

BA Philosophy
About this course
Philosophy is the discipline that asks the most fundamental questions about knowledge, reality, morality, and the good life, and does so with the tools of rigorous argument and conceptual analysis. It is not a body of established facts but a tradition of inquiry, and studying it means learning to read carefully, to distinguish good arguments from bad ones, to identify assumptions and question them, and to construct and defend positions with precision. These are among the most widely transferable intellectual skills that a university education can develop. At the University of Durham, this degree includes a foundation year that builds the academic skills and philosophical background needed before the main programme begins, making it accessible to students who want a stronger foundation. The main programme then covers the major areas of philosophy: epistemology, which asks what knowledge is and how we can have it; ethics and political philosophy, which examines what we ought to do and how societies should be organised; metaphysics, which investigates the fundamental nature of reality; philosophy of mind, which asks what consciousness and thought are; and logic, which provides the formal tools for reasoning rigorously. The programme includes a sandwich year in industry, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities, which add professional experience and international perspective to the academic philosophical training. Philosophy graduates are sought after in roles that require careful thinking, clear writing, and the ability to engage with complex and ambiguous problems. Law, the civil service, consulting, technology ethics, and financial services all attract philosophy graduates. The ability to identify and evaluate arguments, to spot fallacies, and to reason clearly about ethical and policy questions is valuable across almost every profession. Teaching philosophy at sixth form level and university, and academic research through postgraduate study, draw those who want to continue in the discipline. The sandwich year and placements help philosophy graduates develop professional credentials alongside their intellectual skills, strengthening their position in the graduate labour market.
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