

MA Management and Philosophy
About this course
Management and philosophy may seem an unusual pairing, but they address complementary questions that together produce graduates of exceptional analytical depth. Management is concerned with how organisations are structured, led, and operated: how strategies are formed, how resources are allocated, how people are motivated, and how decisions are made under uncertainty. Philosophy brings the tools of rigorous argument, conceptual analysis, and ethical reasoning to bear on those same questions, asking what organisations are for, what good leadership looks like, and how the assumptions embedded in management practice can be examined critically. Together, they form a programme that develops both practical understanding and the capacity for deep, independent thought. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year, full-time programme introduces you to a variety of organisational forms across all sectors of the economy, developing your understanding of marketing, organisational behaviour, and financial analysis alongside the philosophical skills of conceptual analysis, logical argument, and ethical reasoning. The management strand gives you practical and quantitative tools for understanding how organisations work, while the philosophy strand sharpens your capacity to interrogate evidence, challenge received wisdom, and engage with fundamental questions about value, knowledge, and rational action. The programme includes a year abroad, broadening your academic and personal horizons. A typical entry tariff of 232 points reflects the very high academic standard expected for entry. Graduates from management and philosophy programmes are exceptionally well prepared for careers in strategy and management consulting, leadership roles in business and the public sector, law, policy analysis, academic research, ethics and compliance, and any role that demands both organisational understanding and intellectual rigour. The combination is particularly valued in senior roles where complex judgements must be made about competing interests and long-term consequences. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in management, philosophy, law, or public policy, building on the distinctive dual expertise the degree provides.
Syllabus & Modules
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