SEM 100: First Year Seminar I: Humans and Their World

Number of Sections: 6 | Day and Time: Section A-Tuesday & Friday (9:45-11:15 AM ICT), Section B-Tuesday & Thursday (9:45-11:15 AM ICT), Section C-Tuesday & Thursday (11:30-1:00 PM ICT), Section D-Wednesday & Friday (11:30-1:00 PM ICT), Section E-Monday & Wednesday (11:30-1:00 PM ICT), Section F-Wednesday & Friday (5:00-6:30 PM ICT)

Authors

  • Dr. Emily O’Dell (A&D)/Dr. James Batcho (B&E)/Dr. Dan Wessner (C)/Dr. Phil Enns (F)

Course Description

The four-sequenced seminar courses are part of a one mega-course (16
credits), that share the same objectives and learning outcomes.
In Freshman Seminar I, students will take a cross-cultural perspective
on human existence in the context of the many worlds we all occupy:
natural, social and existential.
Human beings, the philosopher Martin Heidegger once wrote, is
"being-in-the-world." In this course, students will experience and
explore a wide variety of ways in which we can conceptualize what it
means to be situated in the world. Students will explore human
existence in the context of post-Darwinian understandings of what it
means to be a human animal. Building on this foundation, they will
consider what it means to be radically and irreducibly social. Through
exploring the work of both Confucian philosophers and evolutionary
theories of ethics, they will ask what it means to be a social animal. And
they will explore the rich traditions of existentialism to explore what it
means to find ourselves here, evolved beings living in society with each
other, conscious of our limitations, our freedom and our death.
This Seminar I course will give students the ability to move between
radically different frameworks of understanding, to derive rich and
complex insights into the human experience.

Prerequisites: None

Published

2023-07-03

Issue

Broad Disciplines

PILLAR