2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of History, Politics and Philosophy
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Howard Miller, Associate Professor and Department Chair Neal Allison, Instructor
W. Craig Bledsoe, Professor
J. Caleb Clanton, University Research Professor
Jerry L. Gaw, Professor
Richard C. Goode, Professor Susan Turner Haynes, Assistant Professor
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Timothy D. Johnson, Professor, University Research Professor
Lee A. Mayo, Visiting Assistant Professor
Linda P. Schacht, Associate Professor
Marc S. Schwerdt, Assistant Professor
Rubel Shelly, Distinguished Professor Guy Vanderpool, Visiting Professor
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The Department of History, Politics and Philosophy houses three distinct academic programs. The history program prepares students to evaluate historical data in order to reach informed conclusions about the past and to appreciate contemporary challenges. The political science program equips students with knowledge of governmental processes and institutions, legal principles, political parties, and the interconnections between politics and society. The philosophy program educates students about the history of big ideas and the process of identifying and evaluating the basic philosophical and moral assumptions that shape the way we as humans think about ourselves and the world around us. Each of the department’s majors and minors are designed to help students hone their analytical and critical thinking skills and develop their research and writing skills. The department’s various majors equip students for numerous careers, as well as for graduate and professional studies. Graduates from the Department have been admitted to many of the nation’s premier law and graduate schools.
Distinctives of the History, Politics and Philosophy Department
The Department of History, Politics and Philosophy offers students the opportunity to study with faculty who have distinguished themselves through research and publication, excellence in teaching and government service. Students are given the opportunity to extend themselves through a variety of internship opportunities, including with the Tennessee State Legislature. The department has recently undertaken innovative programs in the area of civil and human rights studies. The department hosts an active pre-law organization, Phi Alpha Delta; history honor society, Phi Alpha Theta; and political science honor society, Pi Sigma Alpha. The department’s yearly travel course, the Washington Seminar, conducted in Washington, D.C., focuses on foreign policy and national security issues and is highlighted by an intensive week of briefings and seminars with key policy makers.
Career Opportunities
- Law
- Government service
- Business
- Non-government organizations
- Humanitarian and social justice agencies
- Journalism
- Ministry
- High school teaching
- College teaching
- Law enforcement
- Public history
- Restorative justice
“3-then-1” Pathway
The Department of History, Politics, and Philosophy has partnered with the College of Business and the College of Leadership & Public Service to offer an innovative “3-then-1” pathway that would enable ambitious Lipscomb students to complete an undergraduate degree in Philosophy or History or Political Science in three academic years, during the final semester of which they would receive preferential consideration for admission to Lipscomb’s one-year Masters of Management Career Accelerator program in the College of Business or either the one-year M.A. in Leadership & Public Service or the one-year M.A. in Conflict Management in the College of Leadership & Public Service. If admitted to one of these graduate programs, and upon successful completion of it, students in the “3-then-1” pathway can earn a bachelor’s degree (in Philosophy or History or Political Science) and a master’s degree (in Management or Leadership & Public Service or Conflict Management) in only four years time. For more information on these “3-then-1” pathways, contact one of the undergraduate advisors within the Department of History, Politics, and Philosophy.
Bioscience & Philosophy
The Department of History, Politics, and Philosophy has partnered with the Department of Biology to offer an innovative interdisciplinary undergraduate degree in Bioscience & Philosophy. For more information, click here: Bioscience and Philosophy
Requirements for Majors
Students majoring in American studies, government and public administration, history, history teaching or political science must take an exit exam.
Program of Study Requirements- American History, B.A.
- American Studies, B.A.
- Applied Ethics Minor
- Criminal Justice Minor
- Ethics Minor
- European History, B.A.
- Global History, B.A.
- History Minor
- History of Ideas Minor
- History Teaching, B.A.
- History, B.A.
- International Affairs, B.A.
- International Studies Minor
- Philosophy Minor
- Philosophy, B.A. or B.S.
- Political Science Minor
- Political Science, B.A.
- Political Science, Pre - Law Concentration, B.A.
- Political Science: International Relations Concentration, B.A.
- Public Policy Minor
- Restorative Criminal Justice, B.A.
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