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Nov 28, 2024
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University Catalog 2014-2015 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Philosophy, M.A.
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The Master of Arts degree in Philosophy draws students with a wide range of interests and professional goals, including further graduate study in philosophy, community college teaching and personal enrichment. Although the department is analytically oriented, it encourages work in other areas, for example, Asian philosophy, feminist philosophy, and the intersection between European and Anglo-American thought.
Admission to the Program
In addition to University requirements for admission to graduate study the Philosophy Department requires a 2.75 grade point average in the last 90 quarter units, official transcripts, two letters of recommendation, and a writing sample (either a statement of purpose or a philosophy paper). Applicants must possess a baccalaureate in philosophy or a baccalaureate with a major in a field other than philosophy supplemented by the equivalent of a minor in philosophy. The director of graduate studies in the Department of Philosophy will determine whether prior course work is equivalent to a minor. Applicants to the graduate program are admitted based on a comprehensive review of their application materials by the Department of Philosophy.
Applicants must consult an adviser in philosophy to determine whether any academic deficiencies exist before admission to the program can be granted.
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Requirements for the Degree (45 units)
Required Courses
A total of 45 units is required, with at least 36 in philosophy and 23 in 500-level courses. Courses outside philosophy must be relevant to the student’s program. Prerequisites
Students are required to include the following philosophy courses in their program, if not completed prior to admission to the program. Comprehensive Examinations or Thesis (0, 1-6 units)
Comprehensive Examinations
Students must comply with college and departmental eligibility requirements for registration for the comprehensive examinations (PHIL 596) and may take all three examinations during one quarter or spread them over successive quarters.
Students are required to pass comprehensive examinations in three of the four areas in which exams are given; in each area students select one exam.
Area A: Metaphysics or Theory of Knowledge
Area B: Ethics or Social/Political Philosophy
Area C: History of Ancient Philosophy or History of Modern Philosophy
Area D: Aesthetics, Asian Philosophy, Contemporary Continental Philosophy, Latin American Philosophy, Logic, Nineteenth Century Philosophy, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of Religion, or Philosophy of Science.
Students are permitted two attempts to pass each comprehensive examination. Students who fail a comprehensive examination in the same area a second time will be disqualified from the program.
Comprehensive exams will be offered only in the fall, winter, and spring terms. Thesis
Completion of the first 36 units of the master’s degree program with a minimum 3.5 grade point average, approval of the thesis proposal by the department, enrollment in 1-6 units of PHIL 599, and an oral examination on the thesis are required for the thesis option. Students who have at any time attempted the comprehensive examination (PHIL 596) are ineligible for this option.
Students must include seminars in at least three of the four major subject areas in their master’s degree program. The four subject areas and the courses that fulfill each are: History of Philosophy (PHIL 510 , PHIL 511 , PHIL 513 , and PHIL 515 ); Logic, Philosophy of Language, and Philosophy of Science (PHIL 521 , PHIL 523 , and PHIL 525 ) Metaphysics and Theory of Knowledge (PHIL 531 , PHIL 532 , and PHIL 533 ); Aesthetics, Ethics, and Social/Political Philosophy (PHIL 542 , PHIL 543 , and PHIL 544 ). |
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