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BA Philosophy, Ethics and Religion (including a Foundation Year)
About this course
Philosophy, ethics, and religion together form a degree that addresses the deepest questions human beings have ever asked: what is real, what can we know, what should we do, and what gives life meaning? Philosophy brings the tools of rigorous argument and conceptual analysis, training you to reason with precision about ideas that resist easy answers. Ethics extends this into moral philosophy, examining theories of right and wrong, justice, and the good life, as well as applied questions in areas such as medical ethics, environmental ethics, and political philosophy. Religion adds the study of the world's great religious and spiritual traditions, approaching them with both scholarly rigour and genuine curiosity about what they claim and why billions of people have found them compelling. At the University of Chester, this four-year full-time programme includes a year abroad and begins with a foundation year built into the four-year structure. The year abroad gives you the opportunity to study at a partner institution in another country, which is particularly enriching in a subject that spans multiple cultural and intellectual traditions. Chester has a long tradition in theology and religious studies, rooted in the college's Anglican foundation, and while the degree is approached with full academic breadth and scholarly independence, that heritage gives the programme a thoughtful and well-resourced home. Across the programme you will engage with the major philosophical traditions, study the world's religions, including their texts, practices, histories, and theologies, and develop your ethical reasoning through engagement with both classical moral philosophy and contemporary applied debates. The year abroad deepens your exposure to different philosophical and religious traditions in their cultural context. Graduates of philosophy, ethics, and religion degrees move into careers in teaching, chaplaincy and pastoral care, journalism, the civil service, law, international development, NGOs, counselling, and publishing. The critical thinking and communication skills the degree develops are valued across essentially any professional field. Postgraduate study in theology, philosophy, ethics, or religious studies is a common next step.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (72% response rate)
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