I thought it might be fun to do a short series of posts on
undergraduate philosophy majors. Today, we’ll talk about why students generally
pick up a philosophy concentration. My next post will discuss the evolution of
the common undergraduate philosophy major. There might be a third post about
common career paths for the recent philosophy B.A. [Only if I can make it clever enough. Right now the idea of discussing career
paths seems much too dull].
Undergraduates become philosophy majors for a very different
set of reasons than graduate students. I was an English major myself, so I know
from experience that English majors generally become English majors because
they either (1) love literature or (2) want to become a secondary school
English teacher (sometimes both (1) and (2), but sometimes not). And English
majors can really do just about anything office-y in the workforce (“Wait, you
were an English major, so you can write and
speak well—plus you can recite “The Lord’s Prayer” in Old English from heart?
You’re hired!” [This was basically how I
got my first job]).
But back to philosophers. Philosophy is one of those
trickier subjects in the Humanities that, on the surface, doesn’t seem to
qualify someone for a particular type of job (and students and parents of
students are mostly concerned, in the U.S., at least, with pursuing a degree in
higher education in order to get a better job). What, then, draws
undergraduates to study philosophy?
One of my favorite groups of philosophers to work with is
undergraduate philosophy majors—particularly incoming freshpersons (first-year
students). No matter what class (as in, year of student, not socio-economic
class), I always try to sneak in questions about why each student came to philosophy.
Given this data, I’ve come up with four of the major reasons why undergraduate students
decide to study philosophy:
1. I just love it.
There are a few—a very few, I might add—something like 2% of
all incoming students and 10% of all current students (who change
concentrations) who come to philosophy because they just love it. I’ve had
students who discovered philosophy through a high school class or from an
influential sibling or just a simple, intro-level philosophy course somewhere.
This type of student doesn’t really care initially about what they can actually
do with a philosophy degree, they
just can’t imagine studying anything else. Sometimes, usually because of parental
pressure, they pick up a second concentration in something practical, but the
true lovers of philosophy aren’t happy unless they are studying philosophy all
the time.
2. I really liked
Professor X’s Philosophy of [Something-Academically-“Sexy”] class.
Some new philosophy majors are wooed in by a particular
professor or “sexy” philosophy class (Philosophy of Art or Love or Media, for
example). Let’s face it: Some philosophy professors are really, really great at
teaching philosophy in an incredibly interesting way (and some are as dull as
dirt). These sorts of professors tend to attract a small following of
undergrads who try to get away with taking all of this professor’s classes, but
don’t really adore philosophy-for-philosophy’s-sake in the way that our first
student does. This second student might also be wooed in by a really
interesting philosophy class, but may not understand exactly what philosophy is
all about [but who does?!]. This kind
of student makes up about 10% of the population of philosophy majors.
3. I hear that
philosophy students do well on the GRE/LSAT/MCAT/GMAT.
Our largest recruitment pool comes from this type of
student, surprisingly (around 60%), and it is completely true that philosophers
tend to do very well on such tests. There are some nifty charts here (link),
that show how philosophers score on various tests compared to students in other
fields. For those of you who are rather confused about the charts or don’t want
to take the time to study them, I’ve simplified the charts here (click to enlarge):
Exhibit A: How philosophers do overall on standardized
tests.
Exhibit B: How philosophers do on the Verbal/Writing portions
of the GRE.
Exhibit C: How philosophers do on the Quantitative (Math)
portion of the GRE.
And finally, the fourth type of philosophy student.
4. I don’t have any
other options.
Okay, so philosophy is one of those subjects that has a difficult
time recruiting students initially (unless they are student (3) who comes in
with a purpose). We tend to attract students to the major after they take a
course in philosophy and either (a) fall in love with it, (b) are wooed in by a
class or professor, or (c) have no other options.
Philosophy often ends up as the most accepting liberal arts
major because it’s really hard for some philosophers to turn away a hard case
when this student might become a better thinker/reasoner, even if they aren’t
very astute or motivated initially [philosophers
tend to be divided here; one side takes the view that we should keep philosophy
programs small and full of bright students, and one side think that we should
accept all of the strays and hope to build them up as great thinkers].
So for all of you parents out there who just discovered that
your offspring became a philosopher, there is hope. Perhaps a philosophy program
will take your wandering, indecisive child and make them into a thoughtful,
reasonable person. Perhaps your student will do really well on the LSAT and
look forward to a great career in law. Perhaps your student has chosen the path
of wisdom and doesn’t really know where this path leads, but they can’t imagine
studying anything else. Whatever the case, you should be proud of your young
philosopher.
And some fun. A comic that is being passed around by my
philosopher friends (click to enlarge):
~The Philosiologist
You can follow me on
twitter (@Philosiologist), friend me on facebook (Philosiologist Qed), or add
me to your circle on Google+ (Philosiologist Qed). You can also send me an
email, if you would like (left sidebar).
There were also those of us--or maybe it was just me--who hated and loved philosophy in equal parts, but couldn't stay away. The argument addict?
ReplyDeleteAnd/or who had a lot of notions drilled into our heads through our upbringing, without real justification, which we needed to sort out...and the philosophy major, taken with multiple ethics courses, offered a way to (force ourselves to) do that, possibly at the expense of the professors who had to read the essays that resulted. (/run-on) :P
I am studying for a PhD in philosophy, and originally I was sort of a (1), although I would say I chose philosophy because I /quite liked/ it, rather than fell in love with it. Does that count? My secondary (high) school classes in philosophy were fairly uninspiring, and I didn't really fall in love with the subject until late in my undergrad degree and during my master's. It certainly turned out to be a grower.
ReplyDeleteI must admit I was a 3 and 4 hybrid that became a 1. I took a high school semester elective in philosophy, which sparked an interest primarily because I knew it would help my standardized test scores (it did!) and secondarily because I had been for the first time quite challenged academically. I hedged my bets as an undergrad pursuing both a poli sci and philosophy BAs, but the pull towards philosophy, which to summarize pithily a B. Russell comment--great thoughts make one's mind great, my focus in social sciences became almost entirely theoretical. Concluding in a MA in Social Policy. Sadly, the phD will be in something practical, since there are only a few federal govt posts where one can practice philosophy...sigh.
ReplyDelete