There are some common requirements for completing your Wellesley degree, whatever your major.
These include distribution of courses over different types of topics and studies.
That distribution requirement includes one unit in social and behavioral analysis and two units total from two of the following three distribution areas: epistemology and cognition; religion, ethics, and moral philosophy; and historical studies. Here's how philosophy courses fit into that rubric.
Epistemology and Cognition
201 Ancient Greek Philosophy
203 Philosophy of Art
207 Philosophy of Language
215 Philosophy of Mind
216 Logic
221 History of Modern Philosophy
245 Rationality and Action
310 Seminar: Ancient Skepticism
345 Seminar in Advanced Topics in Philosophy of Psychology and Social Science
Religion, Ethics, and Moral Philosophy
200 Philosophy of Witchcraft
207 Philosophy of Language
213 Justice
226 Philosophy of Law
233 Environmental Ethics
236 Global Justice
330 Calderwood Seminar in Public Writing: Ethics for Everyone
338 Seminar: Who Owns the Past?
340 Seminar: The Meaning of Life
342 Seminar: Political Philosophy
Social and Behavioral Analysis
213 Justice
Historical Studies
221 History of Modern Philosophy
310 Seminar: Ancient Skepticism
Mathematical Modeling
216 Logic
ARS
203 Philosophy of Art