This list will be moving to the University itself and we're anticipating a seamless and professional transition. The goal is a better, more effective website and I'll be around until it's up and running -- Lou Bloomfield, Professor Emeritus of Physics
A general education should help you reflect upon and deliberate about your lives as ethical agents both within the University of Virginia community and beyond college. Engagement with ethical questions—questions of justice, liberty, equality, democracy, injustice, rights etc.—is inevitable, inasmuch as avoiding or ignoring conflict and controversy is itself an ethical decision. And consider how to integrate ethical reflection and practice while acknowledging that some differences on ethical questions are irreconcilable. Ethical Engagement Courses will help you:
Reflect upon ethical traditions, your own and those of others;
Grapple with the contingent and historically-rooted character of ethical action;
Pose, evaluate and respond to ethical questions;
Recognize yourselves as ethical agents within communities and the broader world.