Honors Theses
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Philosophy Honors Theses are the written presentations of research conducted under the guidance of Colby faculty by senior Philosophy majors. A bound copy of each thesis is kept in the Department library. 2007: Elizabeth Coogan, Rawls and Health Care 2006: Emily Brostek, An Impoverished Philosophy 2005: Megan Burd, Mysticizing Philosophy 2004: Edward F. Smith, Rationality, Warrant, and Theistic Belief 2003: Peter K. Osborn, Lost in the Woulds: Why I am Not a Counterpart and Other Lessons from Modal Logic 2002: John S. Brownell, Ethical and Legal Issues of Informed Consent in Medicine 2001: Bryan P. Kessler, The Importance of the Ontological Relationship Between Absolute Spirit and Individual Minds in G.W.F. Hegel's Philosophy 2000: Scott J. Bridges, Challenging the Laws of Thought 1999: Dennis N. D'Angelo, If I'd Known Then What I Know Now 1998: John S. Brunero III, Autonomy, Authority, and Discourse: Can Habermas and Mill Resolve Philosophical Anarchism? 1997: Michael S. Barber (senior scholar), Reading Nietzsche, Reading Emerson: (Con) Texts for Creative Meaning 1996: Paul J. Fontana, The Existence of Evil and the Problem of God 1995: John E. Costenbader, Buddhism and the Unveiling of an Environmental Ethic |














