

BA Philosophy and Modern Languages
About this course
Philosophy and modern languages is a combination that develops two of the most rigorous intellectual disciplines alongside one another. Philosophy trains you to examine ideas and arguments with logical precision, to identify hidden assumptions, and to reason carefully about fundamental questions concerning knowledge, ethics, language, and the nature of reality. Modern languages develops your ability to communicate fluently in another tongue and to understand the cultural, historical, and literary contexts that shape how people in other societies think and live. The combination develops an unusually complete intellectual toolkit: the analytical rigour of philosophy and the cultural range and linguistic facility of language study. At the University of Exeter, this three-year full-time programme includes a sandwich year, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities, giving you the chance to develop your language skills through immersion and your philosophical understanding in an international context. You will study core areas of philosophy including ethics, epistemology, political philosophy, and the philosophy of language, alongside the literature, culture, and linguistic study of your chosen modern language. The year abroad is integral to language acquisition at degree level, allowing you to develop the fluency that only sustained immersion produces. Work placement opportunities add a professional dimension that connects your academic learning to the realities of the careers for which the degree prepares you. Philosophy and modern languages graduates are well placed for careers in diplomacy, international organisations, journalism, law, publishing, the civil service, and international business. The philosophical training is particularly valuable as preparation for law and for roles requiring ethical reasoning and the ability to engage with complex arguments. Language skills add a dimension that opens roles in translation, international affairs, and global organisations. The combination develops graduates who can communicate across cultural and linguistic boundaries while reasoning with philosophical precision, a rare and highly valued combination. Postgraduate study in philosophy, languages, European studies, or international relations is a natural next step.
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