Philosophy
is a very good and necessary thing for any civilization. It is untrue
that we do not need philosophy because we have scientists to guide us
to the truth. For one thing, a large part of philosophy is ethics,
and science is a morally neutral thing that gives no guidance in
regard to ethics. For another thing, what is taught by scientists is
often a mixture of fact, dogma, and speculations. In many cases the
dogma consists of ideas that are not proven, but which have simply
become popular in scientific communities. In such cases it is
extremely useful to have a philosophical thinker around, regardless
of whether such a person has any philosophy credentials. A
philosophical thinker can act as a kind of referee or watchdog,
alerting the public when scientists are making truth claims that they
have not proven by observations or experiments.
Then
there is the fact that our scientists are fond of saying that large
classes of statements are forbidden to their kind, such as statements
about the existence of the supernatural or some higher power. Since
so many scientists are taking “hands off” attitudes towards such
things, we need non-scientists such as philosophers to help us sort
out the logic or lack of logic about truth claims in such an area,
and to help sort out whether the evidence is sufficient to warrant
beliefs about the supernatural.
The
very idea that philosophy and science are completely separate things
is erroneous, in the sense that scientists will often engage in
philosophical activity as part of their jobs. For example, when a
physicist starts speculating about a multiverse, he has strayed into
metaphysics. It is appropriate at such times for a philosopher to
comment on whether good metaphysics is going on, or poor metaphysics.
And when scientists start spouting metaphysics, they sometimes spout
the worst kind of metaphysics (violating the philosophical principle
of Occam's Razor in the worst way). To give another example, when a
scientist starts saying “This type of statement is forbidden to a
scientist,” he has strayed outside of science itself into what is
known as philosophy of science. At such point we need philosophers
of science to give input on whether the scientist's statement is an
appropriate rule.
So
philosophy is very necessary indeed. And philosophy is still a good
subject to be taught as an undergraduate major. For a large fraction
of employers, a bachelor's degree is today largely a screening device,
mainly serving the purpose of showing that a student is smart enough
(and has sufficient writing and thinking skills) to pass a four-year
program of study. There are countless employers who will hire any
new college graduate with a good GPA, and many of them don't
particularly care whether you have a degree in philosophy or French
literature or history. Such employers often require employees to use
skills they can only learn at their company.
But
what about graduate programs in philosophy? Do we have any great need
for philosophy PhDs? There is no tremendous need for people to have
doctoral degrees in philosophy, and we could certainly get along
with far fewer philosophy PhDs. Consider the literary output of a
typical academic philosopher. Such a person will largely write for
philosophy journals that almost no one reads. A typical philosophy
journal will have its content behind a paywall, meaning there will be
few Internet readers. And you probably won't be able to read the journal at your local library.
You
can get an idea of the small readership of philosophy papers by going
to the website Philpapers.org, which allows you to see the abstracts
of a vast number of philosophy papers. If you look at the full
abstract for a paper, you will see a graph showing how many people
have downloaded the paper. A typical result will be maybe two
downloads a month.
The
papers written in philosophy journals are typically papers about
philosophy written by philosophers purely for the sake of other
philosophers. Such papers are often very obscure and written in
jargon that only other philosophers can understand. The cultural
impact of such technical papers tends to be very slim. When
philosophers start writing mainly for other philosophers, they tend
to produce forgettable content that has little cultural impact.
There
is a general reason why a university environment may be a poor
environment for a philosopher. Part of the proper role of a
philosopher is to criticize unwarranted or illogical claims from
other people, regardless of their status in society. But a university
can set up scientists as almost kind of local gods. The biologist or
physicist may be a local celebrity at his university, enjoying fame,
funding and a large building that may totally dwarf that of some
philosopher at the university. This creates a situation in which the
philosopher at such a university may have a strong tendency to kowtow
to such an authority figure, and take his pronouncements as gospel
truth. But such a philosopher may not be doing his job if he does
that. Part of a philosopher's role is to expose poor logic and
unwarranted claims of authority figures.
Will
a philosopher at Central University be willing to criticize the
unwarranted dogmatism or unjustified statements of Scientist Jones,
when Central University is paying Scientist Jones $300,000 a year to
secure the services of this well-known figure, and doing everything
it can to build up his reputation and status? Probably not. A university environment may not be an ideal environment for a philosopher,
just like the Pentagon may not be an ideal environment for an editorial
writer analyzing the moral rectitude or logical sense of current US
military policies.
There
is no clear and obvious reason why we need to have philosophy PhDs. It may be
that you can't do much microbiology unless you work at a university
with fancy expensive laboratories, or a corporate lab with similar equipment. But anyone can write
philosophical content even if he or she is not in a university. People
who write philosophical content and place it on the Internet will
probably get far more readers than those writing in philosophical
journals.
A
good deal of a philosophy curriculum involves studying the past works
of philosophers. Such a study does not need to be perfect. It's very
important that there be nuclear engineers who get things just exactly
right, so that nuclear power plants can be built safely; and it's
very important that there be geneticists who get things just exactly
right, so that gene-splicing activities be done just right, and
with minimum risk. But it isn't so terribly important that philosophy
teachers get things just exactly 100% right when describing the teachings
of past philosophers such as Plato, Kant, or Hegel. The main reason
for studying such figures nowadays is perhaps to get a few ideas that
someone might find useful in developing his or her own philosophical
viewpoint. For such a purpose, it works just fine to have a fairly
good knowledge of some past philosopher's ideas, rather than a
crystal clear knowledge of that.
It
seems that the philosophy departments of universities could serve
their purpose well enough if all instruction in philosophy was done
by only people with master's degrees rather than PhDs (and an
accelerated master's degree would probably be sufficient for
teaching philosophy at a university). Since the philosopher should
be ever-ready to challenge the thinking of authorities in all fields
(government officials, religion authorities, scientists and other
philosophers), perhaps philosophers should be in no hurry to set
themselves up as authorities with doctoral degrees in philosophy.
The idea that you have to undergo many years of specialized study before you can call yourself a philosopher is misguided. It is the birthright of every human to philosophize, and any person who thinks deeply on any abstract philosophical topic may rightfully call himself a philosopher.
The idea that you have to undergo many years of specialized study before you can call yourself a philosopher is misguided. It is the birthright of every human to philosophize, and any person who thinks deeply on any abstract philosophical topic may rightfully call himself a philosopher.
Do you think it is better to know the truth and perish before it, or exist in a state of ignorance, but enjoyably so? Or is this a false dichotomy propagated by elitists? Great piece, btw.
ReplyDeleteYours is a great question. I spent years studying philosophy, enough to ace the GRE test in philosophy. But I now remember almost no sayings of particular philosophers. But one of the few quotes from a philosopher that I still remember is a quote by John Stuart Mill: "Better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied." He sugggests an answer to your question.
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