7.08.2009

On The Value of Philosophy

I think the study of philosophy is infinitely valuable for the people of our society.

"Well, but in philosophy you don't really learn anything. It's not that applicable to life. Why is the practice of contemplating my existence really important?"

Here's the thing...previously before the advent of the Internet, people who knew a lot of facts were thought to be "smart". If you could recite the encyclopedia or the dictionary or pass off random facts, then you were "intelligent". Today it's different. What the hell does it matter if I know the capital of everyone country in the world? I can look it up in 2 seconds on Google. Today we have tons and tons of information at our fingertips. To me, in the evolution of our society, "intelligence" is going to change to be the ability to synthesize that information and use it effectively for one's use. Therefore, given a set of facts or information you need to use your logic (what a concept) to formulate a conclusion.

Philosophy is the basis of having a solid logical base in one's mind. If you cannot understand philosophy, then you cannot be logical. Everything in philosophy flows from a set of premises and arguments to a final conclusion. So if you cannot rapidly analyze an argument or a set of data to make an inference about it, you fail. Nobody cares anymore if you know tons of shit that you can look up on Google. It just doesn't matter.

So today in our high schools there is no philosophy. We're too busy teaching kids about math, reading, history, etc. Now some of those are important. You need a solid math base. A solid reading base. A solid writing base. But besides those basics, NOBODY REMEMBERS ANYTHING AFTER AWHILE. You just remember the general tidbits. I took a class on Texas history in 7th grade. I can't tell you jack shit from that class. Davy Crockett went to Texas somewhere in there. Other than that, I don't remember anything. And I actually paid attention in class. I can't imagine the people that don't.

So my proposal is that everyone needs to learn some philosophy. Because learning about philosophy is just learning about how to analyze an argument and be logical. That's it. That's a lot more useful than all these random ass facts that teachers make you memorize and somehow that's "learning." That is NOT learning. Multiple choice tests have fostered this culture of just cramming and then circling letters on a test to indicate learning. You need oral essays and presentations and writing compositions. Instead of shoving facts down kids throats and telling them to regurgitate them back, you need to ask them, "what do YOU think about it?" That's real learning. And we don't do enough of it.

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