God(s): An Inquiry
CANCELLED
Spring 2017 quarter
Taught by
This program will take students on an exploration of the persistent human quest to locate, identify, describe, ascribe power to, and/or worship deities or phenomena outside ourselves. We take as a point of departure that this instinct has been with us as a species since the beginning of recorded human history. As such, by investigating extant sources that document this instinct, we can ask why and how this instinct developed and continues to sustain itself. We begin with ancient Chinese, African, Mesopotamian, Indus (Hindu and Buddhist) Greek, and Egyptian religions (all the while problematizing the meaning of the word "religion") and move on to development of monotheism begun by Hebrew tribes, to development of Western philosophies rooted in these traditions, to the present where the insistence on no (sure) God(s) (atheism and agnosticism) has gathered steam and developed its own ideologies, including scientism.
Students will develop analytic skills in critical historical method, history, philosophy, critical theory, and the study of religion. Readings will include primary sources from each tradition we look at, in addition to secondary sources that come to terms with them. Readings include, for example, selections from The Egyptian Book of the Dead , Homer, The Upanishads , the Hebrew Bible , Kant, Islamic exegesis, and readings in the "New Atheist" movement.
Program Details
Fields of Study
history philosophy religious studiesPreparatory For
consciousness studies, history, religious studies, critical and cultural theory, philosophy, and further studies in the liberal arts.
Quarters
Spring OpenLocation and Schedule
Campus Location
Olympia
Time Offered
DayOnline Learning
Enhanced Online LearningRevisions
| Date | Revision |
|---|---|
| 2016-04-22 | This program has been cancelled. |