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Courses
CVSP 205
Syllabus
Ancient, Medieval and Renaissance Civilizations
Semester: Fall, Spring, Summer
What is a
CVSP Course?
CVSP courses deal
with primary texts from different historical and cultural
backgrounds and pursue an interdisciplinary approach. Their aim is
to introduce the students to diverse world views and to a variety of
methodological approaches.
Sequence one
courses (201, 202, 205) focus on the ancient world up to the
Renaissance, sequence two courses (203, 204, 206) on the pre-modern
to contemporary world. Students have to take a sequence one course,
before enrolling in a sequence two course. Sequence two courses aim
at more complex critical skills, such as points 9 and 10 in # 1.b.
1. Course Learning Outcomes
CVSP-205 is a
composite course of CVSP 201 and 202. Students will not be credited
with both CVSP 205 and either CVSP 201 or 202.
Upon successful
completion of this course, the student will have acquired:
a. KNOWLEDGE AND COMPREHENSION:
about fundamental
elements in the Ancient Mesopotamian and Greek civilizations, and
basic aspects of monotheistic thought and experience from the
medieval and Islamic epochs, including the following:
▪ the
purpose of human existence (Gilgamesh, Plato)
▪ the
origins of justice and of the state (Plato)
▪ the
basis of human knowledge (Plato)
▪ the
nature of heroism (Homer, Sophocles)
▪ the
Socratic method (Plato)
▪
free will and determinism (Homer, Sophocles)
▪
faith as existential personal socio-historic experience (Augustine)
▪
reason and will in the philosophy of man and of human history
(Augustine)
▪
Sufism – mystical experience (Al-Ghazali)
▪
Greek philosophy and science within Islam (Ibn Rushd)
▪
medieval epic poetry (Dante)
b. CRITICAL SKILLS:
such as the ability:
(1) to listen to and recall salient
features of an academic lecture
(2) to read a text in different ways and
appreciate it in its own historical and cultural context – an
exercise in empathy;
(3) to identify basic elements of a text;
(4) to formulate questions about a
lecture/a text;
(5) to discuss ideas in an atmosphere of
mutual respect and freedom;
(6) to ground one’s arguments in a text;
(7) to analyze in depth excerpts of a text
in English in both verbal presentation and written form;
(8) to relate a text to the contemporary
world/one’s own life;
(9) to compare texts and shuttle
between different historical and cultural contexts;
(10) to
evaluate texts with increasing complexity;
2. Resources Available to Students
The emphasis in all CVSP core courses (201 - 208) is on developing
the student's ability to deal with primary texts (written by the
authors themselves: see schedule below). Thus no particular
resources other than the works under study are a set part of the
courses. Individual instructors will help guide the student in the
judicious use of secondary sources.
3. Grading Criteria
A student’s performance is graded according to
the level of critical skills (see 1.b) he/she reached in class.
a.
Written work: normally, two 'midterms' and a Final Exam are
graded on a basis of 20% for each of the midterms and 40-50% for the
Final Exam.
b.
Oral presentations, drop quizzes, class attendance and participation
normally are the basis for the remaining 10-20% of the Final
Grade.
c. Teacher discretion: individual instructors may choose to
vary the above criteria. In every case, they must announce any
diversion from the above clearly and in writing to the students at
the outset of the semester.
4. Schedule
(at
http://staff.aub.edu.lb/~webcsp/lecture205.htm)
Classes meet three times a week: one common lecture and two
discussion sessions.
Note: the CVSP reserves the right to alter specific readings for
any given semester. This is part of the dynamism of ongoing
evaluation and improvement of course offerings. Such changes will
always be in line with the general stated course objectives as
described in # 1 above.
5. Course Policy
Academic integrity and honesty are central components of a
student's education. Ethical conduct maintained in an academic
context will be taken eventually into a student's professional
career. Academic honesty is essential to a community of scholars
searching for and learning to seek the truth. Anything less than
total commitment to honesty undermines the efforts of the entire
academic community. Both students and faculty are responsible for
ensuring the academic integrity of the University. (AUB Student
Handbook, p. 33)
For definitions of cheating and plagiarism as well as the
consequences for such, see the AUB "Student Code of Conduct" as
found in the Student Handbook (esp. pp. 85-86 and 88) and on the AUB
website.
http://pnp.aub.edu.lb/general/conductcode/158010081.html
At
minimum, anyone caught in violation of academic integrity will
receive, as per the "Student Code of Conduct", a failing grade of
forty points for the assignment in question. Should the violation
deserve greater punishment, it will be referred to the Dean and the
Dean's Administrative Committee.
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