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University Center for Human Values


Director

Charles R. Beitz

Faculty

Kwame Anthony Appiah, also Philosophy

Christopher L. Eisgruber, also Woodrow Wilson School

Elizabeth Harman, also Philosophy

Stephen J. Macedo, also Politics

Philip N. Pettit, also Politics

Kim Lane Scheppele, also Woodrow Wilson School

Peter Singer

Executive Committee

Kwame Anthony Appiah, Philosophy

Charles R. Beitz, Politics

Sandra L. Bermann, Comparative Literature

John M. Cooper, Philosophy

Elizabeth Harman, Philosophy

Stephen J. Macedo, Politics

Jan-Werner Müller, Politics

Alan W. Patten, Politics

Philip N. Pettit, Politics

Kim Lane Scheppele, also Woodrow Wilson School, Sociology

Peter Singer

Michael A. Smith, Philosophy

Visiting Professor

Nannerl O. Keohane, Laurance S. Rockefeller Distinguished Visiting Professor of Public Affairs and the University Center for Human Values

Fania Oz-Salzberger, Laurance S. Rockefeller Visiting Associate Professor for Distinguished Teaching

Lecturer

Victoria McGeer, also Philosophy

Faculty Associate

Elizabeth M. Armstrong, Woodrow Wilson School, Sociology

Leora F. Batnitzky, Religion

João G. Biehl, Anthropology

John M. Darley, Psychology, Woodrow Wilson School

Angus S. Deaton, Woodrow Wilson School, Economics

Paul J. DiMaggio, Woodrow Wilson School, Sociology

Mitchell Duneier, Sociology

Caryl Emerson, Slavic Languages and Literatures, Comparative Literature

Susan T. Fiske, Psychology

Daniel Garber, Philosophy

Sophie G. Gee, English

Robert P. George, Politics

Eddie S. Glaude Jr., Religion, African American Studies

Eric S. Gregory, Religion

Gilbert H. Harman, Philosophy

Hendrik A. Hartog, History

Mark Johnston, Philosophy

Thomas P. Kelly, Philosophy

Robert O. Keohane, Woodrow Wilson School

Natasha C. Lee, French and Italian

David R. Leheny, East Asian Studies

Thomas C. Leonard, Economics

Douglas S. Massey, Woodrow Wilson School, Sociology

Sarah E. McGrath, Philosophy

Alexander Nehamas, Philosophy, Comparative Literature

Guy J. Nordenson, Architecture

Jeff E. Nunokawa, English

Joyce Carol Oates, Lewis Center for the Arts, Creative Writing

Serguei Oushakine, Slavic Languages and Literatures

Devah Pager, Sociology

Deborah A. Prentice, Psychology

Albert J. Raboteau, Religion

Daniel T. Rodgers, History

Gideon A. Rosen, Philosophy

Rahal Sagar, Politics

Harold T. Shapiro, Woodrow Wilson School, Economics

Anne-Marie Slaughter, Woodrow Wilson School, Politics

Anna B. Stilz, Politics

Jeffrey L. Stout, Religion

Maurizio Viroli, Politics

Cornel R. West, African American Studies

Michael G. Wood, English, Comparative Literature

Robert J. Wuthnow, Sociology

Julian E. Zelizer, Woodrow Wilson School, History


The University Center for Human Values fosters interdisciplinary study of ethical and evaluative issues in private and public life. One of its activities within the undergraduate curriculum is to cosponsor courses with departments and programs. The center encourages students to supplement their disciplinary concentrations with a set of these courses, which address fundamental questions about the meaning and value of human life and the ethical relationships of individuals and societies.

The University Center for Human Values assists faculty members in developing new courses and revising existing courses, supplements the offerings of the Freshman Seminar Program, and sponsors occasional lectures and colloquiums on human values to which students, along with faculty and other members of the Princeton University community, are invited. The center awards a senior thesis prize to the senior who has written the most outstanding thesis in the area of ethics and human values. Departments are invited to nominate their best thesis in this area.

The center was created in 1990 with an endowment by Laurance S. Rockefeller ’32.

Undergraduate courses that are cosponsored by the center include:

Courses

CHV 202 Introduction to Moral Philosophy (see PHI 202)

CHV 212 The Psychology of Moral Behavior (see PSY 212)

CHV 214 The Other Side of Rome (see CLA 214)

CHV 261 Christian Ethics and Modern Society (see REL 261)

CHV 301 Ethics and Public Policy (see WWS 301)

CHV 306 Democratic Theory (see POL 306)

CHV 309 Political Philosophy (see PHI 309)

CHV 310 Practical Ethics (also PHI 385)   Fall EM

Should we be sharing our wealth with people who will otherwise die from poverty-related causes? Is abortion wrong? Does a human embryo have a greater claim to protection than a chimpanzee? Are we justified in eating animals? Can the traditional doctrine of the sanctity of human life be defended? When should a nation go to war? And why should we act ethically, anyway? Students will be encouraged to question their own ethical beliefs on these and other issues, and in the process to explore the extent to which reason and argument can play a role in everyday ethical decisionmaking. Two lectures, one preceptorial. P. Singer

CHV 311 Systematic Ethics (see PHI 307)

CHV 315 Philosophy of Mind (see PHI 315)

CHV 319 Normative Ethics (see PHI 319)

CHV 330 Greek Law and Legal Practice (see CLA 330)

CHV 335 Greek Ethical Theory (see PHI 335)

CHV 345 Ethics and Economics (see ECO 385)

CHV 351 The Enlightenment in France (see FRE 351)

CHV 364 Sociology of Medicine (see SOC 364)

CHV 365 The Life of Honor (also PHI 365)   Fall EM

Honor is widely regarded as an archaic value and yet it still plays a role in our political rhetoric and in the military. Beginning with the role of honor in the heroic cultures of the ancient world, the class will go on to discuss the duel, as it developed in early modern Europe; honor killing in the Mediterranean world; and foot binding and women’s honor in China. The aim of the course is to understand changing conceptions of honor; to explore the ways in which honor can belong not just to individuals but also to families, classes, races, and nations. One three-hour seminar. K. Appiah

CHV 413 Seminar in Political Theory (see POL 413)

*Freshman Seminars in the Residential Colleges

The Ghetto (Mitchell Duneier)

Children and War (Irena Grudzinska Gross)

The Book of Genesis (James Diamond)

The Literature and Politics of Encounter (Natasha Lee)

History and Memory: Inventing the Past, Constructing the Present (Michael Flower)

History of Cinema: Fascism in Film (Gaetana Marrone-Puglia)

Can Virtue Be Taught? Introduction to the Philosophy of Education (Erika Kiss)

Freud on the Psychology of Ordinary Mental Life (Susan Sugarman)

For information about courses relevant to the study of human values, visit the center's website.

*One-time-only courses