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Graduate Program Requirements

Requirements for the M.A. in Philosophy

At least one year of study in the Philosophy program is usually necessary for award of the M.A. There is no list of required courses. The student may elect to follow either of the following routes to the degree: write a thesis on a subject to be chosen in consultation with an advisor and defend the thesis in an oral examination, or satisfy the Logic and Portfolio requirements (explained below).
Advancement to candidacy for the M.A. requires formal application to the Dean of Graduate Studies via the Philosophy Department Office. Application must be made with the recommendation of the Philosophy Department and must take place before the beginning of the quarter in which the student expects to receive the degree.

Requirements for the Ph.D. in Philosophy

There is no set number of courses required for the Philosophy track, so that work can be tailored to the individual student’s needs and interests. Although a master’s degree is not a prerequisite for the Ph.D., every student is required to have some experience in teaching. Before students receive their first appointment as TAs in this department, they must complete the TA training program offered by UCI's Teaching, Learning, and Technology Center (TLTC).


The Ph.D. program is designed to take six years to complete. University policy allows students up to a maximum of nine years. The following are requirements for the Ph.D.:

Distribution Requirements. Students are required to take a variety of courses in order to become familiar with various historical periods and fields of philosophy. No particular courses are required. Each year, when course offerings are scheduled, notice is given of which courses satisfy which requirements. In cases where a given course can be used to satisfy more than one requirement, the requirement that it satisfies will depend on the content of the student's term paper(s).

The Distribution Requirements are twofold:

History. To satisfy this requirement, students must receive a grade of B or better in at least four courses covering at least three of the following areas: Ancient, Medieval, Modern Empiricism, Modern Rationalism, Kant, Nineteenth Century, and Twentieth Century.

Field. To satisfy this requirement, students must receive a grade of B or better in two courses in value theory and one course in metaphysics/epistemology.

These requirements must be completed by the end of the seventh quarter in residence.

Logic Requirement. Students must receive a grade of B or better in an approved logic course. This requirement must be completed by the end of the seventh quarter in residence.

Tools of Research. In consultation with their advisors, students decide whether learning a foreign language or some course of study outside Philosophy would be most useful for their dissertation research. To satisfy this requirement, a student must pass an examination in a single appropriate foreign language or receive a grade of B or better in each of three appropriate graduate-level courses in another department.

The two-hour foreign language examination (administered by the Philosophy Department) requires students to translate, with the aid of a dictionary, passages from one or two philosophical authors. For the second option, courses of study outside Philosophy will be approved (by the Philosophy Department’s Director of Graduate Studies) when they bear on a student's area of philosophical concentration. Courses offered by the Department of Logic and Philosophy of Science (e.g., in set theory or mathematical logic) may sometimes be used to satisfy this requirement..

The Tools of Research requirement must be completed by the end of the ninth quarter in residence.

Portfolio. A portfolio of three papers is required to demonstrate a student's ability (a) to understand, analyze, and evaluate positions and arguments in classical and contemporary philosophical literature, and (b) to formulate and defend an original philosophical thesis. These virtues must be displayed at a level of sophistication indicating the student's ability to write a doctoral dissertation.

The portfolio must be submitted to the Graduate Coordinator at the end of the fourth week of the student's seventh quarter in residence. Portfolios will be evaluated by the entire faculty of the Philosophy Department. (Students may request that relevant LPS faculty also be present at the evaluation meeting.)

Candidacy Examination. In preparation for the candidacy examination, students consult with their thesis advisor and other appropriate faculty to prepare a reading list in their area of concentration and a brief dissertation proposal. Students apply for candidacy by filing appropriate forms and preparing, in consultation with their advisor, a list of appropriate members for their Candidacy Committee. One of these, the External Examiner, must come from outside the School of Humanities. The Committee is then appointed by the Philosophy Department, on behalf of the Dean of Graduate Studies and the Graduate Council, to administer the oral candidacy examination on the reading list and proposal. This exam determines whether the student is prepared to begin work on a dissertation.

The Candidacy Examination must be completed by the end of the tenth quarter in residence. The Philosophy Department Chair, on behalf of the Dean of Graduate Studies and the Graduate Council, then appoints a Doctoral Committee (typically taken from the Candidacy Committee and naturally including the dissertation advisor) to supervise the writing of the dissertation.

Dissertation Defense. A formal dissertation defense shall be required for completion of the PhD in Philosophy. This defense may be oral or written.