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Winter 2025

 

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Philosophy (PHIL)
211 Susan Campbell, 541-346-5547
College of Arts & Sciences
9 - Low cost (less than $50) for class textbook materials.
Course Data
  PHIL 563   Top Kusch 4.00 cr.
Repeatable. Concentrates on the work of a single philosopher (e.g., Wittgenstein, Dewey, Quine, Merleau-Ponty, C.I. Lewis, or Foucault). Repeatable when philosopher changes.
Grading Options: Optional; see degree guide or catalog for degree requirements
Instructor: Vallega AE-mailHomepage Office:   248 Susan Campbell Hall
Course Materials
 
  CRN Avail Max Time Day Location Instructor Notes
  26222 0 5 1600-1750 mw 184 PLC Vallega A 9
Academic Deadlines
Deadline     Last day to:
January 5:   Process a complete drop (100% refund, no W recorded)
January 11:   Drop this course (100% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
January 11:   Process a complete drop (90% refund, no W recorded; after this date, W's are recorded)
January 12:   Process a complete withdrawal (90% refund, W recorded)
January 12:   Withdraw from this course (100% refund, W recorded)
January 13:   Add this course
January 13:   Last day to change to or from audit
January 19:   Process a complete withdrawal (75% refund, W recorded)
January 19:   Withdraw from this course (75% refund, W recorded)
January 26:   Process a complete withdrawal (50% refund, W recorded)
January 26:   Withdraw from this course (50% refund, W recorded)
February 2:   Process a complete withdrawal (25% refund, W recorded)
February 2:   Withdraw from this course (25% refund, W recorded)
February 23:   Withdraw from this course (0% refund, W recorded)
February 23:   Change grading option for this course
Caution You can't drop your last class using the "Add/Drop" menu in DuckWeb. Go to the “Completely Withdraw from Term/University” link to begin the complete withdrawal process. If you need assistance with a complete drop or a complete withdrawal, please contact the Office of Academic Advising, 101 Oregon Hall, 541-346-3211 (8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday). If you are attempting to completely withdraw after business hours, and have difficulty, please contact the Office of Academic Advising the next business day.

Expanded Course Description
This course is an advanced introduction to philosophy as transcultural thought. The course focuses on one of the major figures in Latin American philosophy in the 20th century, Rodolfo Kusch. In his work Kusch develops a thinking between Western and non-Western thought by recognizing the non-Western lineages at work in Latin American modern consciousness. Kusch was a student of Heidegger’s work and of the Western tradition, all of which he reads against the background of indigenous and popular lineages still at the heart of Latin American consciousness today. In his writing Kusch brings together indigenous and popular thinking in Latin America with such figures as Freud, Kant, Hegel, and Derrida, besides rethinking Heidegger’s Dasein analysis and the sense of being-in-the-world in Being and Time, as well as taking up Heidegger´s later understanding of language and the work of art. Through the course we will read his work Indigenous and Popular Thinking in America, translated by Maria Lugones (2010). Some of the central issues discussed will include, time, space, nature, agency, pre-reflexive understanding, subjectivation, intimacy, embodiment, identity, metaphysics, ontology, poietic thinking, non-binary thinking, community, environment, cosmological thought, and decolonial and traditional epistemologies. Central to course discussions will be issues found in hermeneutics, phenomenology, and deconstruction. Classes will refer to the English translation. However, students able to read the original Spanish text are encouraged to do so.
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Release: 8.11