

MA English Language/Philosophy
About this course
English language and philosophy is a combination that explores how language works and what it tells us about the minds and cultures that use it, alongside the fundamental philosophical questions about knowledge, reality, morality, and meaning. English language study, sometimes called linguistics, is the systematic analysis of the structure of language, its grammar, sounds, meaning, and the ways it varies across social contexts and historical periods. Philosophy provides the abstract reasoning and argumentative rigour to address the deepest questions that language use and its analysis raise: what does it mean for words to refer to things, how is meaning communicated and understood, and what is the relationship between language and thought? At Glasgow you will study this programme part time, giving you flexibility to combine your studies with work or other commitments while engaging with both disciplines across their breadth. A year abroad is available within the programme, giving you the opportunity to study language and philosophy in a different cultural and academic environment. English language study at Glasgow covers the structure and history of English, sociolinguistics, pragmatics, and the ways language functions in social and communicative contexts. Philosophy will take you through the major traditions and questions of the discipline, developing your capacity for precise, sustained argument. Graduates of English language and philosophy find their combination of skills valued in a wide range of careers. Language teaching, educational development, speech and language therapy, translation and interpreting, human-computer interaction, and AI language technology are all natural applications of the linguistics component. The philosophy component is valued in law, policy, ethics roles in technology and healthcare, journalism, and any career where rigorous argumentation and the analysis of complex, contested material is required. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in linguistics, philosophy, applied linguistics, or language technology.
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