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Students
Tuition Fee
Start Date
Medium of studying
On campus
Duration
1 years
Program Facts
Program Details
Degree
Masters
Major
Philosophy
Education type
On campus
Timing
Part time
Course Language
English
About Program

Program Overview


History of Philosophies, East and West (HPEW), MA

Degree Awarded

Master of Arts in History of Philosophies, East and West


Chairpersons of the Participating Departments

  • E. K. Tan, Department of Asian & Asian American Studies, Humanities 11
  • Robert Crease, Department of Philosophy, Harriman Hall

HPEW Program Director

Jeff Edwards


Graduate Secretary

Lisa-Beth Platania, Harriman Hall 2


Department Website

[Not provided]


The HPEW curriculum includes courses on Islamic philosophy, Buddhist philosophy, Chinese philosophy, Japanese philosophy, Hindu philosophy, ancient Greek philosophy, as well as medieval and modern western philosophy. The systematic areas covered from historical perspectives are ethics, political philosophy, metaphysics, cosmology, psychology, aesthetics, theology, and theories of knowledge. The program’s courses and seminars on eastern thought include treatments of its western interpretations, and vice versa. Teaching is based on primary texts, with selective use of secondary sources. Special emphasis is put on the understanding of native terms and concepts from the original languages of the works read. (Languages may include German, French, Italian, Greek, Latin, Arabic, Persian, Sanskrit, Pali, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. Achieving reading competency in one or more of these languages is strongly encouraged.) This program is one of the few in the western world allowing students to earn a philosophy graduate degree while pursuing coursework in both eastern and western thought. Because of its distinctive character, it aims to attract students with a comparative perspective who wish to deepen their understanding of the history of philosophy under the guidance of internationally renowned scholars of modern, medieval, and classical philosophical traditions.


Program Administration and Advising

The administration of this joint MA program is carried out by HPEW’s program director in consultation with the Graduate Program Committee (GPC). The GPC consists of HPEW core faculty and one graduate student representative. Academic advising is carried out primarily by the core faculty, who also meet regularly to evaluate all individual students’ progress toward graduation.


Students must fulfill most degree requirements by taking HPEW’s regularly scheduled graduate courses and seminars. Any student who takes the MA thesis option (6 credits) will request the formation of a faculty committee for the thesis project. This committee consists of the thesis advisor and one other faculty member.


Admission Requirements

  • Bachelor’s degree (Some knowledge of the history of philosophies, East and/or West, is highly desirable but not required.)
  • Two official transcripts of undergraduate record and of any work completed at the graduate level
  • Letters of recommendation from three previous or current instructors
  • Writing sample (This may be a paper written for a previous course.)
  • Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test scores*
  • TOEFL scores for applicants whose native languages are not English**
  • Acceptance by HPEW and the Graduate School

*HPEW’s Graduate Program Committee may request that the GRE requirement be waived for qualified applicants. **HPEW adheres to Graduate School standards setting the acceptable score on the TOEFL test for international students at 550 and above, or a minimum score on the Internet-based TOEFL (IBT) of 90 with a minimum score on each subsection of 22 respectively.


Financial Support

At this point in time, no financial support in the form of fellowship funding or tuition scholarships is available. It should be noted, however, that tuition and fees (set by the State University of New York) may be quite considerably below those of comparable MA programs. For current tuition and fee schedules, please consult the Stony Brook University website.


Degree Requirements

The 30-credit HPEW curriculum can be completed in one year. But it is recommended that full-time students complete the HPEW program as follows:


  • Year one: 24 credits (four 3-credit courses per semester)
  • Year two: (two 3-credit courses in the semester of full-time enrollment)

It is also possible to enroll in HPEW on a part-time basis (i.e., by taking fewer than 12 credit hours per semester).


Program Requirements

  • 6 credits earned in the program’s foundational survey courses on eastern philosophy
  • 6 credits earned in the program’s foundational survey courses on western philosophy
  • 3 credits earned in a seminar outside the declared concentration (in eastern or in western philosophy)
  • EITHER 9 credits earned in seminars in the declared concentration plus 6 credits of thesis research OR, if the MA thesis option is not chosen, 15 credits in the declared concentration, 6 of which may be earned in a graduate-level language course relevant to the chosen concentration.
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