

BA Philosophy and Psychology
About this course
Philosophy and psychology is a pairing that explores the mind from two complementary directions, one through conceptual analysis and argument, the other through empirical investigation and experiment. Philosophy of mind grapples with questions about the nature of consciousness, mental representation, free will and personal identity that psychology cannot resolve through experimentation alone. Psychology provides the experimental and observational data about human cognition, emotion, perception and behaviour that philosophy must take seriously in any credible account of the mind. Studying both together develops a rare combination of conceptual rigour and empirical literacy. At the University of Nottingham, this three-year full-time programme is taught in a research-active environment with genuine depth in both philosophy and psychology. Nottingham considers candidates individually and accepts a broad range of qualifications for this programme, reflecting an open and holistic approach to admissions. The typical entry tariff is around 136 UCAS points. You will study core areas of philosophy including metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, logic and philosophy of mind alongside core psychology content covering cognitive, social, developmental and biological psychology, together with research methods in both quantitative and qualitative traditions. The combination encourages you to bring philosophical and empirical approaches into dialogue, asking how experimental findings bear on philosophical theories and how philosophical analysis can clarify what psychological research is actually showing. Graduates of philosophy and psychology programmes are well placed for a wide range of careers. The philosophical analytical skills complement the empirical psychology training to make graduates effective in research, education, clinical psychology training pathways, human-computer interaction, user experience research, management consulting, law and the civil service. Clinical psychology, which requires postgraduate doctoral training after an undergraduate degree, is a common aspiration. The combination's analytical depth and empirical grounding is valued wherever complex reasoning and evidence-based judgement are required. Postgraduate study in philosophy, psychology, clinical psychology, neuroscience or cognitive science is the well-supported next step.
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