Overview

This specialisation is for students commencing from 2023.Philosophy enables students to reflect critically on the commitments and values that shape human life.  In ordinary life, we make assessments of character and action, of laws and institutions, of media and art, of the soundness of one another’s beliefs.  What values are … For more content click the Read More button below. The philosophy curriculum at UNSW explores such questions. You will gain an expanded understanding of the human, social, and natural world, and appreciate complex relationships and interactions across these domains. You will discover how ethical norms, political institutions, and social practices can both foster and constrain creativity and innovation.  You will appreciate how fundamental concepts that underpin scientific and humanistic inquiry – concepts as fundamental as “time” and “mind” – have been contested, and their meanings debated, over time. And since philosophical inquiry is highly driven by understanding and assessing arguments, you will develop valuable skills of critical thinking, sound reasoning, and clear interpretive and analytical writing.  The curriculum covers the key areas of the discipline with attention to how its fundamental concepts have developed both in Western and Chinese traditions.  Students completing the Philosophy major specialisation at UNSW will gain competency across the key areas of the discipline: logic and reasoning; metaphysics, epistemology, and philosophy of mind; moral, social and political philosophy; and the history of philosophy. 

Learning Outcomes

1.
Articulate philosophical theories and practices and integrate them with cross-disciplinary concerns and connections.
  • Scholars
2.
Articulate broad and coherent bodies of philosophical knowledge in their historical contexts and from local, national and international perspectives.
  • Scholars
3.
Undertake rigorous and engaged scholarly enquiry and analysis in order to justify a position in relation to foundational aspects of societies, cultures, arts and sciences.
  • Scholars
4.
Collaborate effectively with others and engage sensitively with diverse cultural perspectives.
  • Leaders
  • Professionals
  • Scholars
5.
Communicate and debate complex ideas, beliefs and information in a range of different contexts using a variety of suitable media.
  • Professionals
  • Scholars
  • Leaders
6.
Exhibit initiative and self-direction to continually acquire knowledge and skills.
  • Professionals
  • Leaders
  • Scholars
7.
Critically and creatively employ philosophical skills and appraise different theoretical perspectives in order to engage constructively with complex problems in professional practice, civic life and/or scholarship.
  • Scholars
8.
Act ethically, respectfully and responsibly.
  • Scholars
  • Global citizens

Available in Program(s)
Single degree program(s) in which this specialisation is available:

Bachelor of Arts - BA3409 - Arts
Bachelor of Psychological Science - BPsychSc3435 - Psychological Science
Bachelor of Politics, Philosophy and Economics - BPPE3478 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics

Specialisation Structure

You must take 48 UOC, including 12 UOC at Level 1, at least 12 UOC at Level 2 and at least 18 UOC at Level 3.

Arts/Education (Secondary) Students
Level 2 and 3 Prescribed Electives36 Units of Credit:

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You are responsible for ensuring that you enrol in courses according to your program requirements and by following the advice of your Program Authority. myUNSW enrolment checks that you have met enrolment requirements such as pre-requisites for individual courses but not that you are enrolling in courses that will count towards your program requirements.

Pre-2019 Handbook Editions

Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)