Wikipedia talk:Education program archive/Colgate University/CORE 151 I Legacies of the Ancient World (Fall 2014)/Course description

Core 151, Legacies of the Ancient World, taught by an interdisciplinary staff, explores texts from the ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern world that have given rise to some of the philosophical, political, religious, and artistic traditions associated with "The West." The texts of this component articulate perennial issues: the nature of the human and the divine; the virtues and the good life; the true, the just and the beautiful; the difference between subjective opinion and objective knowledge. They exemplify basic modes of speech, literary forms, and patterns of thinking that establish the terminology of academic and intellectual discourse and critical thought: epic, rhetoric, tragedy, epistemology, science, democracy, rationality, the soul, spirit, law, grace. Such terms have shaped the patterns of life, norms, and prejudices that have been continually challenged, criticized, and refashioned throughout history. To highlight both the dialogue and conflicts between the texts and these traditions, this course focuses on both the historical contexts of these texts and the ongoing retellings and reinterpretations of them through time. More-over, the course emphasizes that Western traditions were not formed in a vacuum but developed in dialogue and conflict with other traditions, some of which lie beyond the geographical area of "The West." To accomplish its objectives the course is necessarily multidisciplinary. Common to all sections of this component are classic works such as Homer, the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, Plato, and a Roman text. Complementary texts or visual materials from the ancient period, in and beyond the Western world, and/or response texts from the medieval or contemporary periods are added in individual sections or groups of sections. Thus, some groups of sections may have particular themes. These themes will be identified at registration every term. This section of the course incorporates key Islamic texts, including al-Farabi's text on the Philosophies of Plato and Aristotle, the Qura'an, and the Hadith, and puts those texts in a dialogue with the other texts we are reading.