England
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Investigating philosophy
| Start | End |
|---|---|
| 03 Oct 2026 | Jun 2027 |
What you will study
Block 1: Philosophy of Religion
The concept of God is a concept of an all-powerful entity that exists outside time and space. The philosophical puzzles this raises have been studied for millennia by believers and nonbelievers alike. This block draws on a number of different traditions to study the nature of God, the problem posed by the existence of evil, and the occurrence, or not, of miracles.
Plato’s Crito was written 2400 years ago, but it still has much to teach us. It makes us ask ourselves such questions as “What is the state?” and “Why should we obey the law – if we should?” This block uses Plato’s Crito as the gateway to an exploration of political philosophy today.
Humans and other animals have minds, whereas sticks and stones do not. But what is it to have a mind? The brain seems to have something to do with it, but is it the whole story? Could artificial intelligence be capable of thought, emotion and experience? The block explores these questions.
This block looks at three philosophical answers to the question of what it is for our actions to be right or wrong. Are the right actions simply the ones with the best consequences? Or do we have ‘moral duties’ we should fulfil regardless of the consequences? Or perhaps we should simply focus on being good, virtuous people and then the right actions will follow?
Epistemology is the study of knowledge. How do we know about the world? One obvious answer is by using our senses. Do our senses supply all that we know? Even mathematics? Don’t we, in fact, also acquire knowledge from listening to other people and reading what they have written? But how do I decide whether to trust other people? Do we all have equal access to knowledge, or are some groups better 'knowers' than others?
The final block uses the skills you have gained throughout the module to answer questions in the Philosophy of Race. What is race? Is it a biological category? A social category? How is the idea of racial groups linked to broader societal structures? It will also analyse racism: is it a belief, a disposition to think badly of certain people, or something else?
Entry requirements
Preparatory work
Teaching and assessment
Support from your tutor
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marking your assignments and offering detailed feedback to help you improve -
providing individual guidance, whether that’s for general study skills or specific module content -
guiding you to additional learning resources -
facilitating online discussions between your fellow students in the dedicated forums.
Assessment
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5 Tutor-marked assignments (TMAs) -
End-of-module assessment
What's included
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a week-by-week study planner -
module materials -
specially commissioned audio and video content -
selections from the OU/BBC archive -
quizzes and interactive activities -
assessment guide -
online tutorials and forums
Computing requirements
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Primary device – A desktop or laptop computer with at least 8 GB of RAM and a quad-core processor (2.4 GHz minimum speed). It’s possible to access some materials on a mobile phone, tablet or Chromebook; however, they will not be suitable as your primary device. -
Peripheral device – Headphones/earphones with a built-in microphone for online tutorials. -
Operating systems – Windows 11 or the latest supported macOS. -
Internet access – Broadband or mobile connection. -
Browser – Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge are recommended; Mozilla Firefox and Safari may be suitable. -
Our OU Study app operates on supported versions of Android and iOS. -
Software – Any additional software will be provided or is generally available for free.