Department of Philosophy
Paterson Hall 3A46
613-520-2110
http://carleton.ca/philosophy
This section presents the requirements for programs in:
Program Requirements
M.A. Philosophy (5.0 credits)
Requirements - Thesis pathway (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5850 [0.5] | Proseminar | |
PHIL 5900 [0.5] | Research Seminar | |
2. 2.0 credits in: | 2.0 | |
PHIL 5909 [2.0] | M.A. Thesis (must be defended at an oral examination) | |
3. 2.0 credits in courses, subject to the following limitations: | 2.0 | |
They may include one, but not both of the following: | ||
PHIL 5700 [0.5] | Fall Colloquium | |
or | ||
PHIL 5750 [0.5] | Winter Colloquium | |
They may include up to 1.0 credit from: | ||
PHIL 5000 [0.5] | Special Topic in Philosophy | |
PHIL 5200 [0.5] | Topics in Philosophy of Mind or Philosophy of Language | |
PHIL 5250 [0.5] | Topics in Logic, Epistemology, Metaphysics or Philosophy of Science | |
PHIL 5300 [0.5] | Topics in Value Theory | |
PHIL 5350 [0.5] | Topics in Ethics or Political Philosophy | |
PHIL 5500 [0.5] | Topics in Contemporary Philosophy | |
PHIL 5600 [0.5] | Topics in the History of Philosophy | |
PHIL 5650 [0.5] | Semantics | |
PHIL 5660 [0.5] | Lexical Semantics | |
or, with permission of the department other approved courses at the graduate or 4000-level at Carleton or other universities | ||
They may include up to 1.0 credit in tutorials or, with permission of the department, approved graduate-only courses at the graduate level in other departments or at other universities | ||
They must include at least 0.5 credit in two of the following areas of study: | ||
History of Philosopy | ||
Philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, logic, epistemology, or metaphysics | ||
Moral, social, or political philosophy | ||
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Research Essay pathway (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5850 [0.5] | Proseminar | |
PHIL 5900 [0.5] | Research Seminar | |
2. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5908 [1.0] | Research Essay | |
3. 1.0 credit from: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5700 [0.5] | Fall Colloquium | |
PHIL 5750 [0.5] | Winter Colloquium | |
or, with the permission of the department, approved graduate-level courses in other departments or at other universities | ||
4. Up to 1.0 credit from: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5000 [0.5] | Special Topic in Philosophy | |
PHIL 5200 [0.5] | Topics in Philosophy of Mind or Philosophy of Language | |
PHIL 5250 [0.5] | Topics in Logic, Epistemology, Metaphysics or Philosophy of Science | |
PHIL 5300 [0.5] | Topics in Value Theory | |
PHIL 5350 [0.5] | Topics in Ethics or Political Philosophy | |
PHIL 5500 [0.5] | Topics in Contemporary Philosophy | |
PHIL 5600 [0.5] | Topics in the History of Philosophy | |
PHIL 5650 [0.5] | Semantics | |
PHIL 5660 [0.5] | Lexical Semantics | |
or, with permission of the department, approved courses at graduate or 4000-level at Carleton or other universities | ||
5. Up to 1.0 credit in tutorials, or, with permission of the department, approved graduate-level courses in other departments or at other universities | 1.0 | |
Courses chosen must include at least 0.5 credit in two of the following areas of study: | ||
History and philosophy | ||
Philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, logic, epistemology, or metaphysics | ||
Moral, social, or political philosophy | ||
Total Credits | 5.0 |
M.A. Philosophy
with Specialization in Digital Humanities (5.0 credits)
Requirements - Thesis pathway (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5850 [0.5] | Proseminar | |
PHIL 5900 [0.5] | Research Seminar | |
2. 2.0 credits in: | 2.0 | |
PHIL 5909 [2.0] | M.A. Thesis | |
3. 1.0 credits in courses, subject to the following limitations: | 1.0 | |
- They may include PHIL 5700 or PHIL 5750 but not both | ||
- They may include up to 0.5 credit from PHIL 5000, PHIL 5200, PHIL 5250, PHIL 5300, PHIL 5350, PHIL 5500, PHIL 5600, PHIL 5650, PHIL 5660, or, with permission of the department, other approved courses at the graduate or 4000-level at Carleton or other universities | ||
- They may include up to 0.5 credit in tutorials, or, with permission of the department, approved graduate-only courses at the graduate level in other departments or at other universities | ||
- They must include at least 0.5 credit in two of the following areas of study: history of philosophy, philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, logic, epistemology, or metaphysics, moral, social, or political philosophy | ||
4. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
DIGH 5000 [0.5] | Issues in the Digital Humanities | |
5. 0.5 credit in DIGH (DIGH 5011, DIGH 5012, or annually listed DIGH course) | 0.5 | |
6. 0.0 credit in: | 0.0 | |
DIGH 5800 [0.0] | Digital Humanities: Professional Development | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Requirements - Research Essay pathway (5.0 credits) | ||
1. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5850 [0.5] | Proseminar | |
PHIL 5900 [0.5] | Research Seminar | |
2. 1.0 credit in: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5908 [1.0] | Research Essay | |
3. 1.0 credit from: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5700 [0.5] | Fall Colloquium | |
PHIL 5750 [0.5] | Winter Colloquium | |
Or, with permission of the department, approved graduate-level courses in other departments or at other universities | ||
4. 1.0 credit from: | 1.0 | |
PHIL 5000 [0.5] | Special Topic in Philosophy | |
PHIL 5200 [0.5] | Topics in Philosophy of Mind or Philosophy of Language | |
PHIL 5250 [0.5] | Topics in Logic, Epistemology, Metaphysics or Philosophy of Science | |
PHIL 5300 [0.5] | Topics in Value Theory | |
PHIL 5350 [0.5] | Topics in Ethics or Political Philosophy | |
PHIL 5500 [0.5] | Topics in Contemporary Philosophy | |
PHIL 5600 [0.5] | Topics in the History of Philosophy | |
PHIL 5650 [0.5] | Semantics | |
PHIL 5660 [0.5] | Lexical Semantics | |
Or, with permission of the department, approved courses at graduate or 4000-level at Carleton or other universities | ||
5. 0.5 credit in DIGH 5000 | 0.5 | |
6. 0.5 credit in DIGH (DIGH 5011, DIGH 5012, or annually listed DIGH course) | 0.5 | |
7. 0.0 credit in: | ||
DIGH 5800 [0.0] | Digital Humanities: Professional Development | |
Total Credits | 5.0 |
Course Selection
Special Topics | ||
PHIL 5000 [0.5] | Special Topic in Philosophy | |
Tutorials | ||
PHIL 5004 [0.5] | Tutorial in the History of Philosophy I | |
PHIL 5005 [0.5] | Tutorial in the History of Philosophy II | |
PHIL 5104 [0.5] | Tutorial in the Work of an Individual Philosopher I | |
PHIL 5105 [0.5] | Tutorial in the Work of an Individual Philosopher II | |
PHIL 5204 [0.5] | Tutorial in Logic, Epistemology, or Metaphysics I | |
PHIL 5205 [0.5] | Tutorial in Logic, Epistemology, or Metaphysics II | |
PHIL 5304 [0.5] | Tutorial in Selected Problems of Philosophy I | |
PHIL 5305 [0.5] | Tutorial in Selected Problems of Philosophy II | |
Colloquia | ||
PHIL 5700 [0.5] | Fall Colloquium | |
PHIL 5750 [0.5] | Winter Colloquium | |
Seminars | ||
PHIL 5200 [0.5] | Topics in Philosophy of Mind or Philosophy of Language | |
PHIL 5250 [0.5] | Topics in Logic, Epistemology, Metaphysics or Philosophy of Science | |
PHIL 5300 [0.5] | Topics in Value Theory | |
PHIL 5350 [0.5] | Topics in Ethics or Political Philosophy | |
PHIL 5500 [0.5] | Topics in Contemporary Philosophy | |
PHIL 5600 [0.5] | Topics in the History of Philosophy | |
PHIL 5650 [0.5] | Semantics | |
PHIL 5660 [0.5] | Lexical Semantics | |
PHIL 5850 [0.5] | Proseminar | |
PHIL 5900 [0.5] | Research Seminar | |
PHIL 5908 [1.0] | Research Essay | |
PHIL 5909 [2.0] | M.A. Thesis |
Philosophy (PHIL) Courses
Special Topic in Philosophy
A detailed study of a special topic in philosophy. Topics may vary from year to year.
Tutorial in the History of Philosophy I
Detailed study of a period or issue in the history of philosophy.
Tutorial in the History of Philosophy II
Detailed study of a period or issue in the history of philosophy.
Tutorial in the Work of an Individual Philosopher I
A critical and systematic study of the work of an individual philosopher.
Tutorial in the Work of an Individual Philosopher II
A critical and systematic study of the work of an individual philosopher.
Topics in Philosophy of Mind or Philosophy of Language
A detailed study of an issue or the work of selected philosophers in the general area of philosophy of mind and/or philosophy of language. Topics may vary from year to year.
Tutorial in Logic, Epistemology, or Metaphysics I
An attempt to find a solution to a specific problem in logic, epistemology, or metaphysics.
Tutorial in Logic, Epistemology, or Metaphysics II
An attempt to find a solution to a specific problem in logic, epistemology, or metaphysics.
Topics in Logic, Epistemology, Metaphysics or Philosophy of Science
A detailed study of an issue or the work of selected philosophers in the general areas of logic, epistemology, metaphysics or philosophy of science. Topics may vary from year to year.
Topics in Value Theory
A detailed study of an issue or the work of selected philosophers in the general area of value theory. Topics may vary from year to year.
Tutorial in Selected Problems of Philosophy I
An attempt to find a solution to a specific problem in some area other than logic, epistemology, or metaphysics.
Tutorial in Selected Problems of Philosophy II
An attempt to find a solution to a specific problem in some area other than logic, epistemology, or metaphysics.
Topics in Ethics or Political Philosophy
A detailed study of an issue or the work of selected philosophers in the general areas of ethics or political philosophy. Topics may vary from year to year.
Topics in Contemporary Philosophy
A detailed study of an issue or the work of selected philosophers in contemporary philosophy. Topics may vary from year to year.
Topics in the History of Philosophy
A detailed study within the history of philosophy: a period, an issue or the work of selected philosophers. Topics may vary from year to year.
Semantics
A graduate seminar in contemporary semantics.
Lexical Semantics
Study of the meaning of words. Topics may include lexical decomposition, meaning variation, lexical relations, and lexical aspect.
Also offered at the undergraduate level, with different requirements, as LING 4510 and PHIL 4055, for which additional credit is precluded.
Fall Colloquium
Students prepare for and attend the departmental colloquium series (typically including 10 to 12 sessions in one term), submitting in writing a critical analysis of some aspect of the presentation or discussion for each colloquium they attend.
Winter Colloquium
Students prepare for and attend the departmental colloquium series (typically including 10 to 12 events in one term), submitting in writing a critical analysis of some aspect of the presentation or discussion for each colloquium they attend.
Proseminar
Students in this seminar will engage with contemporary philosophical research by exploring relations and interactions between two broad fields: philosophy of mind, language, and knowledge; and moral, social, and political philosophy. Specific topics will vary from year to year.
Research Seminar
Students select a contemporary philosophical position or historical interpretation and the surrounding debate in the philosophical or scholarly literature upon which to base a thesis proposal using literature review and an essay.
Research Essay
M.A. Thesis
Summer session: some of the courses listed in this Calendar are offered during the summer. Hours and scheduling for summer session courses will differ significantly from those reported in the fall/winter Calendar. To determine the scheduling and hours for summer session classes, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca
Not all courses listed are offered in a given year. For an up-to-date statement of course offerings for the current session and to determine the term of offering, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca
Regulations
See the General Regulations section of this Calendar.
Guidelines for Completion of Master's Degree
Full-time students enrolled in the 5.0-credit M.A. program are expected to complete PHIL 5850, PHIL 5900and 2.0 further credits by the end of the second term of study. The thesis or research essay approval form should be submitted by the end of the fourth week of the third term of study. All full-time students are expected to submit the thesis or research essay by the end of the fourth term of study.
Part-time students enrolled in the 5.0 credit M.A. program are expected to complete PHIL 5850, PHIL 5900 and 2.0 further credits by the end of the third year of study. The thesis or research essay approval form should be submitted by the end of the second month of the fourth year of study. All part-time students are expected to submit the thesis or research essay by the end of the fifth year of study.
Admission
The minimum requirement for admission to the master's program is a B.A. Honours degree (or the equivalent) in Philosophy, with at least B+ standing (or the equivalent).
Students who have not successfully completed an introductory logic course in philosophy (equivalent to Carleton’s PHIL 2001) at the time of their application will be required to complete PHIL 2001 (or an equivalent) successfully prior to registration or as part of their first year of study. If required, completion of a logic course is extra to the degree requirements.
Qualifying-year and M.A. applicants from an institution other than Carleton University must submit two papers.
Qualifying Year
Applicants who do not hold an Honours degree (or the equivalent) will be required to register in a qualifying-year program before proceeding to the master's program. Regulations governing the qualifying year are outlined in the General Regulations section of this Calendar.