Philosophy
Faculty
Director and Professor Parens; Professors Engelland, W. Frank, T. Hibbs, Sanford and Sepper; Associate Professors Knobel, Lehrberger, Mirus, Nielsen, Simmons and Walz; Distinguished Emeritus Professor Wood
The Department of Philosophy offers three graduate programs in philosophy, one leading to the Ph.D. and the other two to the Master of Philosophy and the Master of Arts in Philosophy.
The Doctoral Program with Concentration in Philosophy
For a description of this interdisciplinary program see the Institute of Philosophic Studies.
The Master's Programs
The program leading to the Master’s or Master of Arts in Philosophy is designed to prepare students to pursue careers in non-college teaching professions or for doctoral study in Philosophy. The program engages students in a serious and thorough study of the Western philosophic tradition. Although this study involves a close examination of historical authors and doctrines, students should hope above all to recover the best of the philosophic tradition by rethinking the past in light of fundamental questions, new and old.
Admission Requirements
Application for admission includes a completed application form, two letters of reference, a statement of purpose, an intellectual autobiography, a sample of academic writing, official transcripts of previous college work and GRE General Test scores that are not more than five years previous to the date of application. Possession of a bachelor’s degree is prerequisite to matriculating in the program. Ordinarily candidates should have attained a bachelor’s degree in the discipline. However, at least 15 credit hours of course work that covers classical metaphysics, ethics and the history of philosophy is prerequisite to graduate studies in philosophy.
Degrees in Philosophy
Master of Arts in Philosophy
Master of Philosophy
Course Information and Course Sequence
Courses in Philosophy