

BSc Language, Logic and Communication
About this course
Language, logic, and communication is a discipline concerned with some of the most fundamental questions about how human beings understand and interact with the world. Language is the primary medium through which we think, communicate, and argue, yet its workings are often opaque even to those who use it fluently. Logic provides the formal tools for analysing arguments rigorously, distinguishing valid from invalid reasoning and identifying hidden assumptions. Communication studies examines how meaning is constructed and transmitted across social, cultural, and media contexts. Together, these three areas equip you with an unusually precise set of intellectual tools for understanding and producing discourse of all kinds. At the University of York, this full-time, three-year programme develops a rigorous scientific understanding of how language and communication work alongside the ability to use specialist techniques for deconstructing arguments with mathematical precision. You will study human interaction analytically, developing both your linguistic knowledge and your logical reasoning skills. The programme includes a sandwich year, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities, giving you substantial professional and international experience alongside your academic study. The combination of formal and applied elements makes this degree distinctive: you develop the kind of disciplined analytical thinking that comes from logic training while also grounding it in real communicative practice and empirical linguistic study. The typical entry tariff is 152 UCAS points. Graduates of language, logic, and communication programmes are equipped for a wide range of careers in which clear thinking and effective communication are valued. Law, the civil service, journalism, technology, academic research, data analysis, publishing, and roles in AI and natural language processing are all accessible. The logical reasoning skills are particularly valued in sectors where rigorous argument matters, from policy to technology. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study in linguistics, philosophy, cognitive science, or related fields, and some go into academic research or language technology.
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