The University of Chicago offers masters-level study in Philosophy through the Master of Arts Program in Humanities (MAPH). In this one-year Division of Humanities program, students build their own curriculum with graduate-level courses in any humanities department (including Philosophy) and complete a MA thesis with a faculty advisor. Because the Department of Philosophy is wide-ranging in its research and teaching interests, the program typically has a wealth of graduate course offerings for masters students. Moreover, the department is unusual in the extent and depth of its engagement with both the analytic and continental traditions, so the MAPH curriculum here will make subsequent PhD applications both more impressive and well-rounded.
Each year the MAPH program admits an average of 10-15 students whose primary focus is philosophy. These students are welcomed by the Department of Philosophy each fall at the department’s graduate student library—a place where MAPH students can come during their year in Chicago to study or to meet and talk to philosophy students at either the masters or doctoral level. MAPH philosophy students are ably assisted by the departmental doctoral students whom the MAPH program hires as preceptors each year (for more information about the role of preceptors in MAPH, please consult the MAPH website or contact MAPH administrators). In addition to the classes that these preceptors lead and the help they provide for MAPH coursework and writing, they serve as guides—to the Department of Philosophy, the philosophical profession, and philosophy itself.
MAPH students interested in philosophy, like MAPH students generally, can use their time in the program in various ways. Those who go on to pursue a doctorate in philosophy will leave the program solidly prepared to do work at that level. Some discover that the aspects of philosophy most exciting to them are taken up in a better or more congenial way outside the Department of Philosophy (e.g., questions in the philosophy of language that they want to pursue may turn out to receive their fullest treatment in the Linguistics or Comparative Literature departments; their study of aesthetics may find its home in Art History, or Cinema and Media Studies; and so on). Some find, indeed, that their philosophical interests lie outside academic philosophy altogether. It is one of the virtues of the MAPH program that it makes these possibilities available and transparent to its participants, and offers guidance in the process of selecting from them.
MAPH Admissions Information
For more information about applying to MAPH, visit MAPH’s website. Students can apply directly to the MAPH program at the Division of Humanities admissions webpage.