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Page 277 of Boston College 2005-2006 University Catalog by Boston College Universityas an elective for all students. For majors in English, Philosophy, and Theology, it can satisfy the major requirements if the student takes a seminar as cross-listed in the department of his/her major. Students must also understand the following rule: No student may take more than one Capstone seminar during his/her undergraduate years. Thus, you may not take two Capstone courses in one semester or in two different semesters. This is true whether the course is listed under UN numbers or as a course in a specific department. If a second Capstone course appears on your record, it will be removed. This could make you ineligible for graduation. Undergraduate Course Offerings Note: Future course offerings and courses offered on a periodic basis are listed at http://www.bc.edu/courses/. UN 010 Perspectives on Management (Spring: 3) Cross Listed with MM 010 This course, taught by practitioners Peter Bell (BC `86) and John Clavin (BC `84) provides Boston College sophomores with an excellent opportunity to explore the functional disciplines of business from a real world perspective. Using a combination of lectures, case studies, readings and outside speakers, the course will provide you the opportunity to get grounded in each of these disciplines as well as get some outside views on careers in each of these areas. The course will also provide students a framework to explore and discuss cross-functional issues that effect business strategy and execution. Peter Bell John Clavin UN 104 Modernism and the Arts I/Perspectives II (Fall: 3) Corequisite: UN 105 Satisfies Arts Core Requirement This two-semester course fulfills the 6-credit Philosophy Core requirement, the 3-credit Literature Core requirement, and the 3-credit Fine Arts Core requirement. This is a full-year course in the literature, music, and visual arts usually connected with the term modernism. The first eight weeks of the term will be devoted to literature, the last five of the first term and the first five of the second to music, and the last eight of the second term to the visual arts. Among the authors read during the literature segment will be Baudelaire, Dostoevsky, Ibsen, Eliot, Kafka, and Joyce. During the music segment the composers listened to will include Wagner, Debussy, and Stravinsky. There will also be at least one week of jazz. The Department UN 105 Modernism and the Arts I/Perspectives II (Fall: 3) Corequisite: UN 104 Satisfies Arts Core Requirement A two-semester sequence (UN 104/105 and UN 106/107). Total of 6 credits each term. See course description under UN 104. The Department UN 106 Modernism and the Arts II/Perspectives II (Spring: 3) Corequisite: UN 107 Satisfies Arts Core Requirement A two-semester sequence (UN 104/105 and UN 106/107). Total of 6 credits each term. See course description under UN 104. The Department UN 107 Modernism and the Arts II/Perspectives II (Spring: 3) Corequisite: UN 106 Satisfies Arts Core Requirement A two-semester sequence (UN 104/105 and UN 106/107). Total of 6 credits each term. See course description under UN 104. The Department UN 109 Horizons of the New Social Sciences I/Perspectives III (Fall: 3) Corequisite: UN 110 Satisfies Mathematics Core Requirement This two-semester course fulfills the 6-credit Philosophy Core requirement and the 6-credit Social Science Core requirement. This is a full-year course designed to lead the student to an understanding of the unity that underlies the diversity of the separate social sciences of economics, sociology, political science, and law from a viewpoint that does not prescind from the theological issues. The Department UN 110 Horizons of the New Social Sciences I/Perspectives III (Fall: 3) Corequisite: UN 109 Satisfies Mathematics Core Requirement A two semester sequence (UN 109/110 and UN 111/112). Total of 6 credits each term. See course description under UN 109. The Department UN 111 Horizons of the New Social Sciences II/Perspectives III (Spring: 3) Corequisite: UN 112 Satisfies Mathematics Core Requirement A two-semester sequence (UN 109/110 and UN 111/112). Total of 6 credits each term. See course description under UN 109. The Department UN 112 Horizons of the New Social Sciences II/Perspectives III (Spring: 3) Corequisite: UN 111 Satisfies Mathematics Core Requirement A two-semester sequence (UN 109/110 and UN 111/112). Total of 6 credits each term. See course description under UN 109. The Department UN 119 New Scientific Visions I/Perspectives IV (Fall: 3) Corequisite: UN 120 Satisfies Mathematics Core Requirement This two-semester course may fulfill the 6-credit Philosophy Core requirement and either the 6-credit Natural Science Core or the 3-credit Mathematics Core and 3-credits of the Natural Science Core. Can the study of modern mathematics and the natural sciences prove to be a genuine liberation of the human spirit? This unusual question will form the central theme of this course. The course will explore major developments in the fields of mathematics, biology, physics, chemistry, and the earth and space sciences from ancient Greece, through the modern scientific revolutions of the seventeenth 274 The Boston College Catalog 2005-2006 ARTS AND SCIENCES[close] |
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