PHIL 103
Spring 2007 Part of Term 1
Jan 16-May 2
Credit: 3 hours.
Introductory logic course that concentrates on investigating how the formal mathematical structure of statements, as well as the structure of the relationships among such statements, reveals the logical force of arguments that we use everyday. PHIL 102 takes a less formal, less mathematical approach to the same material.
Students may not receive credit for both PHIL 103 and PHIL 102.
Students must register for one discussion and one lecture section.
This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in
Fall 2022 for:
| CRN | Type | Section | Time | Day | Location | Instructor | Section Details | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
35439
|
Discussion/
Recitation |
AD1
|
9:00AM
-9:50AM
|
F
|
Gregory Hall
|
Wengert, R
Hendricksen, C |
|
|
|
35440
|
Discussion/
Recitation |
AD2
|
9:00AM
-9:50AM
|
F
|
Altgeld Hall
|
Wengert, R
Harper, A |
|
|
|
35441
|
Discussion/
Recitation |
AD3
|
10:00AM
-10:50AM
|
F
|
Davenport Hall
|
Wengert, R
Hendricksen, C |
|
|
|
35442
|
Discussion/
Recitation |
AD4
|
11:00AM
-11:50AM
|
F
|
Noyes Laboratory
|
Wengert, R
Harper, A |
|
|
|
35443
|
Lecture
|
AL1
|
9:00AM
-9:50AM
|
MW
|
Chemistry Annex
|
Wengert, R
Hendricksen, C Harper, A |
|