Nov 21, 2024  
2007-2009 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2007-2009 Undergraduate Catalog [Archived Catalog]

Languages, Linguistics and Philosophy Department


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Languages

Susan Wolfe, Chairperson
Slagle 306
(605) 677-5357

modlang@usd.edu

FACULTY:

Professors:

István Gombocz, German Language, Literature and Culture
Susan Wolfe, Linguistics, Gender Studies, Philosophy of Language

Associate Professor:

Werner Kitzler, German Language, Literature and Culture

Assistant Professors:

Danny Brunette-Lopez, Spanish Language, Literature, and Culture
Jorge Machin-Lucas, Spanish Language, Literature and Culture

Instructors:

Katia Maroun, French Language, Literature and Culture
Rubi Ugofsky Mendez, Spanish Language, Literature and Culture
Teresa Piper, Spanish Section Coordinator, Spanish Language, Literature and Culture
Willie Suarez, Spanish Language, Literature and Culture

MAJOR: FRENCH STUDIES, B.A.
MAJOR: GERMAN, B.A.
MAJOR: SPANISH, B.A.
MINOR: FRENCH STUDIES
MINOR: GERMAN
MINOR: SPANISH
MINOR: INTERDISCIPLINARY LANGUAGE AREAS 

The study of a second language is a valuable asset for every university student regardless of career goals and personal aspirations. Knowledge of other languages and cultures makes one a more informed citizen and may provide a marketable skill. The Department of Language, Linguistics & Philosophy offers programs in French Studies, German, and Spanish. Students wishing to satisfy the fourteen-hour language requirement for the Bachelor of Arts degree may do so in any of the aforementioned languages. Students may elect to minor in French, German, or Spanish. Teaching majors and teaching minors are offered in French, German, and Spanish. Students who wish to expand their knowledge of the world by living in a foreign culture may take advantage of exchange opportunities in France, Germany, Spain and Mexico. Student exchange programs currently exist with the Carl von Ossietzky Universität, Oldenburg, Germany, the Friedrich Schiller Universität, Jena, Germany, and the University of Vigo, Spain. 

SCHOLARSHIPS

Constance Hampl - French majors
Alexander Hartman - French or Spanish majors
Edwin Behrendt- German majors
Lillian Hollingsworth - Spanish majors
Edward and Helen Greene Travel Fund – Language Majors

Philosophy

Leroy N. Meyer, Program Coordinator
301 Slagle Hall
(605) 677- 5357

lnmeyer@usd.edu

FACULTY:

Professors:

Leroy N. Meyer, Logic, Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Religion, Philosophy of Culture
Susan Wolfe, Linguistics, Gender Studies, Philosophy of Language

Associate Professor:

Keith A. Robinson, 19th and 20th Century Continental Philosophy

Assistant Professor:

Vaughn Huckfeldt, Jr., Ethical Theory, Meta-Ethics, Practical Reason

MAJOR: PHILOSOPHY, B.A., B.S.
MINOR: PHILOSOPHY

A major or minor in philosophy represents the finest tradition in university education and will be of lasting value in any vocation prizing that tradition, e.g. law, government, health services, psychology, physics, mathematics, and fine arts. A philosopher is committed to a way of life which promotes wholeness, excellence, and well-being. A philosophical way of life is achieved only through intense, critical investigation of the fundamental principles of all reality and human belief. This is what is meant by referring to philosophy as the love of wisdom. The philosophy program does not hold a narrow, professionalist view of its work, and therefore denies that philosophical activity is limited to scheduled hours of the day. Both inside and outside the classroom, the faculty teaches by engaging in philosophical reflection with those who desire to learn. In light of the work of great philosophical thinkers, the curriculum challenges the student to seek consistent, reasonable, and well defined positions regarding such issues as the nature and possibility of knowledge; the grounds for moral judgment; the methods, aims, and presuppositions of the sciences and arts; the objects and limits of religious belief; and the fundamental nature of reality. Philosophical study not only encourages, but requires responsible, independent thought and action; it often widens the scope of experience by disclosing surprising alternatives to settled opinions and habitual beliefs. Philosophy instills the conviction that free, critical inquiry is a necessary condition of a genuinely worthwhile life. The Philosophy program is administratively located in the Department of Languages, Linguistics and Philosophy.

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