Ask to Study - Ask your questions about online degrees

Philosophy, Politics, and Economics - University Of Pennsylvania

Ask your questions about this Campus Bachelor program from University Of Pennsylvania




Philosophy, Politics, and Economics Bachelor from University Of Pennsylvania details


Program Format: Campus Program Level: Bachelor

Philosophy, Politics, and Economics from University Of Pennsylvania is a Campus Bachelor Political Science degree that prepares you for a Liberal Arts career. In a world where one is increasingly asked to employ tools that cut across disciplines, the Philosophy, Politics , and Economics (PPE) major offers an integrated, cross-disciplinary perspective that combines broad and rigorous training in the foundations of three subjects with a specialization and research experience in a concentration of choice. In the Traditional Concentration, the student chooses one subject (Phil or PSCI or ECON) and takes two more courses each in the other two areas. In the Thematic Concentration, the student chooses an interdisciplinary theme of study that is not limited to the traditional PPE subjects. PPE students are free to explore and integrate many disciplines and research areas. They may examine the nature and implications of human decision-making, the nature of distributive justice, the ethical consequences of the competitive market economy, and the dynamic relationships between the economic, political and legal orders. View more details on University Of Pennsylvania . Ask your questions and apply online for this program or find other related Political Science courses.

If you are interested in appling online for this Philosophy, Politics, and Economics degree, this Google search for University Of Pennsylvania might help.
More Resources:

Here you have more valuable resources related to this University Of Pennsylvania program. You can discover more about Philosophy, Politics, and Economics or other closely related Political Science topics on the next external pages :

Ups, we didn't find any question about Philosophy, Politics, and Economics on our external sources. Why don't you ask one yourself?