Values and Contemporary Issues
Overview
- The course will primarily involve an examination of current ethical issues which are of general interest to the student. For example:
- the morality of taking human life: abortion, euthanasia, suicide, capital punishment, war;
- the relation of morality to the law: the “moral majority”, paternalism, civil libertarianism, pornography, drugs, censorship;
- the just or unjust treatment of sentient beings, e.g., racism, sexism, affirmative action, animal liberation, poverty and famine;
- the direction of culture and civilization: technology, T.V. and violence, eugenics, education and indoctrination, ecology, capitalism, socialism.
- Through the examination of the types of issues in #1, students will learn the general dialogical method of developing their own moral perspective and will be acquainted with various philosophical methods for confronting moral issues (e.g., analytic, existential, phenomenological, pragmatic).
- Through the examination of the types of issues in #1, students will also become acquainted with:
- different types of posture: in ethics (e.g. subjectivism/objectivism, egoism/altruism, individualism/authoritarianism, relativism/universalism) as they relate both to personal and social morality;
- different ethical theories, e.g., utilitarian, deontological, virtue, existential, and situational; and
- different kinds of levels of ethics, e.g., descriptive, normative and meta-ethical.
The course will be taught by a combination of informal lecture and structured discussion. Class participation will be encouraged throughout all aspects of the course. As dialogue is essential to philosophical growth, time will be allowed for in-depth, “give and take” discussions between individual students and the instructor and between individual students and other students, as well as for more general class discussions. Students may be invited to participate in class-instruction, if they so desire, by giving seminars. Some audio-visual materials, focussing on particular ethical problems, or the understanding of such problems, will be used.
Evaluation will be based upon course objectives and will be carried out in accordance with Ƶ policy. The instructor will provide a written course outline with specific evaluation criteria at the beginning of the semester.
Any combination of the following totalling 100%:
Test, Quizzes, and Short Assignments | 20% - 50% |
Written Class Presentations, Essays, Essay Exams | 20% - 60% |
Instructor’s General Evaluation (e.g., participation, attendance, homework, improvement, extra-credit, group work) |
0% - 20% |
At the end of the course, the successful student should be able to:
- Think in a meaningful way about some of the major contemporary ethical issues.
- Learn how to develop personal philosophical positions in relation to some of these issues.
- Examine some contemporary theorizing about these issues by moral philosophers who have wrestled with them and attempted to formulate solutions in a rational and critical manner.
- Become familiar with some of the fundamental philosophical problems which underlie these issues, through the reading of classical and modern philosophical theories.
- Recognize that critical thinking is imperative to handle the complexities inherent in modern moral issues and that simple answers and thoughtless actions are dangerous responses.
Sample Texts (one of the following):
- Camp, J. C. V; Olen, J.; and Barry, V. Applying Ethics: A Text with Readings, 10th ed. Belmont, CA: Thomson-Wadsworth, 2011.
- Rachels, J. The Elements of Moral Philosophy, 6th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2010.
- White, J. E. Contemporary Moral Problems, 9th ed. Belmont, CA: Thomson-Wadsworth, 2006.
Requisites
Prerequisites
None - Although PHIL 1101 is recommended
Corequisites
No corequisite courses.
Equivalencies
No equivalent courses.
Course Guidelines
Course Guidelines for previous years are viewable by selecting the version desired. If you took this course and do not see a listing for the starting semester / year of the course, consider the previous version as the applicable version.
Course Transfers
These are for current course guidelines only. For a full list of archived courses please see
Institution | Transfer Details for PHIL 1102 |
---|---|
Camosun College (CAMO) | CAMO PHIL 202 (3) |
Capilano University (CAPU) | CAPU PHIL 101 (3) |
Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) | KPU PHIL 1110 (3) |
Langara College (LANG) | LANG PHIL 1100 (3) |
Simon Fraser University (SFU) | SFU PHIL 120 (3) |
Thompson Rivers University (TRU) | TRU PHIL 1XXX (3) |
Trinity Western University (TWU) | TWU PHIL 210 (3) |
University of British Columbia - Okanagan (UBCO) | DOUG PHIL 1102 (3) & DOUG PHIL 1103 (3) = UBCO PHIL_O 111 (3) & UBCO PHIL_O 121 (3) |
University of British Columbia - Vancouver (UBCV) | Any 2 of DOUG PHIL 1102 (3) or DOUG PHIL 1103 (3) or DOUG PHIL 1151 (3) or DOUG PHIL 1152 (3) or DOUG PHIL 2250 (3) or DOUG PHIL 3300 (3) = UBCV PHIL_V 100 (6) |
University of Northern BC (UNBC) | UNBC PHIL 1XX (3) |
University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) | UFV PHIL 110 (3) |
University of Victoria (UVIC) | UVIC PHIL 232 (1.5) |
Vancouver Island University (VIU) | VIU PHIL 112 (3) |
Course Offerings
Winter 2025
CRN | Days | Instructor | Status | More details |
---|---|---|---|---|
CRN
12214
|
Mon Wed | Instructor Last Name
Sandlin
Instructor First Name
Richard
|
Course Status
Open
|
CRN | Days | Instructor | Status | More details |
---|---|---|---|---|
CRN
12466
|
Mon Wed | Instructor Last Name
Sandlin
Instructor First Name
Richard
|
Course Status
Open
|
CRN | Days | Instructor | Status | More details |
---|---|---|---|---|
CRN
13465
|
Thu | Instructor Last Name
Sobstyl
Instructor First Name
Edrie
|
Course Status
Open
|