Philosophy Courses

Click on a course below to see the description, instructor, schedule, and location.

For a full listing of REL courses offered at LSU, see the General Catalog. Please know that a course's listing in the general catalog does not mean that it will be offered semesterly or annually.

Spring 2025

This is an Integrative Learning Core (ILC) course that awards general education credit. Credit will not be given for both this course and PHIL 1001. Major works on such themes as appearance and reality, human nature, nature of knowledge, relation of mind and body, right and good, existence of God and freedom and determinism. Students should reach out to individual instructors for information about the specific content of each section.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Chris Blakley T Th 9:00-10:20am  
002 Chris Blakley T Th 10:30-11:50am  
003 Michael Ardoline T Th 1:30-2:50pm  
004 Chris Wells M W F 2:30-3:20pm  
005 Chris Wells M W F 3:30-4:20pm  
006 Ed Hackett 100% Online Asychronous --

Formal and informal reasoning; introduction to propositional logic; formal and informal fallacies; scientific reasoning.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Jeffrey Roland T Th 3:00-4:20pm  

Classical propositional and first-order predicate logic; syntax and semantics of formal languages; translation between formal languages and English; formal methods of proof.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Jon Cogburn M W 4:30-5:50pm  

This is an Integrative Learning Core (ILC) course that awards general education credit. Credit will not be given for this course and PHIL 2050. Classical and recent theories of obligation and value, including works of philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Hume and Nietzsche; topics including freedom, rights, justification of moral judgments. Students should reach out to individual instructors for information about the specific content of each section.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Chris Wells M W F 10:30-11:20am  
002 Anthony Kelley T Th 1:30-2:50pm  
003 Chris Blakley T Th 1:30-2:50pm  
004 Chris Blakley T Th 3:00-4:20pm  
005 Chris Wells M W F 9:30-10:20am  
006 Chris Wells M W F 11:30am-12:20pm  

In this course, we will study women's selfhood and agency in relation to race, and disability. We will do so by discussing works of literature such as Lorde's Cancer Journals, Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, and Morrison's Beloved, in conjunction with key feminist texts. We will cover feminist philosophy by Simone de Beauvoir, Kimberle Crenshaw, Judith Butler, and bell hooks, among others. Here are some of the questions we will explore in the course: What is it to be a woman? In what ways is a woman limited in her ability to exercise agency? How is her personhood affected by disability? In what ways does racial oppression affect her agency?

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
Text Usha Nathan T Th 3:00-4:20pm  

This course provides an in-depth exploration of the central questions and issues in the philosophy of religion. Students will critically examine topics such as the existence of God, the problem of evil, the nature of faith and reason, religious experience, and the possibility of life after death. We will study classical and contemporary arguments for and against the existence of God, including ontological, cosmological, and teleological arguments, as well as responses to the problem of evil and divine hiddenness. Through reading, discussion, and debate, students will engage with various perspectives from both theistic and atheistic viewpoints, fostering a deeper understanding of the philosophical foundations and challenges in the study of religion. No prior background in philosophy or religion is required.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Daniel Felty M W 3:30-4:50pm  

Introduction to major themes and areas of philosophy via readings in Modern philosophy (1492-1804). This semester’s theme will be “Freedom: Metaphysical, Moral, and Political.” Readings from, among others, Montaigne, Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, Spinoza, Rousseau, Kant, Olympe de Gouges, Wollstonecraft, Haynes, Cugoano, and writings on revolts and escapes of enslaved peoples. Temporal focus: 1492 to 1804—from the European invasion of the Americas to the Haitian Revolution. Spatial focus: the “Atlantic Triangle”—Europe, Africa, and North and South America, including the Caribbean. Topics: metaphysics of mind and body as well as free will and determinism; the social contract and the right of revolution; the social status and moral obligations of men and women, and free and enslaved peoples.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 John Protevi M W 3:30-4:50pm  

This course will explore the philosophical status of paranormal, mystical, and religious experiences by reading works by William Alston, Alvin Plantinga, and various contemporary writers on the subject.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Emily Cogburn M W 4:30-5:50pm  

Topics in ethics and meta-ethics: egoism, consequentialism, deontology, moral relativism, virtue ethics, values, ethics and religion; naturalistic fallacy, truth and justification, realism and objectivity, motivation and practical reasoning, autonomy and game theory.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Anthony Kelley T Th 10:30-11:50am  

Epistemology is concerned with knowledge, with what we know (if we know anything at all) and how we know it. Most of us would agree that we know some things, for instance that Louisiana is smaller than Texas. But what does knowing that Louisiana is smaller than Texas come to? How do things have to be—with us, with the world, and with relations between us and the world—in order for us to know that Louisiana is smaller than Texas? Is the answer to this question different for our knowledge that water is composed of hydrogen and oxygen? What about for our knowledge that 2 + 2 = 4? Why care about knowing anyway? What is the value of knowing over, say, believing truly? For that matter, why think that knowing and believing truly are different? These are the types of issues that will concern us in this course. A premium will be placed on in-class discussion.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Jeffrey Roland T Th 12:00-1:20pm  

In this Special Topics course, we will study primary texts that have attempted to answer the question “what is technology?” While in some sense, this question reaches back to Plato’s Protagoras and Xunzi’s theory of artifice, it is thematized explicitly only after the industrial revolution. We will read thinkers such as Marx, Heidegger, Borgman, Arendt, Ellul, Stiegler, and Verbeek.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Michael Ardoline T Th 4:30-5:50pm  

What is oppression? What harms does it give rise to? What is structural injustice? What role does motivated ignorance play in racial injustice? How does oppression affect what we know as a society and what counts as knowledge? In this course, we will look at important issues raised by social justice movements of the past 50 years. The topics covered fall within the intersection of social philosophy, ethics, and epistemology. We will read texts from bell hooks, Audre Lorde, Miranda Fricker, Charles Mills, Kristie Dotson, and Jose Medina.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Usha Nathan T Th 12:00-1:20pm  

“If you kill, you must die,” Immanuel Kant famously writes in his Philosophy of Right. Why is punishment—capital punishment—a categorical imperative? A necessary correlate to the law? Who has the right to punish and how has the State acquired a “monopoly” on punishment? What is the political and social function of punishment and how has this function and its justifications changed over time? How can we account for the rising severity and rates of carceral punishment in the 20th and 21st century? Can we—ought we—imagine a future without punishment? We will ask these questions and more as we work through classic and contemporary philosophical texts related to punishment. We will track the conceptual entailments between blame, guilt and punishment and see when and where justifying punishment becomes an urgent political problem. As part of the HSS "AI-Engaged Classroom" initiative we will look at ways that the development and deployment of "carceral AI" and predictive policing and sentencing have transformed normative assumptions of punishment.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Deborah Goldgaber T Th 1:30-2:50pm  

This course brings a philosophical lens to historical and contemporary scientific and medical accounts of gender, sex, sexuality, and race. We consider a long history of controversial and biased science, its epistemological underpinnings and ask:

  • What sorts of cultural beliefs (about race, sex, sexuality and gender) have stood in the way of scientific objectivity?

  • What ameliorative approaches might ensure more objective science?

  • What light can contemporary philosophical accounts of race, gender and sex shed on scientific accounts of the same?

  • How best to understand the nature of bias in algorithms and data-driven applications?

We consider the ways cultural beliefs influence scientific/medical knowledge and practice and how technological developments both transform and entrench sources of bias. By critically examining controversial science we consider the dynamic nature of our understandings of who we are, how we differ and how social inequalities and hierarchies are created, perpetuated and challenged.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Deborah Goldgaber T Th 10:30-11:50am  

This graduate course is interested in the evergreen question of violence, including the historical and contemporary understanding of violence, its conceptual development, and the force of violence. This course will consider the following questions: What are the philosophical theories and concepts that form the armature for shared notions of violence and our theories of its limits, margins, and others? Can it be legitimate or illegitimate, just or unjust, sanctioned or unsanctioned, proportional or disproportional, incremental or evental, and by what metrics do we make such determinations? What are the ethical, political, and social statuses of violence? How does it function? What are its effects? Particular attention will be given to the drawing/redrawing and defining/redefining of what falls under the purview of violence and the political power therein. Authors may include Walter Benjamin, Franz Fanon, Hannah Arendt, Richard Bernstein, Judith Butler, Michel Foucault, and Susan Sontag. Note that topics that may be upsetting to students such as genocide, systemic or political violence, sexual and physical violence will be discussed.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Hannah Bacon W 3:00-5:50pm  

Fall 2024

This course provides an introduction to philosophy through a survey of a number of figures and themes in western philosophy. We will study major works on such themes as appearance and reality, human nature, nature of knowledge, relation of mind and body, right and good, existence of God, and freedom and determinism. We will discuss figures such as, but not limited to, Plato, Descartes, Hume, Kant, Marx, Nietzsche, and Mill.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Chris Blakely T Th 9:00-10:20am 220 Stubbs Hall
002 Chris Blakely T Th 10:30-11:50am 220 Stubbs Hall
003 Emily Cogburn M W F 12:30-1:20pm 100% Web-Based
004 Chris Wells M W F 2:30-3:20pm 209 Coates Hall
005 Chris Wells M W F 3:30-4:20pm 209 Coates Hall
006 Daniel Felty M W 4:30-5:50pm 209 Coates Hall
007 Ed Hackett TBA 100% Web-Based
008 Deborah Goldgaber T Th 12:00-1:20pm 220 Stubbs Hall
009 Daniel Felty T Th 3:00-4:20pm 104 Audubon Hall
010 Gabriel Connor T Th 9:00-10:20am 132 J. C. Miller Hall

Formal and informal reasoning; introduction to propositional logic; formal and informal fallacies; scientific reasoning.

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Jeffrey Roland T Th 3:00-4:20pm 202 Williams Hall

 

Classical propositional and first-order predicate logic; syntax and semantics of formal languages; translation between formal languages and English; formal methods of proof.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Jeffrey Roland T Th 12:00-1:20pm 127 Tureaud Hall

What am I morally obligated to do? What should I care about and pursue for its own sake? This course introduces students to the philosophical study of ethics by investigating these fundamental and perplexing questions of human existence. Our aim will be not only to understand in theory the questions above, but to grapple with how they challenge us to live our lives, give us meaning, and determine what we value. Our task is to consider who we are and who we want to (or, perhaps, who we ought to) become.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Anthony Kelley T Th 10:30-11:50am 241 Himes Hall
002 Chris Blakely T Th 1:30-2:50pm 209 Coates Hall
003 Chris Wells M W F 9:30-10:20am 209 Coates Hall
004 Chris Wells M W F 10:30-11:20am 209 Coates Hall
005 Chris Wells M W F 11:30am-12:20pm 209 Coates Hall
007 Daniel Felty 100% Web-Based --
008 Anthony Kelley T Th 9:00-10:20am 241 Himes Hall
009 Gabriel Connor T Th 12:00-1:20pm 211 Tureaud Hall
010 Ed Hackett 100% Web-Based --

In this course, we will look at the works of Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, the ancient skeptics, and Stoics. We will focus on ethics, what they have to say about a good and happy life, and we will also cover important contributions these philosophers make to metaphysics and epistemology. We will be reading the texts closely, seeking to understand their claims and their reasons for making those claims.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Michael Ardoline T Th 3:00-4:20pm 220 Coates Hall

Existentialism is the perfect confluence of the questions that drive our lives and how those questions are asked and answered by philosophy. Such questions include: Why do we exist? What is the meaning or point of life? Why do we suffer and die? What is the point of art? What is the basis of individual identity? Is it possible to live authentically? How do we pursue meaning in an absurd and meaningless world? The purpose of this course is to introduce the main questions, concepts, theories, problems, themes, and theories of Existential philosophy. Through this engagement we will strengthen our capacity of self-reflection and in-depth philosophical examination. I anticipate that you will also bring to class your own guiding questions, and that some questions you will find throughout the course. I am immensely interested in what questions matter to you and why. Authors include Camus, Sartre, De Beauvoir, as well as works in film and literature.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Hannah Bacon T Th 1:30-2:50pm 284 Lockett Hall

This course will explore some of the different metaphysical positions in philosophy including theories of the mind such as physicalism, dualism, and panpsychism as well as related theories about the universe including monism. Our investigation will then consider how these theories can be used to study and assess various paranormal claims such as life after death, the persistence of consciousness, and mystical revelations.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Emily Cogburn M W 6:00-7:20pm 209 Coates Hall

Our aim is to gain a thorough understanding of the key ideas or “doctrines” in Nietzsche’s philosophy (e.g. Apollonian/Dionysian duality, death of God, the eternal return, Overman, relativism, moral skepticism, critique of morality, etc.), some of the scholarly debate over how to understand those ideas best and consider whether Nietzsche's philosophy is self-contradictory or incoherent.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Chris Blakely T Th 3:00-4:20pm

209 Coates Hall

 What is of ultimate benefit and harm to beings like us? What is it for a life to go well for the person who lives it? Is it always good for you to get what you want? Could something be good for you in the most basic and fundamental way even if you were not at all interested in it? Is a life that starts out poorly but gets better over time better than one that starts out well but gets progressively worse? These are some of the central questions of well-being—or quality of life or welfare—that we will investigate in this course. We will also study closely related topics concerning the nature of pleasure and the meaning of life, depending on student interest. The course is designed to help graduate students and advanced undergraduates to become better readers and writers of philosophy, especially as it relates to the philosophical study of well-being.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Anthony Kelley T Th 1:30-2:50pm 137 Allen Hall

Overview of substantive criminal law, including basic criminal concepts, statutes, cases, policies, problems, and theories.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Ken Levy M W F 1:50-2:40pm 110 Law Center

Phenomenology is the philosophical study of phenomena as they manifest in lived experience, the study of consciousness in terms of the way we perceive and understand the material and manifest world, and the meaning direct objects have for subjective experience. Phenomenology is the study of the lived experience of the world. In this class we will read classic phenomenology texts such as Merleau-Ponty as well as contemporary critical phenomenology. This class will pay special attention to the body and the lived experience of embodiment and the way in which we understand this (and fail to) philosophically. While this may seem abstract and needlessly obtuse (and indeed some of the texts will seem this way as well) this is meant to be an engaging and curious interrogation of what it feels like to live a human life and the multifaceted registers of our engagement in a complex, variegated, and lush lifeworld.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Hannah Bacon T Th 10:30-11:50am 237 Coates Hall

Philosophical issues related to concept formation and theory construction in the natural, behavioral, and social sciences.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Michael Ardoline M W F 1:30-2:20pm 137 Allen Hall

We will look at three different contemporary philosophers grappling in deep ways with how we might derive meaning and purpose in a universe where, for all any of us can tell (and as Tom Waits puts in a song of the same name) "God's away on business."

Historically, continental philosophers have tended to respond to evidence of cosmic indifference with some form of existentialism, where "man" must heroically invent meaning where none has been found. Analytic philosophers have tended to respond with some form of milquetoast liberalism. Both ignore large swaths of Nietzsche that should have made us wary of both existentialism and liberalism, continentals ignoring the sexist, slavery supporting, genocide praising themes (and the fact that standard voluntarist existentialism and the thankfully now passé academic cult of transgression have no ground to criticize these themes) and analytics ignoring Nietzsche's critique of the idea that post Reformation Protestant morality and politics could survive the death or radical hiddenness of God.

Recent books by Drew Dalton, Shannon Mussett, and Philip Goff have all explored the indifference of the cosmos in fundamentally new ways that arguably neither instantiate the worst of, nor ignore the best of, Nietzsche. Goff's panpsychism grows out of analytic philosophy of mind, but his tracing the existential themes appropriate to panpsychism leads him to affirm intrinsic positive meaning in the cosmos without affirming the traditional perfect deity. Dalton on the other hand finds intrinsic negative meaning in the cosmos and in different ways show how one can ground a meta-ethics and substantive normative ethics via that very realization. Mussett radicalizes some suggestions of Emmanuel Levinas that one also finds in Buddhist philosophy to the effect that terrifying cosmic entropy and finitude lead not to nihilism, but rather must be seen as a precondition for the realization of truth, beauty, and goodness.

 

Section Instructor Day and Time Location
001 Jon Cogburn W 4:30-7:20pm 132 Allen Hall