CHAPEL HILL PHILOSOPHY
people

graduate program

undergrad program

application

class schedules

university calendar

speaker schedule

the colloquium

philosophy links

contact us

search





HOME

Applying to the Graduate Program

To request information about our graduate program, please click here (or send a request via email using our Philosophy Department E-Mail). Alternatively, requests can be sent via regular mail with letters addressed to:

         Prof. Jesse Prinz, Director of Graduate Admissions 
         Department of Philosophy, CB #3125 Caldwell Hall 
         The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 
         Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599

To apply to our graduate program, please use the on-line application
provided by the Graduate School.

Also, please note that you will need to supplement an application with materials requested by the Graduate School, as indicated in the directions it supplies here

In addition, 

  • a sample of philosophical writing
  • a statement concerning your research interests, and 
  •  
  • optionally, additional information concerning your philosophical training that might help convey to the admissions committee an accurate sense of your background (e.g., a description of courses taken or a list of main texts studied).
  • should be sent directly to:
    The Admissions Committee
    Department of Philosophy
    CB #3125, Caldwell Hall,
    UNC/Chapel Hill,
    Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3125


    Those who wish to be considered for fellowships from the Graduate School should have their have their applications in by January 1. Applications postmarked after that may still be considered for admission and support from the Department (as opposed to from the Graduate School), but sending the application by January 1 will ensure that it receives a full review.


     

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     


    The University

    Chartered in 1789 and formally opened in 1795, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was the first state university to admit students. Located in the Research Triangle, the university enjoys not only the resources of a first-rate university, but also the benefits of having both Duke University and North Carolina State University, as well as the National Humanities Center, close by. The result is an unusually rich intellectual and cultural environment, in a part of the country that is stunningly beautiful, economically healthy, and exceptionally hospitable. 

    Philosophy at Chapel Hill

    The philosophy department maintains a congenial, cooperative, and vital atmosphere. Faculty and graduate students alike have offices in Caldwell Hall and the vast majority spend a great deal of time working and talking in the department. With a graduate enrollment of about fifty students and a full-time faculty of twenty (plus visitors), the philosophical community is substantial, yet seminars are small and close faculty-student association is common. To complement the course offerings, people regularly organize informal discussion groups on various topics (e.g., ancient philosophy, set theory, modal logic, philosophy of mind, connectionism, truth and objectivity, feminism, moral epistemology, continental political theory). The department provides an extensive program of speakers throughout the year, with an average of one talk every two weeks. Last year's speakers, for instance, included Ned Block, Tom Christiano, Robert Fogelin, Susan Hurley, Frances Kamm, David Lewis, Ruth Millikan, Martha Nussbaum, Eleanore Stump, and Paul Teller, among others. Every fall, the Chapel Hill Colloquium brings together a large number of philosophers for three days of papers and discussion. In addition, the National Humanities Center brings several distinguished philosophers to the area for the year, while Duke, North Carolina State, and UNC/Greensboro each sponsor active speakers' programs and specialized conferences. 

    The Graduate Program

    The department offers a large number of seminars each year along with extensive opportunities for intensive work on individual research projects. The graduate program is designed to take five years to complete. In the first year everyone takes an advanced logic course and then an intensive proto-seminar (taught by two faculty members). In the second semester of the second year students work closely with a small committee on their M.A. theses. The department does not set comprehensive exams; instead, students take, in their third year, an exam on their chosen area of specialization. And there is no program-wide language requirement. Students are, however, required to satisfy various distribution requirements, and competence in specific languages is expected of those working in some areas (Greek if working in Ancient Philosophy, Latin if in Medieval, German if on Kant...). A synopsis of the graduate program requirements is available. 

    Cooperative Program with Duke University

    Thanks to a cooperative program with Duke University, graduate students registered at either UNC or Duke University are able to enroll in courses offered at the other school. And Duke faculty are available to serve on the dissertation committees of UNC students. The Duke faculty are: Robert Brandon (philosophy of science); Allen Buchanan (ethics); Fred Dretske (philosophy of mind); Michael Ferejohn (ancient philosophy); Owen Flanagan (moral theory and philosophy of mind); Martin Golding (philosophy of law, ethics); Güven Güzeldere (philosophy of mind);  Andrew Janiak (modern philosophy); Elizabeth Kiss (ethics); Edward Mahoney (late ancient, medieval, and renaissance philosophy); Alexander Rosenberg (philosophy of science); Tad Schmaltz (modern philosophy); Brian Cantwell Smith (philosophy of mind); Susan Sterrett (philosophy of science and philosophy of mathematics); Martin Stone (ethics, philosophy of law, Wittgenstein); Jeremy Sugarman (medical ethics); Benjamin Ward (existentialism and aesthetics); David Wong (ethics, metaethics). 

    Placement

    The department makes every effort to find its graduates suitable employment, with significant success.  Detailed information about placement and dissertation topics is available HERE.  If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the Director of Placement, Professor Jay Rosenberg,  via email at: jfr@email.unc.edu

    Financial Support

    Virtually all students receive full financial support for five years. Our students have done very well, too, in securing national fellowships once here.  A variety of Chapel Hill fellowships and assistantships are available, some from the Graduate School, others from the Department.  This support currently carry stipends ranging from $13,000 to $17,000. Those who wish to be considered for fellowships from the Graduate School should have their have their applications in by January 1. In any case, the Department strongly recommends that applications be postmarked by January 15, although applications postmarked after that date may be considered. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the Director of Admissions, Professor Jesse Prinz, at: jesse@subcortex.com

    Admissions

    All applicants should send (i) copies of their undergraduate transcript(s), (ii) Graduate Record Examination results, (iii) letters of recommendation from former teachers, (iv) a personal statement concerning their philosophical interests, and (v) an example of their best work in philosophy. Application materials are available, on-line, HERE

    To request for information about our graduate program, please click HERE (or send a request via email using our Philosophy Department E-Mail). Alternatively, requests can be sent via regular mail with letters addressed to 
     

    Prof. Jesse Prinz, Director of Graduate Admissions, 
    Department of Philosophy, CB #3125 Caldwell Hall , 
    The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 
    Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 27599; 
    (919) 962-7291. 


    Research and Graduate Teaching Interests of the Faculty

    Epistemology -- Bar-On, Hofweber, Long, Lycan, Neta, Prinz, Resnik, Rosenberg, Sayre-McCord. 

    History of Philosophy -- Garrett, Hill, Neta, Postema, Prinz, Reeve, Resnik, Rosenberg, Sayre-McCord, Simmons. 

    Metaphysics -- Garrett, Hofweber, Lang, Long, Lycan, Neta, Prinz, Reeve, Resnik, Roberts,  Rosenberg, Sayre-McCord, Simmons. 

    Moral Theory and Political Philosophy -- B. Boxill, J. Boxill, Garrett, Hill, MacLean, Postema, Reeve, Sayre-McCord, Simmons, Wolf. 

    Philosophy of Language -- Bar-On, Long, Lycan, Munsat, Prinz, Rosenberg, Simmons. 

    Philosophy of Mind -- Bar-On, Long, Lycan, Neta, Prinz, Rosenberg, Simmons.

    Philosophy of Science -- Lange, Lycan, Roberts, Rosenberg.