Last updated: August 6, 2010 @ 10:47AM
Philosophy
Master of Arts in Philosophy
Fields of Specialization
Contemporary Continental Philosophy
Eastern Philosophy
Comparative Philosophy
Dean
Rosemary Drage Hale
Faculty of Humanities
Associate Dean
Jane Koustas
Faculty of Humanities
Core Faculty
Professors
Wing-Cheung Chan (Philosophy), R. Raj Singh (Philosophy)
Associate Professors
Michael Berman (Philosophy), Richard S. G. Brown (Philosophy), Christine Daigle (Philosophy)
Assistant Professors
Athena Colman (Philosophy), Rohit Dalvi (Philosophy), Rajiv Kaushik (Philosophy), Brian Lightbody (Philosophy)
Graduate Program Director
Michael Berman
mberman@brocku.ca
Administrative Assistant
Irene Cherrington
905-688-5550, extension 3315
573 Glenridge Ave.
http://www.brocku.ca/philosophy
Program Description
The Master's program focuses on two areas: recent and contemporary European and Asian thought. The program also accommodates the rise in importance of postmodern continental thinkers (mainly French and German philosophers). Such inclusions indicate the type of dynamic rapport the Department wishes to keep with the wider philosophical community. Consequently, the majority of courses offered in any one year will be selected from the following specializations:
Contemporary Continental Philosophy (Existentialism, Phenomenology, Hermeneutics): Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre, Beauvoir, Marcel, Buber, Scheler, Merleau-Ponty, Gadamer, or some contemporary European movement, such as Structuralism, the Frankfurt School, or Postmodernism: Derrida, Levinas, Deleuze, or Bataille.
Eastern Philosophy: Indian and Upanishadic Philosophy: texts from the six orthodox schools of Indian philosophy, especially Vedanta, Early Indian Buddhist traditions, especially Madhyamika schools; Bhakti traditions, Gandhi; Chinese Philosophy, especially Confucianism, Taoism, and Chinese Buddhism.
Comparative Philosophy: Comparison of Eastern and Western traditions with respect to problems of being, knowledge, person, values, and philosophical method.
In addition, from time to time, half-courses and tutorials may be offered on the following topics: Issues in recent Anglo-American (Analytic) Philosophy, Studies in Classical Philosophy (Pre-Socratics, Plato and/or Aristotle), Process Philosophy (Bergson, Whitehead, Hartshorne). These topics fall outside the principal focus of the graduate program, but are represented by individual members of the Department. (If in a given year a half-credit in one of the above happens not to be offered, an individual tutorial therein may be arranged.)
Admission Requirements
Successful completion of an Honours Bachelor's degree, or equivalent, in Philosophy with an overall average not less than 75%. Applicants must supply a statement of interest. Knowledge of languages other than English may be required as appropriate.
The Graduate Admissions Committee will review all applications and recommend admission for a limited number of suitable candidates.
Individuals interested in part-time study should consult with the Graduate Program Director.
Degree Requirements
In order to complete the degree requirements for the Master of Arts in Philosophy, there are two paths from which to choose: the M.A. thesis option, which requires the successful completion of four half-credits in the philosophy program and a thesis, and the major essay option, which requires the successful completion of eight half-credits as well as a major essay. Thesis candidates are limited to a maximum of one half-credit directed reading course; major essay candidates may take up to two one half-credit directed reading courses. The Graduate Program Director of the Department must approve the program of any graduate student.
The MA program is designed to be normally completed in one year (twelve months) of full-time studies.
Course Descriptions
Students must check to ensure that prerequisites are met. Students may be deregistered, at the request of the instructor, from any course for which prerequisites and/or restrictions have not been met.
PHIL 5F80
MA Major Essay
A research project involving the preparation and defence of a major essay which shall demonstrate capacity for independent work and original research and thought.
Note: completion of this course will replace previously assigned grade and credit in PHIL 5F48.
PHIL 5F90
MA Research and Thesis
A research project involving the preparation and defence of a thesis which shall demonstrate capacity for independent work and original research and thought.
Note: completion of this course will replace previously assigned grade in PHIL 5F99.
PHIL 5P01
Advanced Studies in Political Philosophy
A critical examination of either a particular thinker or problem in political philosophy. Political thinkers may include Plato, Aristotle, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Kant, J. S. Mill, Rawls and Nozick. Problems may include liberty and political organization, justice and equality, human nature and order, civil disobedience, participation and consent, liberalism, anarchism, socialism and conservatism.
PHIL 5P02
Sartre
A study of the existentialism of Jean-Paul Sartre as discussed in his literary and philosophical works.
PHIL 5P03
Merleau-Ponty
Examination of perceptual and cognitive issues in the moral, aesthetic and phenomenological philosophy of this French thinker. Critical exploration of his reception in the post-structuralist and post-analytic traditions.
PHIL 5P04
Foucault
A study of the earlier and later works of Michel Foucault. Themes discussed may include archaeology, genealogy, discipline, power, knowledge, subjectivity and sexuality.
PHIL 5P05
Nietzsche
A study of the philosophical ideas of Fredrich Nietzsche.
PHIL 5P07
Husserl and Transcendental Phenomenology
Basic issues and methods of phenomenological philosophy will be studied and explored with reference to some of the major works of Husserl.
PHIL 5P08
Simone De Beauvoir
A study of the philosophical ideas of Simone De Beauvoir.
PHIL 5P09
Habermas
An examination of the philosophical ideas of Jurgen Habermas as found in Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, Truth and Justification, and Post-Metaphysical Thinking.
PHIL 5P15
Heidegger
A study of Martin Heidegger's Being and Time and selected later works on themes such as fundamental ontology, analytic of Dasein, truth, language and art.
PHIL 5P16
Merleau-Ponty and Nagarjuna
Critical development of comparative philosophical analysis. Examination of issues in phenomenology, existentialism and soteriology.
PHIL 5P20
Kant and the 18th Century
Historical study of the thought of Immanuel Kant in the context of the 18th-century enlightenment, focusing primarily on Kant's Critique of Pure Reason.
PHIL 5P21
Modern Philosophical Studies: Hegel and the 19th Century
Historical study of the thought of Georg W. F. Hegel in the context of the 19th century.
PHIL 5P30
Vedanta
A study of Vedantic thought in the Non-Dualistic, Dualistic and other schools. Problems discussed include identity, difference, maya, reality, liberation and non-dualism.
PHIL 5P71
Merleau-Ponty: The Art of Perception
(also offered as SCLA 5P71)
Merleau-Ponty's treatments and analyses of the visual (painting and film) and literary arts, seen as products, explorations and distortions of human perception and embodied subjectivity, which shed light on our cultural and pre-cultural experiences of the world.
PHIL 5P91
Directed Reading I
Research course with directed study and regular meetings with a faculty member, covering topics not offered in a designated course.
PHIL 5P92
Directed Reading II
Research course with directed study and regular meetings with a faculty member, covering topics not offered in a designated course.
PHIL 5V00-5V09
Studies in Contemporary Philosophy
Topics may include a contemporary philosophical genre such as French Feminism or be focused more narrowly on a single contemporary philosopher, for example, Merleau-Ponty or Deleuze.
PHIL 5V00
2010-2011: French Feminism
Focuses primarily on Julia Kristeva and Luce Irigaray but may also include other French feminist thinkers since 1970 including Hélène Cixous.
PHIL 5V09
2010-2011: Deleuze
Considers the works of Deleuze (some with Guattari) examining concepts of identity and difference, monism and pluralism, multiplicities, lines of flight, body without organs and Deleuze's interpretations of Spinoza and Nietzsche in light of these concepts.
PHIL 5V10-5V19
Advanced Studies in Eastern Philosophy
Concentrated critical and interpretive study of selected texts in the areas of: Advaita Vedanta, Yoga, Madhyamika and Yogacara schools of Buddhism, or Chinese Philosophy.
PHIL 5V13
2010-11: The Bhagavad-Gita
A critical examination of the metaphysics, ethics, and psychology of the Gita vis-a-vis the Upanishads, Samkhya, Yoga, and early Buddhism.
PHIL 5V20-5V29
2010 - 2011: Advanced Studies in Comparative Philosophy
Focuses primarily on the comparison of philosophical figures, concepts, and problems from both contemporary continental thought as well as eastern thought (e.g., Buddhism, Vedanta, Taoism).
PHIL 5V20
2010-2011: Nietzsche and Buddhism
Examines Nietzsche's concepts of will to power and self-overcoming in light of early (Theravada) Buddhism.
PHIL 5V21
2010-2011: Yogacara and Phenomenology
An analysis of Sthiramati's interpretation of Vasubandhu's Trimsika-Vijnapti employing Sartre's phenomenology of consciousness as a theoretical framework.
PHIL 5V22
2010-2011: Comparative Methodologies
Offered by various members of the department and focusing primarily on the question of philosophical methodogy from a cross-cultural perspective.