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Master of Arts (Applied Ethics)
Overview
The course aims to provide professionals and others who have
a general interest in applied ethics with a philosophical
education in one or more areas of applied ethics. Applied
areas on offer in 2004 (subject to enrolments) are: Bioethics,
theoretical Ethics, Applied Ethics Topics and Environmental
Ethics.
It has become increasingly obvious with the proliferation
of ethics committees and the demand for public accountability
that health care professionals, public policy makers, lawyers,
public servants, business people, scientists, researchers,
and others, are required to make well-reasoned, informed judgements
about issues that are essentially ethical. Such judgements
require philosophical expertise - one needs to be able to
recognise the factual and evaluative complexity of the issues,
to recognise evaluative issues as evaluative, critically to
evaluate competing ethical claims, and to reason to a conclusion
soundly. Yet the development of such expertise is typically
not included in the professional training of people who are
called to act as ethical decision-makers. The Master of Arts
(Applied Ethics) helps make good this lack.
It would be expected that students undertaking the course
would benefit at least in the following ways. Firstly, they
would sharpen their critical reasoning skills. Secondly, they
would gain a good grounding in ethical theory and a comprehensive
understanding of the specific issues in their chosen applied
area. Third, they would enhance their ability to make difficult,
ethically sensitive decisions.
The Master of Arts (Applied Ethics) is a course in applied
philosophy, in which ethical theory, as studied in a core
subject (PHIL955 - Theoretical Ethics) is applied to various
areas of practical concern. The course may be co-taught by
members of the Philosophy Program and lecturers from the Faculties
of Law and Health and Behavioural Sciences.
Entry Requirements
Admission is open to holders of a Bachelor's degree (pass
or honours) in any field or others who satisfy the Board of
Research and Postgraduate Studies of comparable professional
standing or attainments.
Course Requirements
The Degree is available by Coursework and Minor Thesis. Candidates
shall successfully complete a program of 48 credit points,
normally comprising a minor thesis (24 credit points) in applied
ethics, together with the two 8 credit point core subjects
and one 8 credit point elective.
Candidates who have done the undergraduate subject PHIL206,
or equivalent, are required to take one core subject PHIL955
and two electives. Candidates who have done the undergraduate
subject PHIL251/301, or equivalent, are required to take one
core subject PHIL935 and two electives.
All students enrol in PHIL923
Minor Thesis.
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