S-Fault Tolerant Quantum Comp

Monolithic quantum hardware is reaching the limits of scalable fabrication, linking hardware modules in local (single fridge) networks is becoming a practical possibility, error correcting codes much better than surface codes are being deployed and universal fault-tolerant computation on them is now a theoretically solved problem. It has never been more exciting to see all the pieces needed for scalable universal quantum computation coming together. This seminar will provide an overview of everything necessary for the complete fault tolerant architecture behind a quantum computer.

Honors Research

The Commonwealth Honors College thesis or project is intended to provide students with the opportunity to work closely with faculty members to define and carry out in-depth research or creative endeavors. It provides excellent preparation for students who intend to continue their education through graduate study or begin their professional careers. The student works closely with their 499Y Honors Research sponsor to pursue research on a topic or question of special interest to them in preparation for writing a 499T Honors Thesis or completing a 499P Honors Project.

Holocaust Literature

What is a Holocaust story? How does literature written in extremis in ghettos, death camps or in hiding differ from the vast post-war literature about the Holocaust? How to balance competing claims of individual and collective experience, the rights of the imagination and the pressures for historical accuracy? Selections from a variety of genres (diary, reportage, poetry, novel, graphic novel, memoir, film, monuments, museums) and critical theories of representation. All readings in translation. No prerequisites.

Intro to Political Thinking

A study of the leading ideas of the Western political tradition, focusing on such issues as justice, power, legitimacy, revolution, freedom, equality and forms of government--democracy especially. Open to all students. Entering students considering a major in government are encouraged to take the course in their first year, either in the fall or the spring semester. Enrollment limited to 30.

Francophone African Women Writers

This course explores how Francophone African women writers from the 20th and 21st centuries address identity, gender, race, migration, female body, and sociocultural norms. Through texts set in Europe and Sub-Saharan Africa, students examine female protagonists navigating gender roles, exclusion, sexuality, and otherness across shifting cultural and social contexts in their pursuit of identity.
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