You had asked me to post the Philosophy courses that are offered as part of the Graduate Diploma in Humanities program at the University of New England (Australia). They are listed below. It seems that you can do both the Grad.Dip. in Humanities or the Grad.Dip. in Social Science using Philosophy as an area of concentration. I am in the process of learning if there is a significant difference between these Grad.Dip programs. Also, there are other areas (Asian Studies, Political Studies, Sociology) that offer philosophically oriented courses that are available as well. Here's the list: 1. (Phil 150) Intro to Philosophy: Freedom, Power & the Self 2. (Phil 151) Intro to Philosophy: Superstition, Science & Skepticism 3. (Phil 102) Critical Reasoning 4. (Phil 230) Elementary Logic 5. (Phil 263) Persons 6. (Phil 265) Ethics and Politics of Environmentalism 7. (Phil 101) Bioethics 8. (Phil 301) Language and Mind 9. (Phil 320) Nietzsche 10. (Phil 310) Gender and Justice 11. (Phil 323) Phil of Social Science 12. (Phil 305) Time 13. (Phil 318) Indian Metaphysics 14. (Phil 322) Foucault 15. (Phil 303) Science vs. Religion 16. (Phil 313) Divine Bodies: Mystical Discourses in Philosophy 17. (Phil 385) Reason and Choice I will post the Masters level courses when they become available. Jack
So if I understand this right, the Humanities diploma requires 8 courses at a 200/300 level of which all may be Philosophy. The MA also requires 8 courses, all at a 400 hundred level. 4 of the courses must be in a single discipline. The web-site seems to suggest that a MA in Philosophy is not currently available (not enough 400 level courses). Do you know how the courses actually "work... can you enroll in any course at any time, is it exams/written/or both, are all the courses available via DL and if not which ones are?