The value of studying Philosophy

in #philosophy8 years ago (edited)

When I tell people that I have studied Philosophy, many ask me what value Philosophy has.

At first, when I was a teenager, I thought that studying Philosophy was interesting and that that by itself should be enough reason to become a student in Philosophy. Now, that I have finished my Master’s degree two years ago, I feel that I can reflect more realistically about the value of studying Philosophy.

Philosophy is liberating 
Philosophy is valuable for its effects on those who study it. I have heard many peers telling me that it was “life changing” and that particular philosophers have made such an impression on them that they feel “liberated” by them. The most important value of Philosophy is that it makes us realize that we are all prisoners of our own comprehensive doctrines. Much like the prisoners in Plato’s allegory of the cave, philosophers may feel that they have only seen shadows of reality prior to their philosophical journey. The world is black and white, there is little substance, it is simple and most of us are dogmatic until we have the courage to ask deep questions about the simplest, but most important questions in life like: “why do we exist?” “what happens when we die?” “what is a good life?” “what is happiness?” “why does the sun rise every morning and set every evening?” The effect of asking such questions is that it broadens our world. And philosophy is exactly doing that. 

Philosophy makes us more imaginative 
When Philosophy is asking deep questions, probing through the surface of reality, it requires us to become more imaginative. Philosophy invites us to look beyond the status quo and look for new possibilities. I was once in an International Political Theory class, which was filled with Political Science and Political Theory students, where we discussed the role of education for a citizenry. Everyone was saying that we should allow more people to go to school as if schooling would be a basic human right. I was the only one who raised the question: “do we really need more schooling or can schooling itself be more harmful? And are there other ways to educate ourselves outside of schooling?” Of course I mentioned several philosophers of education like Ivan Ilyich and Paolo Freire who were extremely critical of schooling. Although such critical questions about schooling may come from anyone, I think Philosophers due to their formal critical training are more likely to ask these type of questions.

Philosophy sustains our speculative interest in the universe
If we only care about knowledge that has been proven or at least have not been falsified, we would be missing something that philosophers provide. We, human beings, have a deep interest in the speculative and the metaphysical. “Is there a God?” “Is absolute truth possible?” “Is pre-birth the same as death?” “Why do we love?” Such questions are most often the most important questions for people. They can give us more solace or meaning in life.

Philosophy trains our mind
Studying Philosophy is extremely tough. It does not surprise me that in general Philosophy students are among the best performers on their SATs and GREs. Philosophical problems are not easy to solve and some may never be solved. It requires relentless logical thinking skills and constant argumentative investigations. I find this challenge extremely invigorating, but I understand if some may find it frustrating. 

Philosophy keeps us humble and prevents us from becoming dogmatic
One of the most important lessons that Socrates taught us was that he was the wisest, because he knew that he knew so little. This philosophical attitude keeps us humble in our knowledge and prevents us from becoming dogmatic. Often, when philosophers study philosophical questions they end up with more philosophical questions. It can be a train ride towards no destination.


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Ran across your post just now. I studied a phd (didn't finish) and MA (did finish) in Anthropology. I studied a lot of philosophy and got a lot of "what are you going to do with that". At the time, though my studies were very interesting, I didn't see any use for it in the "real world".

But, then, I left academia and found a job in the tech industry. Today, I know that it was kinda like the Karate Kid training - seemingly pointless but when it comes down to it studying philosophy provides you a foundation to understand everything.

I have been successful in bringing new perspectives and ideas to where I work and that is thanks to the worldviews I developed while studying.

You can learn more "practical" disciplines but what is useful when you enter school can be obsolete by the time you get out. Especially, in tech. However, the philosophical principles I learned have been priceless and will always be useful.

Thank you for your comment. I'm also working in the tech industry now, and notice a competitive edge of philosophy as well. It's easier to learn the tech (I am in) than learning to ask good questions and to have new perspectives.

Ditto here! It's the best undergrad degree, as far as I'm concerned. It prepares your mind and heart for a very messy world.

I was doing an SAT practice test and there was a great article on the test about philosophy. I was always interested in philosophy, but only as an extremely interesting field that I would read about and discuss on the Internet. It really is worth studying, because regardless of the field one works in, philosophy can be applied to their job and their lifestyle. It introduces new and profound ways to think. It teaches you how to think, not what to think.

It really is worth studying, because regardless of the field one works in, philosophy can be applied to their job and their lifestyle. It introduces new and profound ways to think.

Now you mention it, I started working as a Software Engineer last year. In the Netherlands we have several traineeship programs for people with STEM degrees to learn Software Engineering. Although I did not have a STEM degree, I was still allowed to enter the traineeship, because the company that hired me thought that Philosophy students could give some 'outside of the box' perspectives to their IT teams. :)

That is actually awesome. However those opportunities are still rare. Universities should respond to the problem of philosophy graduates not having specific skills that can be of concrete use to future employers, by offering those kinds of training as part of the curriculum. I know this is not the goal of studying philosophy, but not all of these students plan on staying in academia.

I agree. Philosophy graduates are often left with minimal marketable skills. Maybe universities should give these students more options.

Thank you for your comment. Philosophy alone may not be very marketable, but philosophy in combination with practicality = awesome. :)

The older I get,the more interested in philosophy I am..

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read this, It leads me to remember in the begin of my my career, all people say me, you are not good for this, this is not good for working, thi is not good for life, i am now in the eighth semester and, i don´t regret studying psycology.

All people only say stuff

Yes, there are always other ways to separate yourself from the crowd. You could do some extracurricular things that make you more marketable. I wish you good luck with your psychology studies! :)

I found a very accessible/non-threatening introduction to philosophy is the book Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder. Although its fiction, it covers a wide range of philisophical greats, and the story itself is structured around the nature of reality, and even makes the reader wonder what the nature of their own reality is; well it did me, anyway.
The film The Matrix also asked about the nature of reality (I walked out of the cinema wondering if VR could really fool us so convincingly, shame they screwed it up on the sequels!). Im sure there are plenty of other examples.

Unfortunately middle age has kind of kicked the philosipher out of me somewhat, no time to rhuminate...

Ah yes, Sophie's World was how our Philosophy teacher in high school introduced us to a wide variety of philosophers. I enjoyed watching it in class.
The Matrix is a very great philosophical movie, and sadly I have to agree with you that the sequels were not good. Part 1 is definitely among one of my most favorite movies. :D
It seems that, although we are not always aware to which philosophical thought our ideas belong to, we cannot escape that we too have subscribed to a personal philosophy.

What a coincidence - I just added a link to the Existential Comics' guide to studying philosophy as an amateur, which is actually a serious and seriously good guide: https://steemit.com/philosophy/@dphilosopher/existential-comic-s-guide-to-studying-philosophy-as-an-amateur

I also did a couple of podcast episodes to help people wanting to study philosophy independently:
Establishing A Philosophy Reading Practice

Keeping A Philosophy Notebook Or Log

And an episode on how to run a philosophy discussion:
How To Run A Philosophy Salon

Enjoy Truthseekers!

Great article :)

Thank you, I appreciate that you like it. :)

When someone asks me what the value of Philosophy is, I can't help but feel hatred inside. It's like asking why free thought is important...

Haha :D Nicely said.

i enjoyed your post, thanks 8]

Thank you Gekko. I'm happy to know that you have enjoyed it. :)

The world could definitely use some "Practical Philosophy 101" - if for nothing else, just to slow down and think a little before saying something.

Yes, :) I coudn't agree more.

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