

MA European Philosophy
About this course
European philosophy is a tradition of systematic enquiry into the fundamental questions of existence, knowledge, ethics, politics, and the nature of the human condition, developed across centuries of thought from ancient Greece through the medieval scholastics, the Enlightenment, German Idealism, phenomenology, existentialism, critical theory, and structuralism. To study European philosophy is to engage with Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Kant, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Sartre, Beauvoir, Foucault, and Derrida, among many others, examining their arguments with rigour and asking what they still have to tell us about reason, freedom, language, power, and what it means to live well. The University of Dundee's four-year full-time degree in European philosophy includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study at a partner institution in continental Europe. This experience is particularly meaningful for a programme concerned with the continental philosophical tradition, since engaging with philosophy in the cultural and intellectual environments that shaped it deepens your understanding in ways that study in an Anglophone context alone cannot achieve. You will engage with the major thinkers and movements of the tradition, develop skills in close reading of philosophical texts in translation and where possible in their original languages, construct and evaluate arguments with precision, and write philosophically demanding essays and papers. Dundee's philosophy department has particular strengths in phenomenology and continental thought. Graduates in European philosophy go on to work in education, law, the civil service, journalism, publishing, think tanks, ethics advisory roles, arts and culture, and a wide range of careers where the ability to reason rigorously, read carefully, and communicate complex ideas precisely is valued. Many continue to postgraduate study in philosophy, ethics, political thought, or European cultural history, and some pursue doctoral research that contributes to contemporary philosophical debates. The discipline's training in critical thinking and argument is among the most transferable that any degree can offer.
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