Bulletin Archive
This archived information is dated to the 2008-09 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
This archived information is dated to the 2008-09 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
The honors program in Ethics in Society is open to majors in every field and must be taken in addition to a department major. Students should apply for entry at the end of Spring Quarter of the sophomore year or no later than the beginning of Autumn Quarter of the junior year. Applicants should have a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 3.3 (B+) or higher. They should also maintain this minimum average in the courses taken to satisfy the requirements. Required courses must be taken for a letter grade.
Requirements
A typical student takes ETHICSOC 20 or 170 and 30 or 171 by the end of the sophomore year. Upon admission to the honors program as a junior, he or she takes ETHICSOC 190 in Winter Quarter and requirement 2 (the optional subjects) at any time during the junior year, or possibly Autumn Quarter of the senior year. The honors thesis is normally written during Autumn and Winter quarters of the senior year. Courses taken to fulfill the Ethics in Society honors requirement may be double-counted for Philosophy and other majors; Ethics in Society minors may not double count courses.
*The following courses may be used to fulfill requirement 2. The honors adviser can approve additional courses.
ANTHRO 90A. History of Archaeological Thought
ANTHRO 90B. Theory of Cultural and Social Anthropology
ANTHRO 179. Cultures of Disease: Cancer
ANTHRO 326B. Conduct and Misconduct in Science
ARCHLGY 103. History of Archaeological Thought
COMM 131. Media Ethics and Responsibilities
COMM 236G. Democracy, Justice, and Deliberation
COMM 238. Democratic Theory: Normative and Empirical Issues
ECON 224. Science, Technology, and Economic Growth
EDUC 137X. Social Justice in Education
EDUC 158. Children's Citizenship: Justice Across Generations
EDUC 167. Educating for Equity and Democracy
EDUC 179B. Youth Empowerment and Civic Engagement
EDUC 220C. Education and Society
EDUC 237X. Social Justice in Education
EDUC 247. Moral Education
EDUC 279B. Youth Empowerment and Civic Engagement
EDUC 304. The Philosophical and Educational Thought of John Dewey
OIT 333. Entrepreneurial Design for Extreme Affordability
HISTORY 236. The Ethics of Imperialism
HISTORY 243G. Tobacco and Health in World History
HISTORY 259A,B. Poverty and Homelessness in America I,II
HUMBIO 122S. Social Class, Race, Ethnicity, Health
IPS 241. International Security in a Changing World
INTNLREL 136R. Introduction to Global Justice
ME 206A. Entrepreneurial Design for Extreme Affordability
MED 83Q. Ethical Issues in Stem Cell Research
MS&E 197. Ethics and Public Policy (Same as PUBLPOL 103B.)
PHIL 174/274. Freedom and the Practical Standpoint
PHIL 242. The Philosophical and Educational Thought of John Dewey
PHIL 338. Hobbes and Rousseau (Same as POLISCI 338J.)
POLISCI 1. Introduction to International Relations
POLISCI 114S. International Security in a Changing World
POLISCI 123. Politics and Public Policy (Same as PUBLPOL 101.)
POLISCI 130B. History of Political Thought II: Early Modern Political Thought, 1500-1700
POLISCI 130C. History of Political Thought III: Freedom, Reason, and Power
POLISCI 131. Children's Citizenship: Justice Across Generations
POLISCI 132. Ethics of Political Animals
POLISCI 136R. Introduction to Global Justice
POLISCI 231S. Contemporary Theories of Justice
POLISCI 236. Theories of Civil Society, Philanthropy, and the Nonprofit Sector
POLISCI 330B. History of Political Thought II: Early Modern Political Thought, 1500-1700
POLISCI 330C. History of Political Thought III: Freedom, Reason, and Power
POLISCI 336. Introduction to Global Justice
PSYCH 179/270. The Psychology of Everyday Morality
PUBLPOL 164. Comparative Public Policy
PUBLPOL 180. Social Innovation
PUBLPOL 183. Philanthropy and Social Innovation
RELIGST 7N. The Divine Good: Secular Ethics and Its Discontents
SOC 130/230. Education and Society
SOC 141A. Social Class, Race, Ethnicity, Health
STS 110. Ethics and Public Policy
URBANST 131. Social Innovation and the Social Entrepreneur
© Stanford University - Office of the Registrar. Archive of the Stanford Bulletin 2008-09. Terms of Use | Copyright Complaints