

MA Geography/Philosophy
About this course
Geography and philosophy is a combination that pairs one of the most empirically and practically grounded disciplines with one of the most abstract and conceptually demanding. Geography studies the surface of the Earth as the site of human living and working, examining the physical processes that shape landscapes alongside the human activities that transform them, and the interrelationships that bind people and environments together. Philosophy asks the fundamental questions that underlie every other discipline: what can we know, how should we reason, what is valuable, and how should we live? Together, they give you both a grounded engagement with the real world and the conceptual tools to think carefully about it. At the University of Glasgow, this four-year full-time degree develops both disciplines to degree level, engaging you with geography's breadth of topical coverage from coastal management and environmental hazards to migration, solidarity, and urban geography, alongside philosophy's tradition of rational inquiry and principled debate across metaphysics, ethics, epistemology, and political philosophy. Geography develops your skills in qualitative and statistical data analysis, fieldwork, and independent research, while philosophy develops your capacity for precise conceptual argument and critical reasoning. A year abroad is built into the programme, broadening your intellectual and personal horizons and your understanding of how both geography and philosophy are pursued in different academic cultures. The combination produces a graduate with an unusually complete analytical toolkit: empirically grounded, conceptually rigorous, and equipped for complex, evidence-based reasoning. Graduates go on to careers in research, education, environmental management, planning, public policy, journalism, the civil service, international development, and a wide range of roles where critical thinking and analytical depth matter. Many continue to postgraduate study in geography, philosophy, or related fields such as environmental ethics, political theory, or urban studies.
Syllabus & Modules
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