
INTERDISCIPLINARY
MAJOR IN
PHILOSOPHY,
POLITICS, & ECONOMICS

The Philosophy, Politics, and
Economics program "joins the analytic rigor of the social sciences and the
enduring normative questions of philosophy to promote an integrative and
critical understanding of the institutions, practices, and policies that shape
the contemporary world." The Philosophy, Politics, and Economics degree
integrates broad academic areas in the humanities and the social and behavioral
sciences. In this program the disciplines of economics, philosophy, and
political science form the intellectual foundation for exploring critical social
problems, the development of social policy, and critical policy analysis.
The program applies an
interdisciplinary approach to important societal problems, utilizing the
contributions of all three disciplines.
The strength of the program is
that it looks at policy analysis not just as the economist thinks of it
(efficiency) and not just as the political scientist thinks of it (political
efficacy), but that it also includes the normative ("ought" or
moral/ethical) dimensions that can be more rigorously addressed through
philosophy.
The program provides the broad
preparation that is recognized as essential if we are to adequately educate our
students not just for a career but also for lives in which they can be expected
to change careers three or four times. The program will prepare students for a
variety of careers--and career changes--that require analytic skills and
knowledge of institutional processes that drive social policy questions.
Examples are teaching, banking and finance, journalism, resource management,
social services, criminal justice, and other public service. The program will
also provide excellent undergraduate preparation for students intending formal
study of the law.
Finally, the program is the
major of choice for those students considering postgraduate study in economics,
political science, and philosophy.
A 50 credit core provides a
shared inter-disciplinary experience for all students in the program and offers
a common knowledge base for additional upper division course work. Thirty
credits of the common core area are at the lower division level; twenty credits
are upper division.
The lower division core
provides a basic understanding of the political, economic, and legal systems in
the United States; an introduction to the normative questions that concern
contemporary American society; and, an introduction to logical reasoning.
Lower Division
Core
Econ 201 -- Principles of
Microeconomics (5 credits)
Econ 202 -- Principles of
Macroeconomics (5 credits)
Pols 101 -- American National
Government (5 credits)
and either
Pols 200 -- Comparative
Government (5 credits)
or
Pols 221 -- International
Relations (5 credits)
Phil 102 -- Ethics, Politics
and Law (5 credits)
and either
Phil 203 -- Critical Thinking
(5 credits)
or
Phil 101 -- Self, World, and
God (5 credits)
Upper Division
Core
The upper division core
provides a common, advanced-level application of the analytic, empirical, and
normative tools within each discipline.
Pols 350 -- Public Policy (5
credits)
Phil 420 -- Philosophy of Law
(5 credits)
Econ 334 -- Market and
Society (5 credits)
Econ 407/Phil 407/Pols 407 --
Capstone (5 credits)
Upper Division
Electives
The upper division elective
component offers students the opportunity to emphasize particular disciplines.
All students will complete 25 additional upper division credit hours, of which a
minimum of 5 credit hours must be completed in each of the three disciplines. A
number of these courses will be interdisciplinary, cross-listed, and team
taught. (Other appropriate upper division course work, approved by program
faculty, may be used to satisfy up to 10 credits of this requirement: e.g.,
courses from Sociology, History, Agricultural and Resource Economics,
Geography.)
Concentration in
Public Policy
& Administration
Students majoring
in Philosophy, Politics and Economics may choose to complete a concentration in
Public Policy and Administration, which will allow students to focus their
elective work on the operations and processes of the public sector. To do so, in
place of the 25 upper division elective credits for the degree, students must
complete the following coursework:
POLS 314 -- State and
Local Government (5 credits)
POLS 351 -- Public
Administration (5 credits)
ECON 435 -- Public Finance
(5 credits)
ECON 481 -- American Labor
and Unions (5 credits)
PHIL 490 -- Ethics and
Public Affairs (5 credits)
