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BA Global Philosophies & Worldviews and Sociology
About this course
Global philosophies and worldviews takes seriously the idea that philosophical thought is not the exclusive property of any one culture or tradition. Western philosophy, from Plato and Aristotle through Descartes and Kant to contemporary analytic and continental thought, has shaped much of modern academic inquiry, but it represents only one strand of humanity's sustained reflection on questions of truth, ethics, knowledge, and what it means to live well. This degree broadens that conversation substantially, engaging with African philosophy, Confucian ethics, Hindu metaphysics, Islamic political thought, Jewish existentialism, and Buddhist epistemology, among others. Sociology, paired with these philosophical traditions, provides the empirical and theoretical tools to understand how societies are structured, how they change, and how ideas circulate within them. At Liverpool Hope University, this three-year full-time degree allows you to develop both disciplines in genuine depth while also taking full advantage of the degree's practical features. A sandwich year enables you to undertake a professional placement, connecting your academic work to real-world contexts and building the experience that employers value. The option of a year abroad broadens your intellectual and cultural horizons further, giving you the opportunity to engage with other academic traditions in person. Work placement is integrated into the programme, supplementing your classroom learning with direct professional experience. The skills this combination develops, including critical thinking, ethical reasoning, comparative cultural analysis, and sociological inquiry, are valued across a wide range of careers. Graduates work in education, social research, community development, international organisations, journalism, public policy, the civil service, and the charitable sector. The capacity to understand and respect diverse worldviews while analysing social structures critically is particularly valuable in roles involving intercultural communication, policy development, and public engagement. Many graduates proceed to postgraduate study in philosophy, sociology, religious studies, ethics, or related disciplines, building the specialist expertise needed for academic or advanced professional roles.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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