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Comparative Arts & Letters Office of Digital Humanities Philosophy Humanities News Literature
A philosophy conference honors Daniel Graham, professor emeritus and eminent scholar of pre-Socratic philosophy.
Alumnus Dave Elkington shares how humanities students are needed in the business world.
Women may have been silent onscreen in early cinema, but backstage they were building a powerful new art form.
James Tissot experimented with painting uncommon biblical scenes that create rich resonance.
IC rings in the new school year with gripping films and lectures.
A new conference hosted by BYU Philosophy, Nursing, and the Sorensen Center tackles the toughest questions in medical ethics.
Romantic Circles bridges innovative computer science with the humanities.
Charles Oughton’s unusual teaching method leads to victory.
Everyone’s got one, but what does it really mean to have an identity? Is identity something we choose or something we possess naturally? The answer is more complex than you might think.
Would you find Galileo guilty of heresy? Would you put him to death? These are questions that students grappled with in their two-week mock trial for Philosophy 210 class.
Philosophy and the field of medicine have complementary roles in helping us ask difficult questions and propose workable solutions to today’s pressing concerns.
Dive into 1800s Latter-day Saint women’s culture with a database of newspaper advertisements.