COML610 - Ancient Medieval Soul

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Ancient Medieval Soul
Term
2022A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML610401
Course number integer
610
Registration notes
For Doctoral Students Only
Meeting times
M 01:45 PM-04:45 PM
Meeting location
JAFF 104
Level
graduate
Instructors
Rita Copeland
Ralph Rosen
Description
This seminar focuses on premodern conceptions of the 'soul', the force felt to animate and energize a human body for as long as it was considered alive, and to activate virtually all aspects of its behavior through time. Premodern concepts of the soul attempted to account for a person's emotions and desires, perceptions, thoughts, memory, intellect, moral behavior, and sometimes physical condition. The course will trace the various ancient theories of the soul from the Presocratics, Plato, Aristotle, Stoic thought in Greek and Latin, medical writers (Hippocratics, Hellenistic doctors, Galen), and Neoplatonists, to the medieval receptions and transformations of ancient thought, including Augustine and Boethius, Avicenna's interpretation of Aristotle and its medieval influence, and Aquinas and other later medieval ethicists. These premodern conceptions of the soul have a surprisingly long afterlife, reaching into the literary cultures and psychological movements of early modernity and beyond. Knowledge of Greek or Latin not required, but see the following: The seminar will meet for one two-hour session per week, and a separate one-hour 'breakout' session during which students who have registered for GREK 608 will meet to study a selection texts in Greek, and students who have registered for COML/ENGL will meet to discuss medieval or early modern texts relevant to their fields of study.
Course number only
610
Cross listings
GREK608401, ENGL706401
Use local description
No