- Joined
- May 18, 2014
But the market for a lot of lawyers in America is oversaturated
An extremely valid point but I'm just pointing out at least they have more practical applications as opposed to say gender studies.
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But the market for a lot of lawyers in America is oversaturated
lol a philosophy degree is proof of no such thing
I wouldn't know, because I'm studying criminal justice like a person with a future in mind.
A dude I went to highschool with has a criminal justice degree and last I checked, he's a security guard at a casino...
At least they can reflect on WHY you want fries with that.Yes, let's just ignore the pesky fact that the more exposed to philosophy people are, the more successful they are at math, expression, creativity, logic, comprehension, empathy, debate, language, critical thinking; and the more likely they are to outperform others both in scientific careers and life in general -- not to mention they are far less prone to fall prey to manipulation, tinfoil hat theories, scams and mind-viruses like social justice. One can even go as far as to say that teaching people philosophy reduces autistic tendencies and sociopathy, and forces people realize that they are not special snowflakes who deserve everything without work.
Women's Studies, pretty much every music degree, and English.
This is untrue. A lot of people with music degrees are able to find employment - it just takes hard work.
A dude I went to highschool with has a criminal justice degree and last I checked, he's a security guard at a casino...
There's nothing wrong with private security. It can be a good starting job for someone with that degree.
Also some of the "softer" hard sciences. Don't want to denigrate the biology and life sciences people too much, but if you don't go on to post-undergraduate studies or professional training, it's a relatively worthless degree compared to the engineering and info/comp sci degrees that everyone clever got. Like I have a sinking feeling that my molecular/cell biology degree is going to be pretty useless on its own when it comes down to the job market.
A Psych degree is as useful as the person who earned it, sadly lots of people don't expand their opportunities and end up as standard paper-pushers.
It's a $13-14/hr job that doesn't specifically require a criminal justice degree and he has like six figures of student loan debt (and he's been there for years).But I digress.
Also, what is the consensus on film studies degrees that aren't from a film school? Or film schools in general? It seems like now, in the era of youtube, it'd be almost better to study film on your own and just make random shitty movies and learn that way, rather than pay out the ass for film school tuition in the hopes that you might make industry connections but I guess it's not for me to say.
To be the job market is horrible right now. There's an enormous labor surplus.
But the market for a lot of lawyers in America is oversaturated
At least they can reflect on WHY you want fries with that.
E: In a non-sarcastic answer that goes back to my original point about critical thinking. It's about the paucity of critical thinking skills found in other degrees and not really the inherent superiority of philosophy degrees. If you come out of a degree course thinking you're smarter than everyone else, then it was a huge failure.
Except Gender Studies. You are literally always going to be better off doing Literature, Philosophy, or Sociology (etc.) and just writing your thesis on some gender bullshit.
Yes, let's just ignore the pesky fact that the more exposed to philosophy people are, the more successful they are at math, expression, creativity, logic, comprehension, empathy, debate, language, critical thinking; and the more likely they are to outperform others both in scientific careers and life in general -- not to mention they are far less prone to fall prey to manipulation, tinfoil hat theories, scams and mind-viruses like social justice. One can even go as far as to say that teaching people philosophy reduces autistic tendencies and sociopathy, and forces people realize that they are not special snowflakes who deserve everything without work.