phil207_2020s

Course Description | Course Schedule

Study Helps & Philosophy Links

Spring 2020

9:10-10:10 MWF

John R. Howard Hall 102

Email: fritzman@lclark.edu

Class Email: 20sp-phil-207-f1@lclark.edu

Office: John R. Howard Hall 223

Office Hours:

11:30-12:00 MWF

3:00-4:30 MW

and by appointment

COURSE DESCRIPTION

His trip to India was a failure (so he judged). Yet one onlooker, studying Isherwood's behavior, saw in that supposed failure a quiet success. Prabhavananda observed that Isherwood failed to have a great life-changing experience in India because in him India and America, East and West, were no longer separate worlds. And, in truth, if Isherwood was not at home in India, nor was he at home in his birth-land England. He was most at ease, perhaps, not at but on the drive to the Vedanta Temple on Ivar Avenue, while the car radio blared, horns honked, and a Hindu and an Enlightenment worldview swirled together in his head. Beguiling charlatans like Madame Blavatsky or Paul Brunton could feel at home in India, for they had only to open their mouths and out spouted eastern wisdom. Isherwood's whining discomfort in India, if its syntax is straightened out, was saying something more complex and more original. His was the new voice of an almost visionary ambivalence that could hover between opposing viewpoints and combine a religious and a secular outlook. The question that had vexed Isherwood as he had exited a Europe toppling into destruction and ruin -- "How does one live now?" -- had eked out a response somewhere in alien India. How live? By willing to, even when you don't want to; by fudging nothing about yourself, not even what is distasteful; by holding on, if by the thinnest, barest thread, to some ideal; by accepting the discovery that Prabhavananda's spiritual goodwill to others and his own lustful attractions were two sides of the only coin you can pay for the privilege of being in the world -- that's how Isherwood did it in India.

Jeffrey Paine, Father India: Westerners

Under the Spell of an Ancient Culture,

(New York: HarperPerennial, 1998),

pages 216-217.

This is an introductory course in the philosophies of India. There are two required texts:

Sue Hamilton,

Indian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction

Oxford University Press, 2001.

Paperback

ISBN-10: 0192853740

ISBN-13: 978-0192853745

Retail: $11.95

New: Starting at $4.11

Used: Starting at $2.32

Indian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction is available through the College Bookstore, Amazon.com, or Barnes & Noble.

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan and Charles A. Moore, editors,

A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy

Princeton University Press, 1967.

Paperback

ISBN-10: 0691019584

ISBN-13: 978-0691019581

Retail: $42.00

New: Starting at $22.98

Used: Starting at $4.32

A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy is available through the College Bookstore, Amazon.com, or Barnes & Noble.

This is an introductory course in the philosophies of India. This course will introduce you to the six classical philosophies of India: Nyāya, Vaiśeṣika, Yoga, Sāṅkhya, Mīmāṃsā, and Vedānta. You will also learn about the Védas, the Upaniṣads, Cārvāka, Jainism, and Buddhism. In addition, you will read essays by two recent Indian philosophers, Sri Aurobindo and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan.

In order to have some understanding of the social and cultural context in which Indian philosophies arose, you will receive a brief overview of Indian history. Next, you will read a short introduction to Indian Philosophy. You will then have the resources to study India's philosophies in Radhakrishnan and Moore's Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy.

Indian Philosophy will enable you to consider how the philosophies of India are similar to, and differ from, those in the West. That will allow you to inquire about the nature and pertinence of demarcations between the West and non-West. This is a course on the philosophies of India, and so its focus is on the study of a culture outside of the United States.

This course will discuss the cultural contexts of Indian philosophies by situating them within Indian history (which will be related to world history, where relevant). It will consider their developments of, and departures from, early Indian religions, Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism. It will also investigate the extent to which Indian philosophies themselves become the cultural contexts for subsequent artistic, historical, intellectual, and literary developments.

Students will engage meaningfully with and demonstrate knowledge about a region or regions of the world other than the United States of America (through reading, writing, conversation, presentation and/or first-hand experiences). Topics of study include historical experience, cultural traditions, past and current social and economic realities, or transnational issues.

There are also learning outcomes for students who graduate with a major in Philosophy.

In preparation for each class meeting, you should have read the assigned material. You should arrive in class with prepared questions or comments about something in the assigned reading.

In addition to learning about the philosophies of India, a major goal of this course is to cultivate intellectual abilities which have general application. This course aims to provide the resources which will enable you to develop intellectual survival skills, question what passes as common knowledge and accepted wisdom, evaluate your own and others' positions, and formulate new ideas. Such skills consist in the ability to summarize the assigned material, and to write pieces in which ideas and arguments are articulated, criticized, defended. Such skills also involve developing the ability to think critically about the views of ourselves and others. Critical thinking consists in understanding several sides of a debate, and seeing both the advantages and limitations of an opinion. Learning to question your opinions is as crucial as arguing for them. If you only learn to give reasons for opinions already held, you merely are giving rationalizations for prejudices. You need to learn to think for yourself, developing, defending, and criticizing your beliefs.

In this connection, I am especially concerned that you develop the ability to discuss issues cogently and to write intelligent, reflective pieces in clear, grammatical English. It is important that you learn to think, in a disciplined way, about the books and issues they raise. Part of that discipline consists in being able to analyze, evaluate, and formulate arguments. This involves knowing how to identify basic assumptions, develop a line of reasoning, recognize the steps that lead to a conclusion, and determine whether an argument is sound. In this way, hopefully, you will develop intellectual curiosity and the competencies to reason logically, evaluate critically, communicate effectively, imagine creatively, and appreciate aesthetic and creative expressions of humanity.

You are encouraged to share your questions and observations with the rest of the class, and to engage critically with the material, myself, and each other. By participating in class discussions, you will encounter directly differing interpretations of the material, become aware of the history of these views, and be encouraged to develop your own critical perspectives. In interacting with the material and each other, you will acquire a knowledge and appreciation of self, society, human cultures, and the natural world. I intend that you discover what has been written and said concerning, in the words of Socrates, "the most important things" -- questions about human character and the conduct of life. Such skills will enable you to succeed in subsequent courses and in endeavors outside of the classroom. Those abilities also will contribute to your development as educated citizens in a democratic society.

Each student will write a précis for almost every reading assignment, complete various research exercises that teach research skills, and write and present in class one assessment on a specific reading assignment. There also will be one argumentative research paper (which includes a prospectus, two drafts, and a mandatory rewrite). And a class presentation of the argumentative research paper on the Final Exam Day.

The précis, research exercises, and class participation will be weighted together and will count for 20% of your final grade. The assessment will count for 20% of your final grade. The prospectus will count for 5%, the first draft will count for 10%, the second draft will count for 15%, and the argumentative research paper will count for 25% of your final grade. The presentation will count for 5% of your final grade. The grading scale is as follows:

A = 93%-100%

A- = 90%-92%

B+ = 86%-89%

B = 83% 85%

B- = 80%-82%

C+ = 76%-79%

C = 73%-75%

C- = 70%-72%

D+ = 66%-69%

D = 60%-65%

F = 0%-59%.

A précis will be due almost every class session. Each précis will be one typed page -- never longer -- double-spaced, with 1 inch margins on the right & left sides and the top & bottom. It must be at least 3/4 of a page in length. Use a 12-point Times or Times Roman font. There will be no spelling or grammatical errors in your précis. Your name will be typed in the upper right-hand corner. In each précis, you will summarize -- in your own words, without using any quotes -- the assigned reading's main claims, as well as the reasons which are given to support those claims. You will not include any opinion, evaluation, or commentary. At the bottom of each précis, or on the back, you will write one question that you have about the reading. This question must written prior to, not during, class. I never will accept a late précis, but I will allow you to drop one.

An assessment should be approximately 1500 words, typed, double-spaced. You will sign up for a dates on which you will present your assessments. On the day you present, you will distribute copies to all of the persons in this class. This will require, of course, that you have enough copies made so that each member of the class has one. You first will read your assessment; then, you and I will serve as the main resource persons for fielding questions concerning the material. Since the class discussion will be centered around the assessment, it is crucial that you distribute the assessment the class session when you present it, and that you actually be in class to read your assessment.

An assessment is not a summary of the reading. Rather, its primary purpose assessment is to summarize, consolidate, and explicate the central issues, main points, and key motifs of the assigned reading in order to facilitate class discussion of the material. It is important that the assessment contextualize the reading by describing briefly both how the reading is a continuation and development of material which has come before, and how it contributes to the overall trajectory of the thinker's thought.

It is crucial that you critically engage the reading. You might argue that a claim that the author makes is incorrect, for example, or that a criticism in the secondary literature is incorrect. Alternatively, you might argue that an interpretation advanced in the secondary literature is incorrect. The assessment must reflect an acquaintance with the requisite secondary literature. This means that you must incorporate at least three secondary sources you consulted while writing your assessment.

A student presenting an assessment will not submit a précis of that material too.

The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy will be useful.

The Philosopher's Index will be vital for the Assessment and Argumentative Research Paper.

The Chicago Manual of Style's Citation Quick Guide is online.

There will be an argumentative research paper, 2000 words, typed, double-spaced. It will be on the same topic as your assessment.

You're welcome to consult the Writing Center, located on the main floor of Watzek Library.

Also useful is the Online Writing Lab (OWL) at Purdue University.

If you would find it useful to create concept maps, to help write your assessment or argumentative research papers, you can download the software to create them from IHMC Cmap Tools.

All work must be submitted when it is due. Late work -- précis, assessments, papers -- will not be accepted and will receive no credit.

This class will be successful only if there is a high degree of participation and attendance, and so I want you in class participating. The final grade for the course will be lowered by a full-letter grade if you miss four class sessions, the final grade will be lowered by two full-letter grades if you miss five class sessions, and you will be withdrawn from the course if you miss six or more class sessions. I will not accept make-up work unless you can document the reason for your absence. Documenting the reason for your absence means providing a note from, for example, your doctor explaining why you were absent. Serious illnesses and emergencies will be dealt with on a case-by-case basis.

Throughout the course you are expected to read carefully the assigned material. It is impossible to do well in this course without reading and studying the books. You should spend a minimum of three hours preparing for each class session. Read the assigned material at least twice and take notes on what you read. You are expected to attend all class sessions, come to class having read thoroughly the assigned material, and to contribute to the discussions.

Gorgias of Leontini maintained that "those who neglect philosophy and spend their time on ordinary studies are like the suitors who desired Penelope but slept with her maids." In philosophy, unlike ordinary studies, there are few right and wrong answers. There are better and worse arguments and ideas, however, usually in direct proportion to thoughtfulness and care. What is important is that you think for yourself, and that you develop and defend your own ideas. It would be an excellent idea to write drafts or outlines of your précis and papers, and to have a comrade read them to check on spelling, grammar, development of arguments, and so forth.

You are strongly encouraged to discuss the class material, your ideas, your puzzles and difficulties with each other. A word to the wise: Find a study partner to discuss things with outside of class. (To see why this is effective for creativity and learning, read Malcolm Gladwell's article, Group Think: What Does "Saturday Night Live" Have in Common with German Philosophy?, The New Yorker, 2 December 2002, pages 102-107).

There's a Bollwood tune for every occasion. Click here.

When it comes to finally writing your précis and essays, though, do your own writing. That is the only way you will get the full benefit of your own efforts. I will be happy to discuss ideas with you, read outlines and rough drafts, and so forth. That is partly why I keep office hours.

A final word to the wise. It is not difficult to do well in this class, but it also is easy to do badly. Let me talk about the bad stuff first. You will receive a major grade reduction -- or fail this course -- if you do not read the material, seldom participate in class discussions, do not write your précis, assessment, or argumentative research paper, plagiarize, cheat, and so forth.

About plagiarizing and cheating. All students are expected to follow Lewis & Clark College's Academic Integrity Policy. Plagiarizers and cheaters will be given an "F" for the entire course (they will not be allowed to drop or withdraw from the course). I also will turn their cases over to the Honor Board; I will recommend that disciplinary penalties be assessed. It is never in your interest to plagiarize or cheat!

Now for the good stuff. With a concerted effort, you will do well in this class. To do well, you must participate in class discussions, read and study the assigned material, write the précis, assessment, argumentative research paper, be in class (almost) all of the time, etc. I do not grade on a curve, and so there is no good reason why you should not get an "A" for the course!

Course policy on disability accommodation. If you have a disability or learning difference that may impact your academic performance, you may request accommodations by submitting documentation to Student Support Services, located in Albany 206 (access@lclark.edu, 503-768-7156). They will notify me of the accommodations for which you are eligible.

Course withdrawals. You may drop this course on WebAdvisor by Friday of the second week of class, and no W grade will appear on your transcript.

After the second week and before 4:00 pm on Friday, April 24, you can withdraw from the course by submitting a Course Withdrawal form to the Registrar’s Office. In this case, a W grade will appear on your transcript.

The last day to withdraw is Friday, April 24. It is not possible for you to withdraw from the course after that date. At that point, you will need to complete the course, and receive whatever grade you have earned.

If you have questions or concerns about your performance in the course, please talk with me before April 24.

COURSE SCHEDULE

As a high-school student, when I asked my Sanskrit teacher whether it would be permissible to say that the divine Krishna got away with an incomplete and unconvincing argument, he replied: "Maybe you could say that, but you must say it with adequate respect."

Amartya Sen, The Argumentative Indian:

Writings on Indian History, Culture

and Identity, (New York: Picador,

2005), page 5.

Approximate Chronology of Indian Philosophers

Week 1

Wednesday, January 22:

Introduction to the course.

Read:

Jim Pryor's Guidelines on Reading Philosophy.

Malcolm Gladwell's Group Think in the New Yorker.

Indian Philosophy and Hindu Philosophy in Wikipedia.

Friday, January 24:

Read:

Ethan Watters, "We Aren't the World", Pacific Standard.

Joseph Henrich, Steven J. Heine, and Ara Norenzayan, "The Weirdest People in the World?", Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Volume 33:2-3, June 2010, pages 61-83; précis.

You neeed to sign into Watzek's website to access this article.

Week 2

Monday, January 27:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 1-17; précis.

Discussion of research.

Sign-up for Assessments.

Wednesday, January 29:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 18-33; précis.

Discussion of (annotated) bibliography, reasons for citations, proper quoting (block or in-line).

Friday, January 31:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 34-56; précis.

Discussion of (annotated) bibliography, reasons for citations, proper quoting (block or in-line).

Research Exercise for Monday: Write a précis on the topic of your Assessment (and Argumentative Research Paper).

Colloquium:

3:30 PM, John R. Howard Hall 202

Chris Framarin (University of Calgary),

Householder, Renunciate, and the Good Life

Week 3

Monday, February 3:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 57-69; précis.

Discussion of search procedures for articles and books.

Wednesday, February 5:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 70-83; précis.

Discussion of search procedures for articles and books.

Friday, February 7:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 84-106; précis.

Discussion of search procedures for articles and books.

Research Exercise for Monday: Find one book and one article that will be relevant to your Assessment. Provide one block quote from the book and one in-line quote from the article. List the book and the article in proper format for bibliography.

Week 4

Monday, February 10:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 107-117; précis.

Discussion on using the Arts & Humanities Citation Index and the Philosopher's Index.

Wednesday, February 12:

Hamilton's Indian Philosophy, pages 118-140; précis.

Discussion on using the Arts & Humanities Citation Index and the Philosopher's Index.

Friday, February 14:

History of Indian Thought, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages xvii-xxxi.

Also read

Hindu Philosophy in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Discussion on using the Arts & Humanities Citation Index and the Philosopher's Index

Research Exercise for Monday: In proper bibliographical format, list three additional articles that you found through the Arts & Humanities Citation Index or the Philosopher's Index that are relevant to your Assessment.

Week 5

Monday, February 17:

The Védas, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 3-36; précis.

Also read

The Védas in Wikipedia.

Discussion of annotated bibliography and reliability of sources.

Wednesday, February 19:

The Upaniṣads, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 37-64; précis.

Also read

The Upaniṣads in Wikipedia.

Assessment: Ryan Dyer.

Discussion of annotated bibliography and reliability of sources.

Friday, February 21:

The Upaniṣads, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 64-96; précis.

Also read The Upaniṣads in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Sara Gallagher.

Discussion of annotated bibliography and reliability of sources.

Exercise for Monday: Submit a 3-5 page prospectus of your argumentative research paper in which you:

(1) indicate your topic and thesis.

(2) describe the problem or issue to be treated.

(3) outline your anticipated procedure and probable conclusion.

(4) include an annotated bibliography of works to be consulted (a minimum of six books or articles, with at least a paragraph discussing the relevance of each work to your project).

Week 6

Monday, February 24:

Due: Prospectus of Argumentative Research Paper

Wednesday, February 26:

The Laws of Manu, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 172-192; précis.

Also read

Manusmṛti in Wikipedia.

Assessment: Matthew Siemer.

Discussion of note taking and perusing for content.

Friday, February 28:

Cārvāka, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 227-249; précis.

Also read

Cārvāka in Wikipedia

and

Lokāyata/Cārvāka - Indian Materialism in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Colin Gesik.

Discussion of note taking and perusing for content.

Week 7

Monday, March 2:

Jainism, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 250-271; précis.

Also read

Jainism in Wikipedia

and

Jain Philosophy in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Megan Sawyer.

Discussion of note taking and perusing for content.

Wednesday, March 4:

Buddhism, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 272-292; précis.

Also read

Buddha in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

and

Buddha in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Peyton Chenaur.

Discussion of formulating a thesis: outlines, drafts, revisions.

Friday, March 6:

Buddhism, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 292-312; précis.

Also read

Ethics in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism

and

Mind in Indian Buddhist Philosophy in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Michael Bové and Mado Hayes.

Discussion of formulating a thesis: outlines, drafts, revisions.

Week 8

Monday, March 9:

Buddhism, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 312-328; précis.

Also read

Madhyamaka Buddhism in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

and

The Theory of Two Truths in India in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Julia Barsocchini and Ethan Kelner.

Discussion of formulating a thesis: outlines, drafts, revisions.

Wednesday, March 11:

Buddhism, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 328-346; précis.

Also read

Nagarjuna in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

as well as

Madhyamaka and Nagarjuna in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Ryan Cibull.

Discussion of articulating a thesis: arguments, objections, replies.

Friday, March 13:

The Bhagavadgītā, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 99-131; précis.

Also read

The Bhagavadgītā in Wikipedia.

Assessment: Iri Angelova and Ben Welker.

Discussion of articulating a thesis: arguments, objections, replies.

Due on Monday: Submit the first draft of your argumentative research paper.

Week 9

Monday, March 16:

Due: First draft of your argumentative research paper.

Discussion of articulating a thesis: arguments, objections, replies.

Wednesday, March 18:

The Bhagavadgītā, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 132-163.

Also read

The Bhagavadgītā in the Encyclopedia of Religion.

Assessment: Andrew W. Panicacci and Natalie Vasquez-Barajas.

AND

Nyāya, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 349-385.

Also read

Nyāya in Wikipedia

and

Nyāya in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Discussion of articulating a thesis: arguments, objections, replies.

Friday, March 20:

Class canceled: Midsouth Philosophy Conference

Week 10

Monday, March 23:

Spring Break

Wednesday, March 25:

Spring Break

Friday, March 27:

Spring Break

Week 11

Monday, March 30:

Vaiśeṣika, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 386-423.

Also read

Vaiśeṣika in Wikipedia

and

Analytic Philosophy in Early Modern India in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Ben Carsner.

Wednesday, April 1:

Vaiśeṣika, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 386-423.

Also read

Vaiśeṣika in Wikipedia.

Assessment: Clayton Etulain.

Friday, April 3:

Sāṅkhya, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 424-452.

Also read Sāṅkhya in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Sydney Levine and Lindsey Palish.

Due on Monday: Submit the second draft of your argumentative research paper.

Week 12

Monday, April 6:

Yoga, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 453-485.

Also read Yoga in Wikipedia

and

The Yoga Sūtras of Patañjali in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Abigail McCoy.

Due: Second Draft of Argumentative Research Paper

Wednesday, April 8:

Class canceled: Pacific APA

Friday, April 10:

Class canceled: Pacific APA

Week 13

Monday, April 13:

Purva Mīmāṃsā, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 486-505.

Also read

Mīmāṃsā in Wikipedia.

Assessment: Jocelyn Rausten.

Wednesday, April 15:

Vedānta: The Unqualified Non-Dualism (Advaita) Śaṅkara, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 506-543.

Also read

Vedānta, Nondualism, Adi Śaṅkara in Wikipedia

and

Advaita Vedānta in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Lindsay Woodward.

Friday, April 17:

Class canceled: Festival of Scholars and Artists

This is a campus-wide celebration of student work. It is an opportunity to discuss research, to exhibit, perform, or appreciate art, and to cross disciplinary boundaries. You are required to participate, either by presenting your work or attending presentations by your fellow students.

Week 14

Monday, April 20:

Vedānta: The Qualified Non-Dualism (Viśiṣṭādvaita) of Rāmānuja, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 543-555.

Also read

Viśiṣṭādvaita in Wikipedia

and

Rāmānuja in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Nicole Lewis.

Wednesday, April 22:

Vedānta: The Dualism (Dvaita) of Madhva, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 555-572.

Also read

Dvaita in Wikipedia

and

Madhva in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Makena Ohlmaier.

Friday, April 24:

Sri Aurobindo, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 575-609.

Also read

Sri Aurobindo in Wikipedia.

Assessment: Kaimana J. Kahale.

Week 15

Monday, April 27:

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy, pages 610-637.

Also read

Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Assessment: Casey Yamamura.

Wednesday, April 29:

David Peter Lawrence, "Kashmiri Shaiva Philosophy", Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy,

https://www.iep.utm.edu/kashmiri/.

Assessment: Michael Wudel.

Week 16

Thursday, May 7:

Argumentative Research Paper due by 11:30 AM.

Presentation of Argumentative Research Papers.

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J. M. Fritzman

Department of Philosophy

Lewis & Clark College

0615 SW Palatine Hill Road

Portland, OR 97219-7899

USA

503-768-7477

fritzman@lclark.edu

Updated on 27 April 2020