Bachelor of Philosophy (Turkish) is a profoundly intellectual four-year undergraduate program that immerses students in the entire history of philosophical thought from the Presocratics to the most current debates in continental, analytic, and Turkish-Islamic philosophy while training them to think with radical clarity, question every assumption, and construct rigorous arguments about existence, knowledge, ethics, politics, art, science, religion, and the meaning of human life.From the first semester, students read and discuss original texts in systematic depth: Ancient Greek philosophy (Plato, Aristotle, Stoics, Epicureans), Hellenistic and Medieval philosophy (Plotinus, Ibn Sina, Ibn Rushd, al-Ghazali, Aquinas), Modern philosophy (Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Locke, Hume, Kant, Hegel), nineteenth-century masters (Kierkegaard, Marx, Nietzsche), twentieth-century phenomenology and existentialism (Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty), analytic tradition (Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, Quine, Kripke), critical theory (Frankfurt School, Habermas), post-structuralism (Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze), feminist and postcolonial philosophy, philosophy of mind, language, and science, ethics and political philosophy, aesthetics, and the rich tradition of Ottoman-Turkish and contemporary Turkish philosophy (from Kınalızade and Katip Çelebi to Cemil Meriç, Nurettin Topçu, Ahmet Cevdet, Hilmi Ziya Ülken, and today’s leading Turkish philosophers).Training is rigorous and text-centered: weekly seminars require close reading of primary sources, writing of analytical-exegetical papers, and oral defense of positions; logic (classical, symbolic, modal) and philosophical method courses run throughout all four years. Third- and fourth-year students choose specializations (metaphysics and ontology, epistemology, ethics and value theory, political philosophy, philosophy of religion, aesthetics, philosophy of science, Turkish-Islamic philosophy) and complete a substantial senior thesis that frequently wins national undergraduate philosophy prizes and forms the basis of articles published in journals such as Felsefe Arkivi, Felsefelogos, and Kutadgubilig.Graduates are exceptionally well prepared for academic careers (almost all top performers receive full scholarships for master’s and PhD programs at Boğaziçi, Bilkent, METU, Galatasaray, Koç, Sabancı, and then at Oxford, Harvard, Sorbonne, Heidelberg, Leuven, Chicago, and NYU) as well as for intellectually demanding professions: publishing and editing at leading Turkish publishing houses (İletişim, Yapı Kredi, İş Bankası Kültür), cultural programming at AKM, Istanbul Biennial, Salt, and Pera Museum, journalism and opinion writing at Cumhuriyet, BirGün, Karar, and Duvar, policy analysis at think-tanks (TESEV, SETA, İPM), diplomatic service preparation, screenwriting and dramaturgy for thoughtful Turkish series, and corporate ethics-compliance positions that value critical thinking.The profession enjoys deep cultural respect as the conscience of society: these are the minds that ask the questions no one else dares to ask and provide the conceptual tools for Turkey to understand itself in an age of rapid transformation. In short, the Bachelor of Philosophy offers one of the most intellectually liberating, spiritually profound, and culturally influential paths available to university students, producing lifelong thinkers who shape public discourse, educate future generations, and live examined lives in the truest Socratic sense.