Philosophy


Philosophy: Introduction

Faculty Affiliation

Arts and Science

Degree Programs

Philosophy

MA

  • Concentration: Philosophy of Science

PhD

Combined Degree Programs

STG, Law, Juris Doctor / Philosophy, PhD

Collaborative Specializations

The following collaborative specializations are available to students in participating degree programs as listed below:

Overview

Philosophy has been taught at the University of Toronto since 1843. Much has changed in that time, but the department remains Canada’s preeminent philosophy department. It is an international leader in the history of philosophy — especially ancient and medieval philosophy — as well as ethics, philosophy of science, and philosophy of mind. In all of these areas, department members take contemporary philosophical problems and their historical antecedents to illuminate one another.

The department’s most distinctive strength is its broad coverage of the history of philosophy. While peer departments usually have one or two experts in a few historical periods, U of T has specialists in every area of the history of Western philosophy, as well as in aspects of the history of non-Western philosophy. This historical focus engages with other areas of strength: ethics, philosophy of science, and philosophy of mind.

Many U of T faculty working in these areas also study their history; they use that study to inform their contributions to contemporary debates. At the same time, these historians of philosophy benefit from and contribute to ground-breaking work in systematic philosophy. This integration of historical and systematic philosophy sets this department apart from other top philosophy departments where the history of philosophy is often segregated from the rest of the discipline.

Contact and Address

Web: philosophy.utoronto.ca
Email: graduate.phil@utoronto.ca
Telephone: (416) 978-3312

Department of Philosophy
University of Toronto
Jackman Humanities Building (JHB)
Room 410, 170 St. George Street
Toronto, Ontario M5R 2M8
Canada


Philosophy: Graduate Faculty


Philosophy: Philosophy MA

The Master of Arts (MA) program may be taken on a full-time or part-time basis.

Applicants should consult the department's web page for complete details on graduate programs, course offerings, short academic profiles of graduate faculty, and application procedures.

MA Program

Minimum Admission Requirements

  • Applicants are admitted under the General Regulations of the School of Graduate Studies. Applicants must also satisfy the Department of Philosophy's additional admission requirements stated below.

  • Admission requires an appropriate bachelor's degree from a recognized university. Applicants must have a strong background in philosophy (roughly equivalent to an undergraduate major), with an average grade of at least a mid-B in the applicant's overall program and at least an A– in the applicant's philosophy courses.

  • Applicants whose primary language is not English and who graduated from a university where the language of instruction and examination was not English must complete the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with the following minimum scores:

    • Paper-based TOEFL exam: 600 and 5 on the Test of Written English (TWE).

    • Internet-based TOEFL exam: 100/120 and 22/30 on the writing and speaking sections.

  • Equivalent results in some other recognized test of English-language proficiency are acceptable.

Completion Requirements

  • Coursework. Students must successfully complete 3.5 full-course equivalents (FCEs) in philosophy as follows:

    • At least 1.0 FCE in the history of philosophy.

    • At least 1.0 FCE in the problems of philosophy.

    • 1.0 FCE designated courses only for MA students. One 0.5 FCE in the broad area of ethics/politics and the other 0.5 FCE in the broad area of metaphysics and epistemology. Either could be historical. The timing of the course requirement is:

      • PHL2222H MA Proseminar I, taken in the first session.

      • PHL2223H MA Proseminar II, taken in the second session.

    • PHL3000H MA Professional Development Workshop.

  • Each MA student is assigned an advisor who will recommend a suitable program of philosophy courses. The student's choice of courses must be approved by the department.

  • It is possible for a full-time student to complete all requirements for the MA degree in the Fall and Winter sessions; however, the department encourages students to take no more than 3.0 FCEs during the Fall and Winter sessions and to complete the last course during the Summer session.

Mode of Delivery: In person
Program Length: 3 sessions full-time (typical registration sequence: FWS); 5 years part-time (typical registration sequence: FWS)
Time Limit: 3 years full-time; 6 years part-time

 


Philosophy: Philosophy MA Concentration: Philosophy of Science

The Philosophy of Science concentration will provide students with a background in general philosophy of science and with specific topics in philosophy of science. Students will be prepared for academic work at the PhD level in philosophy and for non-academic career tracks that require strong critical thinking skills, as well as an understanding of science and its role in knowledge and society.

MA Program; Concentration: Philosophy of Science

Minimum Admission Requirements

  • Applicants are admitted under the General Regulations of the School of Graduate Studies. Applicants must also satisfy the Department of Philosophy's additional admission requirements stated below.

  • Admission requires an appropriate bachelor's degree from a recognized university. Applicants must have a strong interest in:

    • Philosophy (evidenced in a strong writing sample, personal statement, and letters of reference).

    • A strong academic background in either philosophy or, typically, a subject in the natural and social sciences, with minimum average grades of A–.

  • Applicants whose primary language is not English and who graduated from a university where the language of instruction and examination was not English must complete the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with the following minimum scores:

    • Paper-based TOEFL exam: 600 and 5 on the Test of Written English (TWE).

    • Internet-based TOEFL exam: 100/120 and 22/30 on the writing and speaking sections.

  • Equivalent results in some other recognized test of English-language proficiency are acceptable.

Completion Requirements

  • Coursework. Students must successfully complete 3.5 full-course equivalents (FCEs) including:

    • PHL2198H Advanced Introduction to the Philosophy of Science

    • 1.5 FCE in graduate seminars in philosophy of science or cognate areas of philosophy such as logic, philosophy of language, epistemology, metaphysics, or philosophy of mind.

    • 1.0 FCE in graduate courses in the history and philosophy of science and technology (HPS) such as HPS1000H, HPS2009H, HPS 2010H, HPS3004H, HPS3010H, HPS4001H. A list of recommended HPS courses will be prepared and shared annually on the Department of Philosophy's graduate courses web page. Students will have the opportunity to request other HPS electives that reflect their specific research interests.

    • PHL3000H MA Professional Development Workshop.

  • Each MA student is assigned an advisor who will recommend a suitable program of philosophy courses. The student's choice of courses must be approved by the department.

  • It is possible for a full-time student to complete all requirements for the MA degree in the Fall and Winter sessions; however, the department encourages students to take no more than 3.0 FCEs during the Fall and Winter sessions and to complete the last course during the Summer session.

Mode of Delivery: In person
Program Length: 3 sessions full-time (typical registration sequence: FWS); 5 years part-time
Time Limit: 3 years full-time; 6 years part-time

 


Philosophy: Philosophy PhD

The PhD program has two options: a five-year option and a four-year option. The five-year option is the most common and is the only direct-entry option for students with a bachelor's degree. The five-year option provides five years of funding and requires two years of coursework, while the four-year option provides four years of funding and requires one year of coursework. The program requirements are summarized below.

Students enrolled in graduate programs in philosophy in other universities are welcome to apply to spend a year studying at the University of Toronto. Please direct any inquiries to the Director of Graduate Studies.

Students who wish to take, for credit, one or more of the courses offered by the department as non-degree students, should apply for admission as Special Students. The application procedures and deadlines are the same as those for the MA program.

Applicants should consult the department's web page for complete details on graduate programs, course offerings, short academic profiles of graduate faculty, and application procedures.

PhD Program

Minimum Admission Requirements

  • Applicants approved by the department are admitted under the General Regulations of the School of Graduate Studies.

  • Applicants should have a master's degree in philosophy from a recognized university with an average grade of at least an A– in the applicant's overall program. Applicants must satisfy the department that they are capable of independent research in philosophy at an advanced level.

  • Applicants whose primary language is not English and who are not graduates of a university whose language of instruction is English must complete the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with the following minimum scores:

    • Paper-based TOEFL exam: 600 and 5 on the Test of Written English (TWE).

    • Internet-based TOEFL exam: 100/120 and 22/30 on the writing and speaking sections.

  • Equivalent results in some other recognized test of English-language proficiency are acceptable.

Completion Requirements

  • Course Requirements. Students must complete a minimum of 3.0 full-course equivalents (FCEs) in philosophy, with a minimum A– average by the end of Year 1 including:

    • At least 1.0 FCE which must comprise courses from philosophical traditions from different geographical regions and/or different historical periods.

    • At least 1.0 FCE which must comprise problems of philosophy courses.

    • The proseminar in philosophy (PHL1111H) worth 0.5 FCE during the Fall session of Year 1.

    • With the department's permission, a student may replace up to 1.0 FCE in philosophy with graduate courses offered by another department, provided that the courses are required for the student's planned research.

  • Breadth Requirement. A student must demonstrate competence in at least six areas of philosophy, including the following:

    • Each of the following three areas in the problems of philosophy:

      • Contemporary issues in metaphysics, epistemology, and philosophy of science.

      • Contemporary issues in values (ethics, politics, aesthetics, and philosophy of religion).

      • Contemporary issues in mind, language, and logic.

    • The remaining three areas must be chosen from philosophical traditions from different geographical regions such as South Asian or East Asian philosophy, and/or different historical periods such as Medieval or Twentieth-Century philosophy.

    • Competence in any area is normally established by successful completion of a graduate 0.5 FCE in that area.

    • A student must also demonstrate competence in logic (defined as proficiency in first-order symbolic logic with identity). This competence is expected of all students prior to beginning doctoral studies. Where this is not the case, competence must be acquired as a supplement to the required number of courses and be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the department by the time the qualifying requirement is met.

  • Revision Paper Requirement. To be satisfied either sometime during coursework or in the summer immediately following coursework. Students will designate a particular paper typically written during coursework as their revision paper and will solicit supervision on the revision of the paper from a faculty member. Students will receive verbal and written feedback on their paper from their faculty supervisor and will revise their paper in light of this feedback. A second round of feedback and revision may be sought by the student or the faculty supervisor, after which time the student will again revise and submit. Students should plan to complete the requirement over one or two months depending on whether one or two rounds of revision are undertaken.

  • Qualifying Requirement. After completing all course requirements, the student selects a thesis committee that will oversee his or her academic progress through the final thesis defence. The student meets with the committee to discuss a tentative thesis topic, construct an appropriate research reading list, and receive guidance on writing a qualifying paper. After submitting the qualifying paper and making any required adjustments to the reading list, the student takes a two-part (written and oral) qualifying examination based on the paper and the reading list. The paper will be submitted and written and oral exams taken four to six weeks later, during the Winter session of Year 2.

  • Thesis Proposal Requirement. To be satisfied at the September meeting of the student and their dissertation committee. The proposal can take many forms and could, for example, proceed by indicating chapters, problems, and literature, and/or theses that will organize, be discussed, or be argued for in the dissertation. Committees will then give feedback on the overall plan. The length of the proposal will vary from committee to committee but as a rough guideline, the proposal may comprise a document of three to five pages.

  • Research Tools Requirement. Each PhD student must demonstrate competence in at least one research tool. A research tool may be one of the following:

    • Reading knowledge of a language other than English.

    • Familiarity with a discipline other than philosophy (e.g., linguistics, psychology, or mathematics).

    • Mastery of research methods not typical in philosophy (e.g., statistical methods).

    • The research tool will be determined by the Graduate Coordinator in consultation with the student's thesis committee.

  • Thesis. A candidate must submit a thesis on an approved subject and defend the thesis at a Doctoral Final Oral Examination. The department is not obligated to provide supervision in areas falling outside the competency, interest, or availability of its graduate faculty.

  • Residence. Students must be registered as full-time, on-campus students and must reside in sufficient geographical proximity to enable them to fulfil the course, breadth, qualifying, and language requirements set by the department in a smooth and timely fashion. They are also expected to participate fully in departmental activities. While writing the thesis, candidates are expected to be in residence, with the exception of absence for research.

  • Normal Timeline Through the Program. By the end of Year 1 of registration, students should have completed all the course requirements for the degree. By the end of the following year of registration, all students should have satisfied any remaining breadth requirements, selected a thesis committee, and passed the qualifying examination. (These are general deadlines; consult the department's web page for specific dates and further details.) Thereafter, the candidate selects a member of the thesis committee to be the thesis supervisor and begins work on the thesis, which he or she is expected to finish within two years.

Mode of Delivery: In person
Program Length: 4 years full-time (typical registration sequence: Continuous)
Time Limit: 6 years full-time

 

PhD Program (Direct-Entry)

Minimum Admission Requirements

  • Applicants approved by the department are admitted under the General Regulations of the School of Graduate Studies.

  • Applicants should have an appropriate bachelor's degree from a recognized university; a strong background in philosophy (roughly equivalent to an undergraduate major); and an average grade of at least a B+ in the overall program and at least an A– in philosophy courses.

  • Applicants whose primary language is not English and who are not graduates of a university whose language of instruction is English must complete the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with the following minimum scores:

    • Paper-based TOEFL exam: 600 and 5 on the Test of Written English (TWE).

    • Internet-based TOEFL exam: 100/120 and 22/30 on the writing and speaking sections.

  • Equivalent results in some other recognized test of English-language proficiency are acceptable.

Completion Requirements

  • Course Requirements. Students must take a minimum of 6.0 full-course equivalents (FCEs) in philosophy, with an average grade of at least an A– including:

    • At least 2.0 FCEs which must comprise courses from philosophical traditions from different geographical regions such as South Asian or East Asian philosophy, and/or different historical periods such as Medieval or Twentieth-Century philosophy.

    • At least 2.0 FCEs which must comprise problems of philosophy courses.

    • The proseminar in philosophy (PHL1111H) worth 0.5 FCE during the Fall session of Year 1.

    • With the department's permission, a student may replace up to 1.0 FCE in philosophy with graduate courses offered by another department, provided that the courses are required for the student's planned research.

    • To remain in good standing, students must complete 3.0 FCEs with an A– average by the end of Year 1, and 6.0 FCEs with an A– average by the end of Year 2.

  • Breadth Requirement. A student must demonstrate competence in at least six areas of philosophy, including the following:

    • Each of the following three areas in the problems of philosophy:

      • Contemporary issues in metaphysics, epistemology, and philosophy of science.

      • Contemporary issues in values (ethics, politics, aesthetics, and philosophy of religion).

      • Contemporary issues in mind, language, and logic.

    • The remaining three required areas must be chosen from philosophical traditions from different geographical regions such as South Asian or East Asian philosophy, and/or different historical periods such as Medieval or Twentieth-Century philosophy.

    • Competence in any area is normally established by successful completion of a graduate 0.5 FCE in that area.

    • A student must also demonstrate competence in logic (defined as proficiency in first-order symbolic logic with identity). This competence is expected of all students prior to beginning doctoral studies. Where this is not the case, competence must be acquired as a supplement to the required number of courses and be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the department by the time the qualifying requirement is met.

  • Revision Paper Requirement. To be satisfied either sometime during coursework or in the summer immediately following coursework. Students will designate a particular paper typically written during coursework as their revision paper and will solicit supervision on the revision of the paper from a faculty member. Students will receive verbal and written feedback on their paper from their faculty supervisor and will revise their paper in light of this feedback. A second round of feedback and revision may be sought by the student or the faculty supervisor, after which time the student will again revise and submit. Students should plan to complete the requirement over one or two months depending on whether one or two rounds of revision are undertaken.

  • Qualifying Requirement. After completing all course requirements, the student selects a thesis committee that will oversee his or her academic progress through the final thesis defence. The student meets with the committee to discuss a tentative thesis topic, construct an appropriate research reading list, and receive guidance on writing a qualifying paper. After submitting the qualifying paper and making any required adjustments to the reading list, the student takes a two-part (written and oral) qualifying examination based on the paper and the reading list. The paper will be submitted and written and oral exams taken four to six weeks later, during the Winter session of Year 3.

  • Thesis Proposal Requirement. To be satisfied at the September meeting of the student and her dissertation committee. The proposal can take many forms and could, for example, proceed by indicating chapters, problems, and literature, and/or theses that will organize, be discussed, or be argued for in the dissertation. Committees will then give feedback on the overall plan. The length of the proposal will vary from committee to committee but as a rough guideline, the proposal may comprise a document of three to five pages.

  • Research Tools Requirement. Each PhD student must demonstrate competence in at least one research tool. A research tool may be one of the following:

    • Reading knowledge of a language other than English.

    • Familiarity with a discipline other than philosophy (e.g., linguistics, psychology, or mathematics).

    • Mastery of research methods not typical in philosophy (e.g., statistical methods).

    • The research tool will be determined by the Graduate Coordinator in consultation with the student's thesis committee.

  • Thesis. A candidate must submit a thesis on an approved subject and defend the thesis at a Doctoral Final Oral Examination. The department is not obligated to provide supervision in areas falling outside the competency, interest, or availability of its graduate faculty.

  • Residence. Students must be registered as full-time, on-campus students and must reside in sufficient geographical proximity to enable them to fulfil the course, breadth, qualifying, and language requirements set by the department in a smooth and timely fashion. They are also expected to participate fully in departmental activities. While writing the thesis, candidates are expected to be in residence, with the exception of absence for research.

  • Normal Timeline Through the Program. By the end of Year 2 of registration, students should have completed all course requirements for the degree. By the end of the following year of registration, all students should have satisfied any remaining breadth requirements, selected a thesis committee, and passed the qualifying examination. (These are general deadlines; consult the department's web page for specific dates and further details.) Thereafter, the candidate selects a member of the thesis committee to be the thesis supervisor and begins work on the thesis, which he or she is expected to finish within two years.

Mode of Delivery: In person
Program Length: 5 years full-time (typical registration sequence: Continuous)
Time Limit: 7 years full-time

 


Philosophy: Philosophy MA, PhD Courses

Not all courses are offered every year. Please consult the department's website, which lists the courses the department will offer this year as well as those offered by other departments that may be taken for philosophy credit.

Required Courses

Course CodeCourse Title
PHL1111HPhD Proseminar
PHL2222HMA Proseminar I
PHL2223HMA Proseminar II
PHL3000HMA Professional Development Workshop

Concentration: Philosophy of Science

Course CodeCourse Title
PHL2198HAdvanced Introduction to the Philosophy of Science

Reading Courses

Course CodeCourse Title
Reading Course
PHL1000YReading Course
Reading Course
PHL1001YReading Course
Reading Course
PHL1500YReading Course

History of Philosophy

Classical Greek and Roman Philosophy

Course CodeCourse Title
Early Greek Philosophy
Plato
Aristotle
Seminar in Plato
Seminar in Aristotle
Seminar in Greek Philosophy
Late Greek Philosophy

East Asian Philosophy

Course CodeCourse Title
PHL2013HTopics in Chinese Philosophy
PHL2014HTopics in Chinese Moral Psychology
Taoism: Philosophy and Religion

South Asian Philosophy

Course CodeCourse Title
PHL2018HSouth Asian Philosophy
PHL2019HTopics in South Asian Philosophy

Medieval Philosophy

Course CodeCourse Title
Themes in Medieval Philosophy
Birth of the Will: Augustine and Anselm
Topics in Medieval Metaphysics
William of Ockham
Free Will and Human Action in Medieval Philosophy
MST3346HMedieval Islamic Philosophy

Early Modern Philosophy

Course CodeCourse Title
The Rationalists
The Empiricists
Seminar in Seventeenth-and Eighteenth-Century Philosophy
Kant's Ethics

Feminist Philosophy

Course CodeCourse Title
Topics in Feminist Philosophy

Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Philosophy

Course CodeCourse Title
PHL2070HTopics in Philosophy of Race
PHL2076HHegel
Kierkegaard
Marxist Philosophy
Seminar in Nineteenth-Century Continental Philosophy
Husserl
PHL2088HHeidegger
Seminar in Twentieth-Century Continental Philosophy
Hermeneutics
The Critical Theory of Society
Frege
Russell
Wittgenstein
Later Analytic Philosophy
Seminar in Analytic Philosophy
Topics in Analytic Philosophy

History and Philosophy of Science and Technology

For MA students in the Philosophy of Science concentration.

Course CodeCourse Title
HPS2000HHistory of Mathematics
HPS2001HHistory of Physics
HPS2003HHistory of Biology
HPS2004HHistory of Medicine
HPS2008HHistory of Psychology
HPS2009HHistory and Philosophy of the Social Sciences

Problems of Philosophy

Metaphysics and Epistemology

Course CodeCourse Title
Seminar in Metaphysics
Topics in Metaphysics
Seminar in Epistemology
Topics in Epistemology
Formal Epistemology
Philosophical Foundations of Multidisciplinary Studies
Philosophy of Mind
Seminar in Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Perception

Logic and the Philosophy of Language

Course CodeCourse Title
Introductory Mathematical Logic
Advanced Logic
Seminar in Logic
Many Valued and Modal Logics
Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Mathematics
Topics in Informal Logic
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Language
Seminar in the Philosophy of Language
Foundations of Computation and Information

Value Theory

Course CodeCourse Title
Ethics
Seminar in Ethics
PHL2133HTopics in Ethics
Metaethics
Political Philosophy
Seminar in Political Philosophy
PHL2143HSocial Philosophy
Seminar in Social Philosophy
Bioethics
Topics in Bioethics
Philosophy of Law
Legal Theory
Aesthetics
Philosophy and Teaching

Philosophy of Science

Course CodeCourse Title
Topics in the History of the Philosophy of Science
Philosophy of Biology
Topics in the Philosophy of Science
PHL2198HAdvanced Introduction to the Philosophy of Science
Seminar in the Philosophy of Science
PHL2200HPhilosophy of Physics

Miscellaneous

Course CodeCourse Title
Intensive Special Course
Research Seminar
PHL4901HRevision Paper Requirement