The Minor in Philosophy 
 
Course Requirements for the Minor: 18 units
The following courses, or their approved transfer equivalents, are required of all candidates for this minor.
2 courses required:
| SUBJ NUM | Title | Sustainable | Units | Semester Offered | Course Flags | 
| PHIL 201 | History of Ancient Philosophy |  | 3.0 | FS |  | 
| 
Western philosophical thought from the pre-Socratics through Stoicism, including movements and figures such as Pythagoreanism, Plato, Aristotle, and Epicureanism. 3 hours lecture.
 | 
| PHIL 302 | History of Modern Philosophy |  | 3.0 | FA |  | 
| 
Western philosophical thought from the Renaissance through Kant, including Bacon, Hobbes, Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. 3 hours lecture.
 | 
It is strongly recommended, but not required, that the above courses be taken in sequence.
1 course selected from:
| SUBJ NUM | Title | Sustainable | Units | Semester Offered | Course Flags | 
| PHIL 303 | History of 19th Century Philosophy |  | 3.0 | FS |  | 
| 
Western philosophical thought from Kant through the twentieth century, including the phenomenological and analytic traditions in western philosophy. 3 hours lecture.
 | 
| PHIL 304 | Analytic Philosophy |  | 3.0 | SP |  | 
| 
Study of central figures in analytic philosophy, including Wittgenstein, Quine, Davidson, and Kripke, emphasizing philosophy of language and philosophy of mind. 3 hours seminar.
 | 
| PHIL 305 | Continental Philosophy |  | 3.0 | FA |  | 
| 
The phenomenological movement and its impact on philosophy, literature, and psychology, with attention to Husserl's views on mind, body, and intersubjectivity and Heidegger's ideas of being-in-the-world, authenticity, and death. 3 hours seminar.
 | 
| PHIL 306 | American Philosophy |  | 3.0 | FS |  | 
| 
A study of the major philosophic movements which have originated in the United States or had a significant impact on its institutions and culture. 3 hours discussion.
 | 
9 units selected from:
Any upper-division philosophy (PHIL) courses selected in consultation with the Philosophy Department advisor.