ggftw Staff Blog |
From the drawing board...
After a bloody...
Posted 11-18-2009 at 06:11 PM by ggstaff
...war of signing up for next quarter's classes, I'm finally done.
I've always hated the system. You check the seats available and it's like 15+ but by the time the system unlocks you, it's down to like 4 seas left or full. .__.
My current classes are now:
General Psychology II
I've always hated the system. You check the seats available and it's like 15+ but by the time the system unlocks you, it's down to like 4 seas left or full. .__.
My current classes are now:
General Psychology II
The scientific study of behavior. Topics include human development, personality, abnormal psychology, clinical intervention, and social psychology. Other topics may include psychological assessments, cross-cultural psychology, and psychological adjustments.Introduction to Ethics [Philosophy]
Consideration of the traditional theoretical questions posed in moral philosophy: standards that determine the morality of an action, the motives and consequences of an act, the good life. Authors studied may include Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Bentham, Mill, and Kant.English 2A: Critical Thinking and Writing II
Second course in a two-course, themed sequence featuring more advanced study and practice of academic discourse, with additional emphasis on information literacy and skills related to developing and organizing longer and more complex documents.Introduction to U.S. Politics
Critical analysis of U.S. political values, institutions, and processes. America's political tradition, the Constitution, the presidency, Congress, the bureaucracy, Supreme Court, elections, political parties, interest groups, mass media, political opinion and participation, domestic policies, and foreign policy.I'm going to be ggFTW's shrink when I take more Psychology classes? lols.
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Comments
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I'm right in the middle of Intro to Ethics (Philosophy), and it's really a bunch of common sense (to me), but the amount of names you have to remember of who said what and believes this or that can be overwhelming at first. I hope your prof. doesn't throw it all at you at once and hopes that you'll start evaluating every thing quickly.
It's really an easy course, though. Basically, you learn the different accepted "moral theories" like utilitarianism, relativism, Kant's moral theory, natural law, ect., and then you'll apply them to ethical problems today, like abortion, euthanasia, stem cell research, ect.. It's pretty simple.
Good luck!Posted 11-18-2009 at 07:45 PM by SOC
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Posted 11-18-2009 at 09:08 PM by Esper
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