

MA Gaelic/ Philosophy
About this course
Scottish Gaelic and Philosophy is a rare and intellectually rich combination, connecting one of Scotland's indigenous languages and its associated culture with one of the oldest and most demanding academic disciplines. Gaelic is the language of a distinct cultural tradition that has shaped the literature, music, and oral history of Scotland and the wider Gaelic world, and studying it means developing genuine linguistic competence alongside engagement with that tradition. Philosophy is the systematic pursuit of clear answers to fundamental questions about knowledge, existence, morality, and human nature, using argument and reason as the primary tools. At the University of Glasgow, this part-time programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study in a different environment and, potentially, to deepen your engagement with Gaelic communities or with philosophical traditions in an international context. Glasgow has particular expertise in both Celtic Studies and Philosophy, and the programme draws on that depth. You will develop your Gaelic language skills while studying the history and literature of the Gaelic world, and alongside this you will engage with philosophical questions ranging from epistemology and metaphysics to ethics and political philosophy, developing the rigorous argumentative skills that philosophy training produces. The combination is unusual, but its graduates develop a distinctive profile: deep knowledge of a minority language tradition, linguistic competence that is genuinely rare, and the analytical and argumentative skills that philosophy produces. These qualities are valued in education, cultural institutions, broadcasting, community development, and public policy contexts where the Gaelic language and its communities are a focus, as well as in broader professional settings where critical thinking is at a premium. Graduates move into teaching, Gaelic broadcasting, community and cultural development, archiving, publishing, and the public sector. Some pursue postgraduate study in Celtic studies, philosophy, linguistics, or related fields.
Syllabus & Modules
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