Graduate Program
Graduate Study in Philosophy
Gonzaga University offers a program of studies leading to the Master of Arts degree in Philosophy. With one of the largest and most pluralistic faculties in the Northwest, Gonzaga affords students the opportunity to engage in coursework and research on a wide range of topics. A hallmark of the graduate experience at Gonzaga is close work with faculty members throughout the degree program. In keeping with the Jesuit character of Gonzaga, students in the graduate program have opportunities to explore the significance of philosophy for fundamental questions of human meaning and value. The University library maintains a strong collection of philosophy books and journal holdings and a high level of access to electronic information services, facilitating on-site thesis research on a variety of subjects.
Within a broad spectrum of available graduate course and research opportunities, the Gonzaga program has strengths in two areas of study: History of Western Philosophy and Social and Applied Ethics.
History of Western Philosophy
Students seeking intensive concentration in the history of Western philosophy may choose from graduate courses offered in every major period of the Western tradition, as well as historically significant philosophical movements. The graduate faculty includes specialists in ancient Greek, medieval, early modern, and contemporary philosophy, as well as specialists in all of the major movements of twentieth-century philosophy – analytic philosophy, phenomenology, existentialism, process philosophy, and neo-scholasticism. Research in all of these areas is supported by one of the best history of philosophy library collections in the Northwest.
Social and Applied Ethics
The graduate philosophy program offers a range of opportunities for course work and research in the growing field of social and applied ethics. The faculty has specialists in traditional fields of social and applied ethics, like business ethics, medical ethics, nursing ethics, engineering ethics, philosophy of law and environmental ethics. Additionally, the department has faculty specializations in new fields such as information ethics, computer and internet ethics, and technology and values. The department also regularly offers courses in allied disciplines such as social and international ethics, feminism, and political philosophy. The philosophy department has greatly increased library holdings in these areas over the past decade, and can afford students ample research opportunities. Additionally, the program offers a one-semester medical internship for which graduate students may compete.
Financial Assistance
The department is typically able to offer each fully accepted, full-time student at least six credits of financial assistance per academic year in the form of a graduate assistantship.