

BSc Mathematics and Philosophy
About this course
Mathematics and philosophy is a combination with a long and distinguished intellectual history. The two disciplines are more closely related than they may appear: philosophy of mathematics asks what numbers actually are, whether mathematical truths are discovered or invented, and what it means for a proof to establish certainty. Logic, which underpins both modern mathematics and much of analytic philosophy, sits squarely at their intersection. Studying them together gives you access to two distinct but complementary modes of rigorous thinking, and the combination is particularly well suited to those drawn to precision and abstraction. At the University of Sheffield, this three-year full-time programme includes a sandwich placement year, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities, giving you considerable scope to extend the academic experience with professional and international dimensions. You will study across a range of mathematical areas, including analysis, algebra, statistics, and applied mathematics, and engage with philosophical topics in ethics, metaphysics, epistemology, logic, and the philosophy of science and mathematics. The programme is designed to be flexible, allowing you to shape your degree towards your particular interests as it progresses. You will develop the capacity to work with abstract structures and to construct and evaluate complex arguments, whether mathematical proofs or philosophical reasoning. The ability to approach problems in a systematic and logical way, to distinguish rigorous from weak reasoning, and to communicate intricate ideas with clarity are skills that emerge strongly from this combination. Graduates from mathematics and philosophy programmes are genuinely versatile. Careers in finance, actuarial science, data science, technology, law, research, and policy are all accessible. The philosophical background is valued in roles that require careful conceptual analysis and written argumentation, while the mathematical training opens doors in quantitative and technical fields. Further study in philosophy, mathematics, logic, artificial intelligence, or law is equally natural, and many graduates pursue research degrees or professional qualifications in these areas.
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