

MA Language & Linguistics and Philosophy
About this course
Language and linguistics is the scientific study of human language as a natural and social phenomenon, asking how languages are structured, how they are acquired by children, how they change over time, and how they vary across communities and individuals. It draws on cognitive science, psychology, anthropology, and computer science as well as its own distinctive methods, providing tools to analyse everything from the sounds and grammar of individual languages to the social functions of speech, the relationship between language and thought, and the computational modelling of linguistic knowledge. Philosophy, combined with linguistics, extends this enquiry into some of the deepest questions about meaning, mind, and the nature of knowledge, asking what concepts are, how language relates to thought and reality, and what it means to understand anything at all. At the University of Aberdeen, this four-year full-time degree develops both disciplines across a programme that also includes a year abroad. You will study the core areas of linguistics, including phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, alongside the history and evolution of language. You will also engage with sociolinguistics, examining how language varies with social identity, and with the cognitive dimensions of language acquisition and processing. The philosophy component introduces you to logic, epistemology, ethics, and philosophy of mind and language, building the analytical tools to address the foundational questions that connect both disciplines. The year abroad provides a sustained opportunity to study in another academic and cultural environment, sharpening your awareness of how language and thought are shaped by context. Graduates of this combination enter careers in linguistics research, language teaching, speech and language therapy, computational linguistics and natural language processing, lexicography, publishing, and the civil service. The analytical rigour and philosophical training developed by the degree is valued in law, management, public policy, and education. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in linguistics, philosophy of language, cognitive science, or speech and language therapy, building the specialist expertise needed for research and professional roles in these fields.
Syllabus & Modules
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