

BA Philosophy and Religion
About this course
Philosophy and religion is a combination that addresses some of the most fundamental questions human beings have asked: What can we know and how? What ought we to do and why? Does God exist, and if so, what follows? How do religious traditions make sense of suffering, death, meaning, and moral obligation? The two disciplines have been in conversation for most of recorded history, and studying them together allows you to examine both the rational analysis that philosophy brings to these questions and the rich diversity of traditions through which human beings have answered them in practice. At the University of Manchester, this three-year degree develops your philosophical skills, including the ability to construct and evaluate arguments, analyse concepts, and engage with complex ethical and metaphysical questions, alongside a thorough study of religious traditions and the academic field of religious studies. In the philosophy strand, you will engage with questions in ethics, epistemology, philosophy of mind, political philosophy, and the specific subfield of philosophy of religion, which examines religious claims with philosophical rigour. In the religion strand, you will study major world religions including Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, and Hinduism in their historical and contemporary dimensions, alongside the theoretical frameworks that scholars use to understand religion as a human phenomenon. Manchester's combined programme benefits from strong departments in both subjects. The intellectual skills developed across this degree, including careful reading, rigorous argument, and the ability to engage respectfully and analytically with complex and contested worldviews, are valued in many professional contexts. Careers in teaching, both at secondary level and in higher education, draw many graduates. The clergy and religious ministry, charitable and humanitarian organisations with religious foundations, and interfaith dialogue bodies provide further pathways. Law, journalism, public policy, and the civil service value the analytical clarity that philosophy develops. Some graduates move into counselling, chaplaincy, or social work, drawing on their understanding of how religious and existential questions intersect with human wellbeing. Postgraduate study in philosophy, theology, or religious studies is a natural continuation for those drawn to academic careers.
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