Page:American Journal of Sociology Volume 8.djvu/118

This page needs to be proofread.

106 THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY

department, including Course 17. (Alternate with Course 20.) Three hours, second semester. Professor M. R. Smith.

19. Criminology. The anthropology of the criminal, and the causes and condi- tions of crime. Lectures and assigned reading. Open to students who have had nine hours' work in the department. (Alternate with Course 17.) Three hours, first semester. Professor M. R. Smith.

30. Penology. Supplementary to Course 19. Methods of treating criminals; police, police stations and courts, county jails, state prisons, penitentiaries, and refor- matories. Lectures, reading, visitation and study of penal institutions. Open to stu- dents who have had twelve hours in the department, including Course 19. (Alternate with Course 18.) Three hours, second semester. Professor M. R. Smith.

Social legislation.

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.

HISTORY AND ECONOMICS.

DR. HOOSE.

Point of view of the courses in history: History is an account of ideas and insti- tutions in movement, rather than an account of personalities and events. Ideas are thoughtful experience embodied in definitions or in documents; they change in form and content as experience varies under different conditions. Personalities are the agents who exploit ideas. Events are reactions among ideas and personalities. Institutions are ideas formulated in practice to serve the purposes of human being. Civilization is the sum total of ideas and institutions which exist at any given period of time upon any given portion of the earth i. e., civilization is the evolution of ideas and institutions.

Point of view of the course in economics : The science of economics inquires into the sources and nature of wealth, and the relations which it sustains to individual, social, civil, and national well-being. This science investigates the principles and laws that are evolved by industrial, commercial, and social conditions. Political econ- omy discusses the inventions and forms which human energies put forth to subordinate and utilize the forces of nature in order that they may see the needs, comforts, and luxuries of society.

VI. Seminary of political and social science. (Round table.) This course purposes to discuss special problems that measure civil, political, and sociological con- ditions problems which arise out of movements and reactions among the elements of civilization. Elective for those college students who are prepared to enter upon the course. One hour, throughout the year.

COLORADO- UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO.

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION.

PROFESSOR DR. CHARLES E. CHADSEY.

1 6. Evolution of society. One semester, two hours. Application of theory of evolution to society. A study of the conditions that have made modern institutions possible. The causal idea in history. The family. Primitive law. Evolution of political institutions.

DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY.

PROFESSOR DR. JAMBS M. WILSON. 7, 8. Applied ethics. One year, one hour. Discussions and supplementary lectures. Two courses given in alternate year.