in is framed by this tradition. In order to comprehend and navigate this world successfully, you should develop a critical understanding of these ideas and how they shape your life. Authors studied include such thinkers as Bentham, Comte, Mill, Durkheim, DuBois, Wollstonecraft, and others.

HONR 2040: Ethics and Moral Philosophy
This seminar examines the nature of moral responsibility and the practice of moral reasoning. Classic and contemporary authors will guide a philosophical examination of foundational ethical questions, such as: Are there moral principles that hold true in all times and places? Does the existence of moral responsibility depend on a religious foundation? Do human beings have a nature, function, or set of capacities that provide a framework for moral responsibility? Is it best to understand moral responsibility as a duty to promote good states of affairs, to respect individual rights, or to balance and combine the two? To what extent does moral responsibility extend across international borders? Does moral agency belong to individuals, groups, or both? Do human beings have responsibilities not only to existing persons but to future generations, nonhuman animals, ecosystems, and the like? The course will build on students' earlier readings in virtue ethics (Aristotle) and natural law theory (Aquinas), and will examine modern ethical theories such as utilitarianism (Bentham, Mill) and duty-based ethics (Kant), as well as critiques and extensions of classic Western ethics from authors of the Global South, feminists, and/or postmodern authors.

HONR 2540: Modern Political Theory
This seminar, which builds on the discussions of the polis during the first year, provides an introduction to modern political philosophy through an examination of major political theories and developments from the age of absolutist monarchies to contemporary times. Major topics include the sovereign state, social contract theory, constitutional governments, democracy, and socialist thought, as these were developed in the writings of Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Toqueville, Mill, Marx, Foucault, and others.

HONR 2550: The Evolution of Economics
John Maynard Keynes wrote, “The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood.” This course critically investigates the evolution of the dominant ideas that guide the economic aspect of modern society. The study ranges from the mid-17th century to the late 20th century. Authors covered include Turgot, Smith, Ricardo, Pareto, Keynes, Arrow and Sen.

HONR 2180: Rhetoric for Public Debate
This seminar develops the essential skills of effective argumentative writing on policy or other significant social issues within the social sphere. It provides a study of the rhetoric of public debate that emphasizes writing for diverse audiences, marshaling evidence for strong persuasion, constructing logical arguments, and appealing to an audience’s sympathies and reason. Consideration also will be given to the genres of public discourse and the development of a flexible prose style that can be adapted to a variety of rhetorical situations and audiences.

HONR 2360: Statistics for Policy Analysis
This course provides an introduction to the statistical methods that help inform decision makers and the public when considering public policy. The emphasis of this class is on application. Students will work with raw data related to the quarter’s theme. Students will also be introduced to computer applications used to generate statistical results. Topics include: descriptive statistics, probability, random variables, estimation, hypothesis testing, and regression.

HONR 2580: Promoting the Common Good: Crafting Social Policy
This seminar is a focused study of a prominent question of social concern (inequality, representation, provision of healthcare, environmental degradation) and how society has responded to this concern. The topic as well as the perspective of this class will vary with and reflect the disciplinary background of the faculty member leading the course. Analysis of the particular social issue will be both theoretical and empirical. The explicit aim of this course is to envision a policy response that reflects content of the Society, Policy & Citizenship track within University Honors—a policy that is ethical and politically and economically feasible. The seminar concludes with a capstone project produced in conjunction with the empirical methods and rhetoric courses featured in this quarter.

Innovations

Photo of Vinod Acharya in coffee shop

The Innovations Track emphasizes intellectual, cultural and artistic innovations, while preparing students to think critically about both the relevant historical contexts and the implications of these innovations for society and values. Innovations is a three-year track, ideally suited to students with credit-intensive majors in nursing and the sciences. Students in this track are advised by Dr. Vinod Acharya.

Innovations: Year One

HONR 1010: Origins of Philosophy
With the beginnings of philosophy in Ancient Greece, China, and India, some of the great questions of culture and the life of the mind presented themselves. What is human excellence? What can we know? What makes a human life distinctively human? How should we live? In the dialogues of Plato, the treatises of Aristotle, as well as selected works from classical India and China, these questions and others are examined.

HONR 1210: Polis, Republic, and Empires
The vast variety of human societies across the globe that existed thousands of years ago (roughly 3000 BCE - 500 CE) are a historical laboratory of experiments with government by relatively many, by relatively few, and by a sole ruler, among other systems. Along with these political questions, the dynamics of cultural expression, religious framework, economic organization, and social hierarchy in these communities of the remote past can be both familiar and strange to us. In this course you will encounter one or more of these ancient societies in historical context as you learn the theory and methods of historical inquiry. You will study critically the ways in which historical narratives are constructed from written and material evidence, and you will consider what understandings about the past are useful for improving the ongoing human experiment.

HONR 1450: Major Debates in Theology and Religious Studies
This seminar provides a case study of a major debate or set of major questions that have informed the development of civilization from ancient times through the Renaissance. It asks students to analyze the historical roots of this debate from a disciplinary perspective and examines its long-term effects. The topic for this seminar will change each year, in accordance with the specialty of the professor teaching it.

HONR 1240: Catholicism and Its Global Reach
Starting with an examination of the rise of the Catholic Church as the dominant institution in post-Roman Europe, this course will explore the central ways the Church defined its identity, spiritually and temporarily, and the ways it dealt with religious heterodoxy. The second half of the course investigates the collapse of Catholic orthodoxy in the religious upheavals of the sixteenth century and how the emergence of the Jesuits shaped the globalization of Catholicism in the early modern world.

HONR 1140: Literary Innovations 1
This seminar focuses on innovations in literature from the ancient to the medieval and the Renaissance worlds, 1500 BCE to 1700 CE. It follows the movement of literary genres from oral epic to acted drama, and from written poetry and tales to printed scripts and manuscripts. We will meet innovative writers and their classic creations: for example, from Gilgamesh to the Gita, from Homer’s Iliad or Odyssey to Shakespeare’s Hamlet or The Tempest, from Sappho’s Odes to Julian’s Showings, from Chaucer’s Tales to More’s Utopia. Through the study and analysis of these works, they will learn the rise and fall of genres, the development of literary traditions and communities and their intertextual echoes, allusions, and counter-texts. All of these literary innovations will parallel, challenge, and deepen our understanding of the issues and debates in Greek, Roman, and Christian global history, philosophy, and theology.

Innovations: Year Two

HONR 2020: The Modern Age of Philosophy
Modernity is the age of deep tensions and contradictions: the rise of science, but also of distrust and loss of meaning; individual freedom and rights, but also colonialism and collective oppression; the age of universal reason, but also of skepticism towards God and tradition. By examining the writings of key thinkers from 17th century onwards, including Descartes, Hume, Locke, Douglass, Wollstonecraft, Kant, Baldwin and Nietzsche, this course will undertake a critical appraisal of the modern age. One main objective is to initiate a thoughtful evaluation of the “modern” ways in which we still understand the world and ourselves.

HONR 2300: The Rise of Science
This seminar examines the 16th- and 17th-century Scientific Revolution beginning with its roots in earlier Greek, Indian, Chinese, and Islamic scientific inquiry and culminating in the work of Kepler, Galileo, Hooke, and Newton. It includes laboratory experiments in 17th century physics and laboratory exercises in early astronomical reasoning. Topics include the sociology of early science and women in science.

HONR 2220: History of Revolutions
The first part of this course will compare the revolutions in England, France and the Atlantic World in the 17th and 18th centuries order to critique theories of revolution that have long dominated the discourse about these events. With this theoretical underpinning this course will then examine case studies of revolutionary responses to industrialization, political underrepresentation and colonialism in the 19th century. This course concludes with an examination of the extent to which the Russian Revolution represents a new model of revolution in the 20th Century.

HONR 2510: Capitalism and Its Discontents
This course is a philosophical examination of capitalist economics. It first examines its classical defense (Adam Smith), and then examines figures who worry about it, including Thomas Piketty, Noam Chomsky, and Joseph Stiglitz. It also examines possible alternatives, including indigenous economics, Buddhist economics, communist anarchy (Kropotkin), and communism (Marx). It also examines the economics of the global ecological crisis as well as global economic inequality. This class is neither a dismissal nor a defense of the status quo, but rather an examination of a broad range of issues at the heart of this timely issue. 

HONR 2140: Literary Innovations 2
The second “Literary Innovations” seminar tells the story of innovations in literature from the revolutions of the late 18th century to the present. Just as the rise and diminishment of empires (French, British, German, American, Russian, Chinese, etc.) and World Wars I and II produced a variety of social and cultural ruptures during this period, literature also experienced seismic shifts in the revaluing and repurposing of genres, the rise of the novel as a dominant form, the rapid increase and prevalence of experimentation (e.g., free verse, stream-of-consciousness narrative, pastiche, metafiction, etc.), and the promotion of access to literature across the globe. Breaks with long-established literary traditions resulted in new trans-national literary movements (e.g., Romanticism, Modernism, Post-modernism, etc.). The prolific translation and mass distribution of literary works across national boundaries encouraged writers from many cultures to draw upon wider influences than ever before and to find audiences beyond their nations to create new works and make their voices heard. Through an examination of several significant writers, from Wordsworth to Bishop, from Austen to Borges, from Ibsen to Beckett, this seminar delves into the complexities of literary expression in our recent past.

HONR 2420: Artistic Innovators 
Like the “Literary Innovations” seminars, this seminar explores major innovators in the arts more broadly, those artistic masters who have greatly impacted the arts through their original work. The primary focus for this course will be on either drama or classical music. How did major dramatists or composers reshape received traditions to create new, innovative work that changed the course of their chosen media? What does the idea of “innovations” mean in the performative arts?

Innovations: Year Three

Note: All courses this quarter are non-Honors.

HONR 2520: Modern Selves and Global Society
This course investigates a 20th/21st-century response to the Enlightenment ideas of freedom and rational autonomy. This response focuses on the rise of a class of questions that relate to ideas of the self, identity and community within society and society’s institutions. Particular attention is paid to the effects of modernization and globalization. Authors covered include such thinkers as Dewey, Du Bois, Freud, Levinas, Mead, Foucault, Nussbaum and Rawls.

HONR 2320: The Measurement of Inequality 
This course presents mathematical and statistical methods for measuring multiple dimensions of inequality. The course also looks critically at the assumptions and social constructs embedded in inequality metrics. Methodological discussion is accompanied with guided practices on real data using statistical software.  Students apply inequality metrics to data, gaining insight into past and present levels of inequality and into how policies to address inequality are empirically evaluated.  Topics include the distribution of income and wealth, racial inequality, gender inequality, and environmental inequality.

Check with your Honors advisor prior to registration.

HONR 2400: Major Ethical Debates of the Modern World
This seminar focuses on key ethical debates influencing public policy issues of the last 50 years. As with the Major Debates from the first year, it asks students to analyze the historical roots of this debate from a disciplinary perspective and examines its long-term effects. The topic for this course will change each year, as will the discipline from which it is approached.

HONR 2030: Crises in Contemporary Thought
If the 18th and 19th Centuries produced some optimism about humanity and its prospects, the 20th and 21st centuries, with their unprecedented wars, ecological devastation, and global anxieties, led to grave doubts about the Western cultural heritage. Reading some of this period's most trenchant thinkers, we will examine some of its most vexing questions. For example: What remains of religion and the belief and trust in God? Is the humanistic heritage all it is cracked up to be? Does capitalism enhance the quality of life on earth or does it produce misery and ecological devastation? Do we any longer believe in progress and the goodness of life? Do the contemporary global crises provide any new openings for other ways of thinking and living?

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