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Students
Tuition Fee
USD 24,960
Per year
Start Date
Not Available
Medium of studying
On campus
Duration
48 months
Program Facts
Program Details
Degree
Masters
Major
Philosophy
Discipline
Humanities | Linguistics
Minor
Celtic Linguistics | Philosophy and Philosophical Inquiry
Education type
On campus
Timing
Full time
Course Language
English
Tuition Fee
Average International Tuition Fee
USD 24,960
Intakes
Program start dateApplication deadline
2023-09-01-
2023-09-11-
About Program

Program Overview


Celtic & Anglo-Saxon Studies and Philosophy adds to your exploration of the lives and legacy of the Celtic, Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian peoples with an examination of life's ‘big questions’ – how we apply reasoning and argument to questions of fundamental importance to us humans past and present. The intellectual skills you will develop and their transferability will make you a very attractive graduate with very wide career options, including in business.

Program Outline

What You'll Study

  • Year 1
  • Year 2
  • Year 3
  • Year 4
  • Year 1


    Compulsory Courses

  • Academic Writing for Language & Literature (AW1008)
  • Getting Started at the University of Aberdeen (PD1002)
  • Experience, Knowledge and Reality (PH1023)
  • Songs, Myths and Hero - Tales of the Old North (CE1537)
  • Academic Writing for Language & Literature (AW1008)

    This compulsory evaluation is designed to find out if your academic writing is of a sufficient standard to enable you to succeed at university and, if you need it, to provide support to improve. It is completed on-line via MyAberdeen with clear instructions to guide you through it. If you pass the evaluation at the first assessment it will not take much of your time. If you do not, you will be provided with resources to help you improve. This evaluation does not carry credits but if you do not complete it this will be recorded on your degree transcript.

    Detailed course information

    Getting Started at the University of Aberdeen (PD1002)

    This course, which is prescribed for level 1 undergraduate students (and articulating students who are in their first year at the University), is studied entirely online, takes approximately 5-6 hours to complete and can be taken in one sitting, or spread across a number of weeks.

    Topics include orientation overview, equality and diversity, health, safety and cyber security and how to make the most of your time at university in relation to careers and employability.

    Successful completion of this course will be recorded on your Enhanced Transcript as ‘Achieved’.

    Detailed course information

    Experience, Knowledge and Reality (PH1023)

    15 Credit Points

    How “real” is reality? How does the mind relate to the world? This course introduces two approaches to answering these questions: rationalism and empiricism. By reading Rene Descartes’ Meditations on First Philosophy, we learn about Descartes’ rationalist approach to knowledge, reality, mind-body dualism, and God’s necessary existence. Through David Hume’s Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding see how Hume grounds knowledge in experience. We read Hume on impressions and ideas, induction, causality, miracles and critically compare and examine Descartes’ and Hume’s arguments by drawing on readers and critics.

    Detailed course information

    Songs, Myths and Hero - Tales of the Old North (CE1537)

    15 Credit Points

    This course introduces the oldest vernacular literature of Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England, beginning in the sixth century AD. We explore heroic narratives featuring, for example, the Scandinavian monster-fighter Beowulf (immortalized in England’s first epic poem), the Irish warrior Cú Chulainn (hero of the Táin) and the tragic Welsh princess Branwen, caught up in a fatal power-struggle between Wales and Ireland. We examine praise-poetry, meditative poetry, and look at mythological tales about the old gods and voyages to Otherworld isles in the western ocean.

    Detailed course information


    Optional Courses

    Select

    AT LEAST TWO

    of the following courses:

  • Barbarians, Romans, Gods and Warriors (CE1033)
  • Modern Irish Language (CE1036)
  • Gaelic Scotland (GH1015)
  • Gaelic for Beginners A (GH1007)
  • Latin 1 (LT1009)
  • Latin 2 (LT1507)
  • Gaelic for Beginners 1B (GH1507)
  • Plus, select

    TWO

    from

    the following:

  • Controversial Questions (PH1027)
  • How Should One Live? (PH1522)
  • Logic and Argument (PH1518)
  • Plus select further credit points from courses of choice to a total of 120 credits.

  • Barbarians, Romans, Gods and Warriors (CE1033)
  • Modern Irish Language for Beginners 1 (CE1036)
  • Gaelic Scotland (GH1015)
  • Gaelic for Beginners 1a (GH1007)
  • Latin 1 (LT1009)
  • Gaelic for Beginners 1b (GH1507)
  • Latin 2 (LT1507)
  • Controversial Questions (PH1027)
  • How Should One Live? (PH1522)
  • Logic and Argument (PH1518)
  • Barbarians, Romans, Gods and Warriors (CE1033)

    15 Credit Points

    This course gives you an exciting introduction to the Celtic and Germanic worlds. In lectures and small-group tutorials, we will explore the peoples who inhabited western and central Europe in Antiquity. We will discuss their cultures and their interactions with Greece and Rome. The course also covers the fates of these cultures in the post-Roman world. Change over time will provide a major driver of the course: for instance, empire and its effect; the history and impact of the "barbarian"; the successive impacts of Roman religion and of Christianity, and how they were represented in mediaeval "heroic" literature.

    Detailed course information

    Modern Irish Language for Beginners 1 (CE1036)

    15 Credit Points

    This course gives students an introduction to the modern Irish language. It covers basic conversation skills, and the structures of the language, through the use of songs, videos and speaking practice in class. It is open to those with little or no knowledge of the language.

    Detailed course information

    Gaelic Scotland (GH1015)

    15 Credit Points

    Gaelic is Scotland's oldest living language. In this introductory course you will learn about the Gaels, their history and their role in the shaping modern Scotland. You will also learn about how Gaelic language and culture became minoritised in its own country. Students will learn learn about various contemporary initiatives that are aimed at saving and promoting this indigenous language and culture and this will be compared to minority languages and cultures elsewhere in the world.

    Detailed course information

    Gaelic for Beginners 1a (GH1007)

    15 Credit Points

    This is an 11-week course in the modern Scottish Gaelic language for students who have little or no prior experience of the language, or for students with no formal qualifications in Gaelic.

    You will learn Gaelic through a mixture of interactive language classes, a class which focuses on conversational skills, and a programme of homework exercises, together with self-directed learning.

    By the end of the course, you will be able to speak, read, write and understand Gaelic at a basic level and you will have mastered a large working vocabulary.

    Detailed course information

    Latin 1 (LT1009)

    15 Credit Points

    Latin 1 is an introductory, intensive course for those with little or no previous exposure to Latin. Students completing this course should have a Latin vocabulary of about 400 words and a basic understanding of Latin grammar and syntax. Students successfully completing this course will be adequately prepared to attend Latin 2. Students will very likely discover that their knowledge of English vocabulary and grammar/syntax is improved by their study of Latin. The etymological roots of many English words can be traced to the Latin language.

    Detailed course information

    Gaelic for Beginners 1b (GH1507)

    15 Credit Points

    This is an 11-week course in the modern Scottish Gaelic language for students who have completed GH1007 Gaelic for Beginners 1A.

    You will attend three interactive language classes and one conversation class each week, as well as undertaking self-directed learning.

    By the end of the course you will be expected to have mastered a large working vocabulary and to be competent in understanding and using most of the major structures of the language.

    Detailed course information

    Latin 2 (LT1507)

    15 Credit Points

    Latin 2 picks up where Latin 1 finished in first term. By the end of this course students should have a more or less comprehensive understanding of Latin syntax and grammar, a Latin vocabulary of 700-800 words, and should be capable of translating simple Latin texts into idiomatic English. Students will very likely discover that their knowledge of English vocabulary and grammar/syntax is improved by their study of Latin.

    Detailed course information

    Controversial Questions (PH1027)

    15 Credit Points

    We examine questions such as: Is eating animals immoral? Is being a good or bad person a matter of luck? If so, are we justified in punishing bad people? Should anyone be able to set limits on what you can do with your own body, even if it's ‘for your own good’? Should everyone be allowed to state their mind, even if their views are harmful or offensive? Is censorship ever justifiable? Do you have a moral obligation to help those worse-off? Are you unknowingly biased against underprivileged groups?

    Detailed course information

    How Should One Live? (PH1522)

    15 Credit Points

    What are the key elements of a good life? Freedom, happiness, acting in our own interests, doing good for others, or following moral laws? Philosophers have asked these questions for millennia, generating a large number of answers and a larger number of further questions. In this course, we will read and discuss theories of ethics from a range of times and cultures. We will read some of the most important works in the history of philosophy from Plato, Aristotle, Confucius, Kant, and Mill, before turning to contemporary approaches including feminist ethics and virtue ethics. Throughout, we will consider and discuss our own views about the values of good and bad, right and wrong, and how to live a good life.

    Detailed course information

    Logic and Argument (PH1518)

    15 Credit Points

    What makes an argument a good argument? What are the correct rules for reasoning? How do the meanings of sentences relate to each other? How can the tools of logic be used in philosophy? This course provides an introduction to logic and tools for successfully evaluating arguments. Some of the topics covered include validity, soundness, consistency, entailment, provability, quantification, and identity. Two formal languages are introduced, the language of sentential logic and the language of quantified logic. The course develops the ability to symbolise English sentences into formal languages and to complete proofs in Natural Deduction. Logical concepts are applied to issues in philosophy of language, metaphysics, as well as philosophical puzzles and paradoxes.

    Detailed course information

    Year 2


    Optional Courses

    Select

    AT LEAST TWO

    from the options below.

    Plus select further courses of choice to make up 120 credit points, of which 45 credits must be from level 2 Philosophy courses.

  • Love, Loss and Revival: Gaelic Ireland, 1700 to the Present (CE2063)
  • Vikings: an Introduction (HI2526)
  • Introduction to Scottish Gaelic Literature (GH2514)
  • Love, Loss and Revival: Gaelic Ireland, 1700 to the Present (CE2063)

    15 Credit Points

    This course provides an introduction to Gaelic Ireland from the eighteenth century to the present, a period of great historical trauma but also of unrivalled literary expression across many genres, from courtly poetry to the folk song, the autobiography and the novel. Reference will be made throughout to the political upheavals in which Gaelic Ireland was refashioned, alongside other key themes including the changing status of the Irish language, and Ireland's relationship with the rest of Europe. Though much Gaelic writing of this period closely reflect the bleakness of history, it has also been a vehicle for joyful affirmation, comedy, and tragic grandeur and resilience.

    Detailed course information

    Vikings: an Introduction (HI2526)

    15 Credit Points

    The year 793: a surprise viking attack on the peaceful monastic island of Lindisfarne. This raid is often considered to mark the beginning of the so-called Viking Age, a time of turbulence and transformation with repercussions throughout Europe and beyond. This period saw violence and warfare, cultural contact and religious conversion, political overhaul, and literary and artistic creativity. As well as critically interrogating the concepts of the ‘viking’ and the ‘Viking Age’, this course provides an introduction to key themes and topics in the study of early Scandinavia, c. 800-1200.

    Detailed course information

    Introduction to Scottish Gaelic Literature (GH2514)

    15 Credit Points

    This survey course is an introduction to Scottish Gaelic literature from the 17th century to the modern day. Scottish Gaelic has one of Europe's oldest secular literatures and this is an exciting choice for anyone with an interest in Scotland's history, literature and culture: it is taught using translated texts and originals for those whose Gaelic language is good enough. Students will gain new perspectives on key areas of Scottish society such as Jacobitism, the Clearances, the Highland Land Wars, the Celtic Twilight Movement and the Gaelic renaissance in the modern period. This course is suitable for anyone in Programme Year 2 with an interest in Scottish society.

    Detailed course information

    Year 3


    Optional Courses

    Select 60 credit points of level 3 Celtic & Anglo-Saxon courses from the list below, plus 60 credits of level 3 philosophy courses.

  • Introduction to Old English Language (CE3047)
  • Introduction to Old Gaelic 1a (CE3063)
  • Early Modern Gaelic Language and Texts A (GH3059)
  • Independent Study In Celtic & Anglo - Saxon Studies A (CE3099)
  • Scottish Archaeology (AY3009)
  • The Heroic Age in Gaelic Sagas (GH3527)
  • Saints, Sinners and Heretics in the Celtic and Anglo - Saxon Worlds (CE351B)
  • Introduction to Old English Language (CE3047)

    30 Credit Points

    This course will provide an introduction to the language of the Anglo-Saxons. It will focus on grammatical study of the language, and translating basic Anglo-Saxon passages into modern English. It will be based on a new version of the Old English course designed by Dr Duncan Macrae-Gibson, an eminent Anglo-Saxonist and inspirational lecturer at Aberdeen. This 21st-century version of the course (published by Aberdeen University Press) will include traditional and online elements. The course will give students the opportunity to begin learning the language in which 'Beowulf' and many other fascinating poems and prose texts were composed.

    Detailed course information

    Introduction to Old Gaelic 1a (CE3063)

    30 Credit Points

    The course provides a basic introduction to Old Gaelic, and is an exciting option for students who are interested in exploring the history of modern Scottish Gaelic, and/or curious about Celtic grammatical structures. We will read some basic texts in the original language. Any previous language study will be an advantage. Old Gaelic is the earliest form of a Celtic language which we can reconstruct with some certainty. It holds the key to the earliest vernacular literature north of the Alps, and is the earliest attested form of both Irish and Scottish Gaelic.

    Detailed course information

    Early Modern Gaelic Language and Texts A (GH3059)

    15 Credit Points

    This course introduces students to the Gaelic language and society of the early modern period c1200-c1700. Students will learn to read short texts in the original language (with help); students will also read translated texts and scholarly materials about historical and cultural topics of that period.

    Detailed course information

    Independent Study In Celtic & Anglo - Saxon Studies A (CE3099)

    15 Credit Points

    This course will provide the opportunity for self-motivated students to pursue in-depth exploration of a specific topic in Celtic and/or Anglo-Saxon Studies. It gives students an opportunity for intensive engagement in a specific area within the research field of an individual staff member, and can be arranged as preparatory work towards a dissertation. The content of this course varies depending on the topic chosen, but the course focuses on enhancing the student's knowledge and research skills in the specified topic. Students interested in taking the course MUST discuss their specific interest before the course begins with a possible supervisor and with the Programme Co-ordinator (Aideen O'Leary).

    Detailed course information

    Scottish Archaeology (AY3009)

    15 Credit Points

    Here in Scotland we have a world-class record of past human society. From the spectacularly preserved Neolithic settlement of Skara Brae to 19th century clearance villages, this course explores the broad sweep of Scottish prehistoric and historic archaeology. In lectures and a day long study trip students will get an in-depth insight into the archaeology of Scotland and will explore some of the major issues in human history: the origins of agriculture and monumentality, worldview and belief in the north, settlement and social structure, urbanism and the emergence of the modern world.

    Detailed course information

    The Heroic Age in Gaelic Sagas (GH3527)

    30 Credit Points

    Are heroes always a good thing? Medieval Gaelic legendary narrative offers no simple answers. Its rich and hugely entertaining body of heroic sagas dramatizes the feuds, loves and fatal flaws of great men and women of medieval Ireland and Scotland, to reflect on urgent questions about royal and aristocratic conduct. Storylines studied will include cattle-raids, fights with saints, beheading competitions, family breakdowns, love-triangles, and people uprooting trees for no apparent reason.

    Detailed course information

    Saints, Sinners and Heretics in the Celtic and Anglo - Saxon Worlds (CE351B)

    30 Credit Points

    This course will explore developments in religious beliefs and practices in the Celtic and Anglo-Saxon worlds (especially Scotland and Ireland) from 400 to 1200. Topics included will include some or all of the following: conversion to Christianity, saints and monasteries, the production of saints’ Lives and other texts, heresies real and alleged, Culdee works and teachings, apocryphal texts and prophecies, the influence of canon law, effects brought about by Vikings, and the wide-ranging reforms of the twelfth century.

    Detailed course information

    Year 4


    Optional Courses

    Select

    ONE

    of the following dissertation options:

  • Dissertation in Celtic & Anglo-Saxon Studies (CE4598)
  • Philosophy Dissertation (PH402D)
  • Select further Level 4 Celtic & Anglo-Saxon Studies course(s) from the list below to gain 60 credits in the discipline.

    Plus further Level 4 Philosophy course(s) to gain 60 credits in the discipline.

  • Dissertation in Celtic & Anglo - Saxon Studies (CE4598)
  • Dissertation (PH402D)
  • Introduction to Old English Language (CE4047)
  • Introduction to Old Gaelic Ib (CE4063)
  • Early Modern Gaelic Language and Texts B (GH4059)
  • Independent Study In Celtic & Anglo - Saxon Studies B (CE4099)
  • The Heroic Age in Gaelic Sagas (GH4527)
  • Saints, Sinners and Heretics in the Celtic and Anglo - Saxon Worlds (CE451B)
  • Dissertation in Celtic & Anglo - Saxon Studies (CE4598)

    30 Credit Points

    The Dissertation in Celtic & Anglo-Saxon Studies is for Senior Honours students registered in the Celtic & Anglo-Saxon Studies degree programme. It will consist of approximately 3 one-hour tutorials, to provide students with guidance on selecting a suitable academic topic and developing a methodology for tackling this topic.

    Detailed course information

    Dissertation (PH402D)

    30 Credit Points

    The dissertation is on a topic in philosophy. The specific topic will be chosen by the student with the approval of the supervisor. The choice of topics is restricted insofar as it must fall within the teaching competence of the supervisor.

    Another dissertation or Project course must not be undertaken alongside the Philosophy Dissertation

    Detailed course information

    Introduction to Old English Language (CE4047)

    30 Credit Points

    This course will provide an introduction to the language of the Anglo-Saxons. It will focus on grammatical study of the language, and translating basic Anglo-Saxon passages into modern English. It will be based on a new version of the Old English course designed by Dr Duncan Macrae-Gibson, an eminent Anglo-Saxonist and inspirational lecturer at Aberdeen. This 21st-century version of the course (published by Aberdeen University Press) will include traditional and online elements. The course will give students the opportunity to begin learning the language in which 'Beowulf' and many other fascinating poems and prose texts were composed.

    Detailed course information

    Introduction to Old Gaelic Ib (CE4063)

    30 Credit Points

    The course provides a basic introduction to Old Gaelic, and is an exciting option for students who are interested in exploring the history of modern Scottish Gaelic, and/or curious about Celtic grammatical structures. We will read some basic texts in the original language. Any previous language study will be an advantage. Old Gaelic is the earliest form of a Celtic language which we can reconstruct with some certainty. It holds the key to the earliest vernacular literature north of the Alps, and is the earliest attested form of both Irish and Scottish Gaelic.

    Detailed course information

    Early Modern Gaelic Language and Texts B (GH4059)

    15 Credit Points

    This course introduces students to the Gaelic language and society of the early modern period c1200-c1700. Students will learn to read short texts in the original language (with help); students will also read translated texts and scholarly materials about historical and cultural topics of that period.

    Detailed course information

    Independent Study In Celtic & Anglo - Saxon Studies B (CE4099)

    15 Credit Points

    This course will provide the opportunity for students to pursue in-depth exploration of a specific topic in Celtic and/or Anglo-Saxon Studies. It gives students an opportunity for intensive engagement in a specific area within the research field of an individual staff member, and can be arranged as preparatory work towards a dissertation. The content of this course may vary, but the course focuses on enhancing the student's knowledge and research skills in the specified topic. Students interested in taking the course should discuss their specific interest in advance, where possible, with the Programme Co-ordinator and a possible supervisor.

    Detailed course information

    The Heroic Age in Gaelic Sagas (GH4527)

    30 Credit Points

    Are heroes always a good thing? Medieval Gaelic legendary narrative offers no simple answers. Its rich and hugely entertaining body of heroic sagas dramatizes the feuds, loves and fatal flaws of great men and women of medieval Ireland and Scotland, to reflect on urgent questions about royal and aristocratic conduct. Storylines studied will include cattle-raids, fights with saints, beheading competitions, family breakdowns, love-triangles, and people uprooting trees for no apparent reason.

    Detailed course information

    Saints, Sinners and Heretics in the Celtic and Anglo - Saxon Worlds (CE451B)

    30 Credit Points

    This course will explore developments in religious beliefs and practices in the Celtic and Anglo-Saxon worlds (especially Scotland and Ireland) from 400 to 1200. Topics included will include some or all of the following: conversion to Christianity, saints and monasteries, the production of saints’ Lives and other texts, heresies real and alleged, Culdee works and teachings, apocryphal texts and prophecies, the influence of canon law, effects brought about by Vikings, and the wide-ranging reforms of the twelfth century.

    Detailed course information

    We will endeavour to make all course options available; however, these may be subject to timetabling and other constraints. Please see our InfoHub pages for further information.


    Within Subject Areas

  • Celtic & Anglo-Saxon Studies
  • Philosophy


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