Faculty of Arts & Science
2013-2014 Calendar |
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The History and Philosophy of Science and Technology (HPST) is committed to the study of science and tech-nology (including mathematics and medicine) as historically significant in themselves, as integral components of the general development of knowledge, and as conceptually and theoretically rich domains for philosophical analysis. The programs of study offered by IHPST reflect the Institute’s commitment to interdisciplinarity. These programs require of their students a first-hand knowledge of scientific practice, but also require them to engage in the study of philosophy, history and the important place of science in both. HPS courses in Philosophy of Science engage with the structure of science, its methods, its special claims to the production of knowledge. HPS courses specifically in the History of Science and Technology seek to synthesise the study of science, its history and its place in history. Advanced students in the Major undertake a directed research project into the history or philosophy of science.
Students pursuing a program of study in the history and philosophy of science will find themselves ideally suited to any professional or academic context that requires an understanding of the relation between the sciences and the humanities. These may include, but are not restricted to, medicine, law, journalism, and education. Fur-thermore, the study of the history and philosophy of science furnishes students with a battery of analytic and critical tools with which to approach a wide range of interdisciplinary endeavours.
Director of Undergraduate Studies:
Professor M. Vicedo, Victoria College, Room 314 (416-978-1500)
Email: marga.vicedo@utoronto.ca
Enquiries:
Victoria College, Room 316 (416-978-5397)
This program has unlimited enrolment and no specific admission requirements. All students who have completed at least 4.0 courses are eligible to enrol. Students are encouraged to meet with the Director of Undergraduate Studies prior to registering for this degree.
(7.5 FCEs, including at least 2.0 FCEs at the 300+level, 0.5 of which must be at the 400-level)
First year:
1. HPS100H1
2. 1.0 100+level FCE in any natural or social science (including MAT and STA courses), excluding courses for non science students.
Higher years:
3. HPS200H1, HPS210H1, HPS211H1, HPS250H1, HPS201H1 or HPS202H1
4. 0.5 FCE from: PHL245H1, PHL246H1, JPH311H1, HPS390H1 or HPS391H1
5. 1.0 FCE in History
6. 1.0 200+level in Science, including 0.5 at the 300+level (These courses should be in the same area)
7. 0.5 FCE from HPS300+ level courses, JHE353H1, JHE355H1, PHL355H1, PHL356H1, PHL357H1
8. 0.5 FCE from Special Research Opportunities (HPS481H1, HPS482H1, HPS483H1, HPS484H1, HPS485H1) or Independent Studies course HPS495Y1
This program has unlimited enrolment and no specific admission requirements. All students who have completed at least 4.0 courses are eligible to enrol. Students are encouraged to meet with the Director of Undergraduate Studies prior to registering for this degree.
(4 FCEs including at least one FCE at the 300+level)
1. HPS100H1
2. 0.5 FCE from: HPS200H1, HPS201H1, HPS202H1, HPS210H1, HPS211H1, HPS250H1, SMC230Y1, SMC231Y1
3. An additional 3.0 FCEs from: any HPS course, JHE353, JHE355H1, JPH311H1, PHL356H1, PHL357H1
The 199Y1 and 199H1 seminars are designed to provide the opportunity to work closely with an instructor in a class of no more than twenty-four students. These interactive seminars are intended to stimulate the students’ curiosity and provide an opportunity to get to know a member of the professorial staff in a seminar environment during the first year of study. Details can be found at www.artsci.utoronto.ca/current/course/.
An investigation of some pivotal periods in the history of science with an emphasis on the influences of philosophy on the scientists of the period, and the philosophical and social implications of the scientific knowledge, theory and methodology that emerged.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities or Science courseWhy do we do what we do? What factors play a role in shaping our personality? What biological and social elements help configure a person's moral and emotional character? In this course, we examine landmark studies that shook standard beliefs about human nature in their time. We analyze those studies in their historical context and discuss their relevance to social, ethical, and policy debates. The studies may include research on mother love, obedience, conformity, bystander intervention in emergencies, deception, race, and gender stereotypes.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities or Science courseAn introduction to issues at the interface of science and society. Including the reciprocal influence of science and social norms, the relation of science and religion, dissemination of scientific knowledge, science and policy. Issues may include: Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Weapons; Genetic Engineering; The Human Genome Project; Climate Change.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseTechnology and its place in our culture from Antiquity to the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution. Relations between technology and science, religion, the arts, social institutions, and political beliefs.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseA survey of technical change and its social implications from the Industrial Revolution to the present.
Recommended Preparation: HPS201H1Case studies in the history of science from antiquity to 1800, including the revolutionary work of Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Descartes, Newton, Linnaeus, Lavoisier, and Herschel. The course is designed to be accessible to science students and non-scientists alike.
Exclusion: HPS200Y1Case studies in the history of science from 1800 to 2000, including Volta, Lyell, Darwin, Mendel, Einstein, Schrdinger, Watson, and Crick. The course is designed to be accessible to science students and non-scientists alike
Exclusion: HPS200Y1This course traces the use of geometry and algebra in the evolution of physics and astronomy from around 1310 to 1690. It examines the conceptual foundations of geometry, algebra, analytic geometry and the differential calculus and their use in understanding the physical world. No prior mathematical knowledge is presupposed.
Exclusion: Any 100-level MAT courseAn examination epistemological and logical aspects of medical science. Topics may include anecdote, bias, complexity, evidence, expertise, heuristics, phronesis, placebos, plausibility, probability, randomness, statistics and uncertainty.
Prerequisite: One HPS half course or PHL half course or BIO150Y1This course introduces and explores central issues in the philosophy of science, including scientific inference, method, and explanation. Topics may include underdetermination, realism and empiricism, and laws of nature.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseThis lecture course explores the fantastic visions of humanity's future inspired by the advance of the biological sciences during the twentieth century. Biology provided the scientific underpinning for societal hopes and fears embodied in such cultural icons as robots, aliens, "brains in a vat," and super-humans.
Exclusion:
HMB444H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)
HPS 280H1 History of Science [TBA]
An introduction to the history of science, surveying major developments from antiquity to the present.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Society and its Institutions (3)
HPS299Y1 Research Opportunity Program
Credit course for supervised participation in faculty research project. Details at http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/current/course/rop.
Breadth Requirement: NoneTopics vary year to year.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseAn examination of the tools of war in the Western world from the Middle Ages to World War II, including not only weapons but the means of transportation, communication, and organization used in violent conflict. The effects of war on the development of science and technology.
Exclusion: HPS417H1The history of human control of various sources of energy, including technical developments, scientific theories, and impact on culture and society. Recent debates on fossil fuel and nuclear power examined in historical context.
Recommended Preparation: HPS201H1/HPS202H1 or any HIS courseThe systemic nature of modern technology suggests that it has intimate interactions with society, human values, ideologies, and the economy. We will attempt to examine these interactions in history in order to promote reflection on ways in which technology and its evolution could be managed for the benefit of humankind.
Recommended Preparation: any half course in HPS at the 200-levelTopics in the history of physics from antiquity to the 20th century, including Aristotelian physics, Galileo, Descartes, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, relativity, quantum physics, and particle physics. The development of theories in their intellectual and cultural contexts.
Prerequisite: At least one-half PHY course at university levelThe emergence of the modern discipline of chemistry from 1785 to 1939. Seminar discussions focus on key papers of important Historical analysis of the interplay between theory and practice, and of the dynamics of scientific communities
Prerequisite: At least one CHM course at university levelA history of the science and technology of electricity in the 19th and 20th centuries in its social, economic, and cultural context.
Prerequisite: At least one-half CSC/PHY or Electrical Engineering (ECE) courseThis course explores how medicine was practiced, taught and theorized from ancient Greece to the early modern period. It focuses on the historical development of western medicine in relation to societies, politics and culture, and considers topics such as the creation of medical traditions, the tranmission and communication of medical knowledge, the pluralistic world of healers, the role of religion, magic and natural philosophy, the cultural meaning of disease, and the emergence of institutions such as the hospital.
Exclusion: HPS314Y1This course examines the development of medicine from the seventeenth to the twentieth century. It focuses on the historical development of western medicine in relation to societies, politics and culture and considers topics such as changing views of the body, the development of medical institutions such as hospitals, asylums and laboratories, the diversifies world of healing and the place of visual and material culture in the production and dissemination of medical knowledge.
Exclusion: HPS314Y1; HPS315H1Personally and socially, we experience illness as a narrative. Narratives of health and illness have been constructed and interpreted from the early modern period to the present. The continuities and discontinuities that characterize the structure of these stories over time, and what narratives reveal about historical realities will be explored.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseThis course seeks to understand the nature of engineering practice, which comprises complex social, intellectual, and technical actions at various stages from design to entrepreneurship. Building upon the history and social studies of technology, philosophy of engineering, business history, and management science, we introduce ways to analyze such complex actions.
Prerequisite: Three courses with any combination of engineering, natural sciences, medical sciences, or commerceA survey of the history of and recent developments in the scientific study of complex systems and emergent order. There will be particular emphasis on the biological and cognitive sciences. Topics covered may include: mechanism and teleology in the history of science, 19th and 20th century emergentism, complex systems dynamics, order and adaptiveness, self-organisation in biology and congitive development.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseHistorical examination of the interactions of science (both as body of knowledge and as enterprise) with ideological, political and social issues. The impact of science; attacks on and critiques of scientific expertise as background to contemporary conflicts. Subjects may vary according to students interests.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseFrom its origins in the Renaissance, modern science has developed in the context of European religious beliefs and institutions. Although cases of conflict like Galileo or the Monkey Trial are famous, more common are cases of scientists like Newton or Faraday whose religious convictions were crucial to their scientific success.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities courseComputing technology from Chaldean astronomy to the advent of British and U.S. mass production of electronic mainframes in 1953. Emphasis will be on uses and users, especially on great figures from Babbage through von Neumann, but hardware descriptions will also be featured.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities or Science courseCovers the period from mass production in 1953 to the emergence of minicomputers around 1969. Beginnings of software and services industries, networking, university computer science. Emphasis on international developments.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities or Science courseAn investigation into the nature and development of scientific knowledge, inspired by Kuhns notion of revolutions. Topics may include, the rationality of theory choice, and social constructivism.
Prerequisite: HPS250H1 or permission of the instructorThis course explores central developments, ongoing controversies, and major figures in the social sciences: sociology, economics, political science, anthropology, and the behavioral sciences. It concentrates on such prominent individuals as: Rene Descartes, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Franz Boas, Sigmund Freud, and Gunnar Myrdal.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities or Social Science courseAn examination of major ideas about biological evolution from the 18th century to the 1930s and of their impact on scientific and social thought. Topics include the diversity of life and its classification, the adaptation of organisms to their environment, Wallace’s and Darwin’s views on evolution by natural selection, sexual selection, inheritance from Mendel to T.H. Morgan, eugenics, and the implications of evolution for religion, gender roles, and the organization of society.
Prerequisite: 6 full courses or equivalentAn examination of the place of the organism in evolutionary theory from the early 1900s to the present. Biology is the science of living things, and yet, paradoxically, living things--organisms--have been comprehensively left out of the Modern Synthesis theory of evolution that developed in the twentieth century. This course surveys the reasons--historical, philosophical and empirical--for the marginalisation of organisms from evolutionary theory. It examines the ways in which evolutionary developmental biology attempts to restore the organisms to a central place in evolutionary biology.
Prerequisite: 6 full courses or equivalent including (BIO120H1,BIO220H1)/BIO150Y1Conceptions of the universe since 1800 with attention to observational sources of changing ideas. History of large telescopes, stellar spectroscopy and radio astronomy. Relativistic conceptions of space and time, models of stellar evolution, discovery of extra-galactic nebulae, Hubble red-shift and microwave background radiation. Philosophical and religious implications are examined.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities or Science courseFirst part of a series on the history of science and technology in the Islamic world. History of the exact sciences, including mathematics, astronomy, optics, and cartography.
Prerequisite: At least one MAT or Science course at university levelSecond part of a series on the history of science and technology in the Islamic world. History of biological and life sciences, including history of medicine, botany, agriculture, and alchemy.
Prerequisite: At least one MAT or Science course at university levelA survey of ancient, medieval, and early modern mathematics with emphasis on historical issues. (Offered in alternate years)
Prerequisite: At least one full course equivalent at the 200+level from CSC/MAT/STAA survey of the development of mathematics from 1700 to the present with emphasis on historical issues. (Offered in alternate years)
Prerequisite: At least one full course equivalent at the 200+level from CSC/MAT/STAAn historical survey from pre-Greek to the present. Various themes are emphasized year to year, to show mathematics as changing and evolving. A student could expect to gain an historical overview as well as a sense of the unity of the mathematical sciences.
Prerequisite: HPS309Y1/HPS310Y1/HPS390H1/HPS391H1/MAT220Y1 and permission of instructorAn examination of foundational and conceptual aspects of mathematics such as: the nature of mathematical objects, logicism, Church’s elementalistic mathematics, Gödel’s theorem and formal systems, postulational methods, mathematics and reality, the cardinal, ordinal and abstract approaches to numbers, infinity, and Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometries.
Prerequisite: PHL245H1/HPS390H1 or HPS391H1 or HPS410H1 or permission of the instructorAdvanced level survey of biological science from ancient Greece to the 20th century emphasizing primary sources analyses.
Prerequisite: HPS200Y1/(HPS210H1 + HPS211H1)/ZOO354Y1/HPS323H1;HPS333H1 and permission of instructorThe development of chemistry from the Chemical Revolution of Lavoisier to the periodic table of Mendeleev: electro-chemistry, the rise of organic chemistry, classification, valency, structural chemistry.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorAn advanced survey of the history of technology from Antiquity to the Industrial Revolution.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorAn advanced survey of the history of technology from the Industrial Revolution to modern times.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorThis course offers advanced undergraduate students the opportunity to undertake original research into the history of medi-cine, under the guidance of a faculty seminar leader and a graduate student mentor. Students are required to initiate and pur-sue a research project of their own design, culminating in a research paper.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorThis course offers advanced undergraduate students the opportunity to undertake original research into the history of the natu-ral or physical sciences, under the guidance of a faculty seminar leader and a graduate student mentor. Students are required to initiate and pursue a research project, culminating in a research paper.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorThis course offers advanced undergraduate students the opportunity to undertake original research into the history of the natu-ral or physical sciences, under the guidance of a faculty seminar leader and a graduate student mentor. Students are required to initiate and pursue a research project, culminating in a research paper.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorThis course offers advanced undergraduate students the opportunity to undertake original research into the history of the natu-ral or physical sciences, under the guidance of a faculty seminar leader and a graduate student mentor. Students are required to initiate and pursue a research project, culminating in a research paper.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorThis course offers advanced undergraduate students the opportunity to undertake original research into the history of the natu-ral or physical sciences, under the guidance of a faculty seminar leader and a graduate student mentor. Students are required to initiate and pursue a research project, culminating in a research paper.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructorA reading and research project in some aspect of history of science and technology, supervised by a faculty member. Projects must be approved by the Institute and are subject to availability of a faculty supervisor.
Prerequisite: Two HPS coursesA reading and research project in some aspect of the social, cultural or intellectual history of science and technology, supervised by a faculty member. Projects must be approved by the Institute by the previous June for a Fall course or by November for a Spring course, and are subject to availability of a faculty supervisor.
Prerequisite: Two HPS coursesA reading and research project in some aspect of the social, cultural or intellectual history of science and technology, supervised by a faculty member. Projects must be approved by the Institute by the previous June for a Fall course or by November for a Spring course, and are subject to availability of a faculty supervisor.
Prerequisite: Two HPS coursesA reading and research project in some aspect of the development of scientific theory or practice, supervised by a faculty member. Projects must be approved by the Institute by the previous June for a Fall course or by November for a Spring course, and are subject to availability of a faculty supervisor.
Prerequisite: Two HPS coursesA reading and research project in some aspect of the development of scientific theory or practice, supervised by a faculty member. Projects must be approved by the Institute by the previous June for a Fall course or by November for a Spring course, and are subject to availability of a faculty supervisor.
Prerequisite: Two HPS courses