- Greek III
- Critical Analysis & Writing I
- Physics I
- Animal Biology
- The State, Religion, Economy, and Human Consumption
For those of you wondering about that last one, here's the description my honors advisor sent out:
The State, Religion, Economy, and Human Consumption — Until recently, the great thinkers of Western civilization have assumed that the economy and the realm of production and consumption must be radically subordinated to the State and Religion. This course will explore works both Ancient and Modern that express this idea, including the Prometheus Bound of Aeschylus, the Plutus of Aristophanes, the Miser of Moliere, Gulliver's Travels and selections from The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith. Evaluation will be through papers and an essay final examination. — Epstein — et cetera.
I thought this a happy compromise. No Intro to Music, but hey, I don't mind having a humanities floating around to be picked up later, and in a pinch either the seminar this semester or the Jane Austen seminar last spring can count.
The only downside: for the third semester in a row I've managed to line up 3-4 back-to-back classes over lunch. Another semester of being the idiot trying to chew quietly on my makeshift bag lunches in the back of a class. Ah well.
Beauteous chem lab beckons. Cheerio!
Sounds like a fun time for you! So, eh, Physics is back on the agenda now?