

BA Music and Philosophy
About this course
Music and philosophy is a combination that makes deep sense once you consider how much the two subjects have in common. Both are concerned with what lies beyond the immediately observable, both have long and rich theoretical traditions, and both demand a kind of rigorous attention to structure and meaning that trains the mind in ways that are valuable far beyond the disciplines themselves. Philosophy of music is a well-established field asking fundamental questions about the nature of musical experience, representation and value. Aesthetics, the philosophy of mind, ethics and formal logic all intersect with musical study in ways that make the combination genuinely coherent. At Durham University, this three-year full-time programme is offered with a particularly rich set of structural features. The course includes a sandwich year with embedded work placement opportunities and a year abroad, giving you professional experience and international study within a compact three-year degree. Durham's music department is one of the strongest in the UK, and its philosophy department has a distinguished research profile, so both strands of the degree carry genuine academic weight. The typical entry tariff for this programme is around 168 UCAS points, consistent with Durham's high academic standards. You will study music theory, analysis, history and composition alongside philosophy of art, ethics, epistemology, metaphysics and logic. The combination develops your capacity for both creative and analytical thinking, and you will be expected to engage seriously with both disciplines rather than treating either as a subsidiary interest. Performance may also feature in the music component depending on your musical background and the choices you make within the programme. Graduates of music and philosophy programmes are exceptionally well prepared for careers requiring analytical rigour, creative thinking and the capacity to engage with complex abstract ideas. Music careers including composing, performing, music journalism, arts administration, cultural policy and education are natural destinations for the music strand. The philosophy component opens doors to law, public policy, research, consultancy, journalism and the civil service. Postgraduate study in musicology, philosophy of mind, aesthetics or music education is a well-supported path.
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