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Linguistics and Philosophy

new MIT Stata center
The new Stata center which will house the departments of Linguistics and Philosophy.

As its name suggests, the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy houses a linguistics section and a philosophy section. Though they share a number of intellectual interests and a joint undergraduate major, these two sections are administratively autonomous with separate chairpersons, faculties, admissions procedures, curricular and degree requirements, and financial aid programs.

Linguistics

The research conducted by the MIT Linguistics Program strives to develop a general theory that reveals the rules and laws that govern the structure of particular languages, and the general laws and principles governing all natural languages. The core of the program includes most of the traditional subfields of linguistics: phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and psycholinguistics, as well as questions concerning the interrelations between linguistics and other disciplines such as philosophy and logic, literary studies, the study of formal languages, acoustics, and computer science.

For more information, visit http://web.mit.edu/linguistics/www/home.html

Philosophy

The Philosophy section of MIT's Department of Linguistics and Philosophy offers two undergraduate majors: one a general philosophy major, and another joint major with the linguistics section in the foundations of the study of language and mind. For more than 30 years, the Department has also had an outstanding Ph.D. program that attracts students from around the world, and has placed its graduates on the faculties of the world's leading universities. 

The Department's faculty is small, but has research and teaching strengths in a wide range of areas of philosophy, including metaphysics, logic, the philosophy of language and the philosophy of mind, ethics,
and political philosophy. The MIT philosophy program also offers the opportunity for interdisciplinary work in linguistics, mathematics, and political science.

For more information, visit http://web.mit.edu/philos/www/

Available Courses
MIT Course #Course Title
24.00Problems of Philosophy Fall 2001
24.03Relativism, Reason, & Reality Fall 2002
24.04JJustice Fall 2002
24.111Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics Spring 2002
24.119Mind and Machines Spring 2003
24.241Logic I Fall 2002
24.500Other Minds Spring 2003
24.611JPolitical Philosophy: Global Justice Spring 2003
24.900Introduction to Linguistics Spring 2002
24.901Language and its Structure I: Phonology Fall 2002
24.904JLanguage Acquisition Fall 2001
24.905JPsycholinguistics Fall 2002
24.942Grammar of a Less Familiar Language Spring 2003
24.945JLanguage Processing Fall 2002
24.946Linguistic Theory and the Japanese Language Fall 2001
24.949JLanguage Acquisition I Spring 2002
24.953Argument Structure and Syntax Spring 2003
24.954Pragmatics in Linguistic Theory Fall 2002
24.961Introduction to Phonology Fall 2002
24.966JLaboratory on the Physiology, Acoustics, and Perception of Speech Fall 2001
24.973Advanced Semantics Spring 2003
24.979Topics in Semantics Fall 2002
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