

BSc Philosophy - Physics
About this course
Philosophy and physics might seem like an unusual pairing, but they have more in common than is immediately apparent. Both disciplines ask fundamental questions about the nature of reality, causation, space, time, and the limits of knowledge. Physics approaches these questions through mathematics and empirical investigation, building models of the physical world and testing them against evidence. Philosophy approaches them through conceptual analysis and argument, examining the foundations and implications of what science tells us and asking what we can really claim to know. Studied together, they produce a uniquely powerful intellectual combination. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year full-time MA (Hons) programme provides deep training in both disciplines. In philosophy, you will engage with both historical and contemporary work across logic, epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, and the philosophy of science, developing the skills of critical argument, close analysis, and principled debate that the discipline demands. In physics, you will build the rigorous mathematical and conceptual foundations of the physical sciences, studying classical and quantum mechanics, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, and the physics of matter. The interface between the two subjects is itself intellectually rich, raising questions about the interpretation of quantum mechanics, the nature of scientific explanation, and the relationship between physics and our ordinary understanding of the world. A year abroad is built into the programme. The typical tariff is 232 points, reflecting the highly competitive admissions for this programme at St Andrews. Graduates of this combination are genuinely unusual in the breadth and depth of their analytical training, and are well placed for careers that demand both rigorous thinking and the ability to engage with complex theoretical questions. Common destinations include academia, law, finance, scientific research, technology, the civil service, and public policy. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in philosophy of science, theoretical physics, or related fields.
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