The London Times
August 15, 1998
THINK ON
Philosophy is a quintessentially modern discipline
For Immanuel Kant, the Enlightenment could be captured in two small words:
sapere aude — “dare to think.” When 3,500 individuals professionally
devoted to this proposition are gathered under one roof, as happened at the
20th World Congress of Philosophy in Boston this week, the effect may be
more of Babel than of 18th-century discourse. Modern philosophy speaks a
bewildering variety of languages, from analytic logic to existentialism,
poststructuralism, semiotics and the wilder shores of ecofeminism, and there
is a fair degree of apartheid between its practitioners.
Hence the temptation to view the discipline as too rarefied and
“academic” for mere mortals. Britons are notoriously wary of theory; the
national prejudice is well captured by Kipling’s “If you can think and not
make thoughts your master . . .” Isaiah Berlin captured British hearts with
his tongue-in-cheek remark that he had turned to political thought because
“philosophy can only be done by very clever people.” This is one of the few
European countries where almost no school teaches philosophy. Yet in this
age of uncertainty, when today’s vocational training may be tomorrow’s
passport to redundancy, “dare to think” should be the motto pinned on the
wall of every undergraduate room and recruitment agency. Philosophy is
making a modest comeback in British universities, and not before time.
The great virtue of philosophy is that it teaches not what to think, but
how to think. It is the study of meaning, of the principles underlying
conduct, thought and knowledge. The skills it hones are the ability to
analyse, to question orthodoxies and to express things clearly. However
arcane some philosophical texts may be — and not everybody can come to grips
with the demands of Austrian logical positivism — the ability to formulate
questions and follow arguments is the essence of education.
It can also be studied at many levels. In the US, where the number of
philosophy graduates has increased by 5 per cent a year during the 1990s,
only a very few go on to become philosophers. Their employability, at 98.9
per cent, is impressive by any standard. Philosophy has always been a good
training for the law; but it is equally useful for computer scientists. In
this country, the Higher Education Statistics Survey puts philosophy of
science right up with medicine in its employment record for graduates.
Philosophy is, in commercial jargon, the ultimate “transferable work
skill.” That is not the only argument for expanding philosophy departments,
and encouraging sixth-formers to read Plato, or John Stuart Mill on liberty.
Chris Woodhead, the Chief Inspector of Schools, has cautioned against an
obsession with the narrowly vocational. Lecturing the Confederation of
British Industry on the “sly utilitarianism” of employers, he defends a
liberal education as needing “no justification beyond the satisfaction and
enjoyment that it brings.” Teenagers waiting for their A level results and
pondering degree courses should consider philosophy. It is rewarding in
itself; and it could nowadays be the passport to a successful, varied
career.
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