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  2. RELIGION 116

The Conduct of Life in Western and Eastern Philosophy
RELIGION 116

Jointly Offered with: Harvard Divinity School as HDS 2313, Harvard Law School as HLS 2392

Course Information

Description

A study of approaches in the philosophical traditions of the West and the East to the conduct of life. Philosophical ethics has often been understood as meta-ethics: the development of a method of moral inquiry or justification. Here we focus instead on what philosophy has to tell us about the first-order question: How should we live our lives?

This year a major concern will be the study and contrast of two such orientations to existence. One is the philosophical tradition focused on ideas of self-reliance, self-construction, and nonconformity (exemplified by Emerson and Nietzsche). The other is a way of thinking (notably represented by Confucius) that puts its hope in a dynamic of mutual responsibility, shaped by role and ritual and informed by imaginative empathy. Offered jointly with LAW 2392 and HDS 2313. (Sections meet separately.)

School Faculty of Arts & Sciences
Credits 4
Cross Reg

Available for Harvard Cross Registration

Course Component Seminar
Subject Religion
Grading Basis FAS Letter Graded
Exam/Final Deadline May 7, 2026
General Education N/A
Quantitative Reasoning with Data N/A
Divisional Distribution Arts and Humanities
Course Level N/A