

MA Philosophy and Psychology
About this course
Philosophy and psychology address the same territory from fundamentally different directions, and combining them produces an intellectual education that is richer than either alone. Philosophy asks the conceptual and normative questions: what is the mind? What is consciousness? Can there be genuine free will? How do we know what we know? Psychology asks the empirical questions: how does perception actually work? What drives motivation and emotion? How does the mind develop in childhood and change in illness? The two disciplines need each other, and students who study both gain a command of both the conceptual precision and the empirical sophistication that questions about mind require. At the University of Dundee you will study across both disciplines over four years, with the philosophy component specialising in the continental European tradition, engaging with key texts from thinkers such as Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Sartre and their contemporary inheritors. This focus gives you a distinctive approach to questions about experience, embodiment, language and meaning that complements the more experimentally oriented questions you will pursue in psychology. The programme includes a year abroad, extending your intellectual engagement with different scholarly traditions and cultural contexts. Graduates of philosophy and psychology bring together conceptual clarity, methodological range, and a nuanced understanding of mind that is valued across a wide spectrum of careers. Clinical and counselling psychology are common destinations, usually after postgraduate training. Research in cognitive science, neuroscience, or social psychology is another path. Graduates also move into education, law, policy, journalism, human resources, healthcare administration, and the growing field of AI ethics and technology policy, where philosophical training about mind and cognition is directly relevant. Postgraduate study in philosophy, psychology, cognitive science, psychotherapy, or law is a natural extension for those who wish to develop their interests further.
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