yogurtexpress
Active Member
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- Joined
- Oct 12, 2011
- Messages
- 127
I've been taking philosophy classes on and off because it's always been my hidden passion. I even considered minoring or even majoring in it at some point because there hasn't been a philosophy class that I haven't enjoyed, and unlike English (my actual major) the papers are fun and you get a chance to be more speculative and creative.
This semester, however, introduced me to the rigid academic nature of the field. I had the good fortune to take two classes where the professors really didn't care about any ideas you had to contribute, and basically only wanted you to study and regurgitate the information. It doesn't help that the subjects themselves were really uninteresting for me. They were both related to metaphysics and I guess that it's just not my thing.
I've already been disillusioned with academia since I started college. 90% of the classes you take either test you on rote memorization, or they want you to argue things like you're in a fucking courtroom. It makes me wonder, do any of the professors (or anyone in this world, period) actually care about original ideas? We study all these thinkers like Descartes, Locke, Nietzsche, who actually thought of new things, revolutionary guidelines and principles which served as a blueprint for the future of humanity. I understand that rote memorization is part of being an educated person, but I don't believe that it gives you any credibility as far as intelligence is concerned. All it shows is that professors just want students to learn this stuff so that they can give a good grade and boost the rep of the school, and then the students show their grades to their employers so their employers can see that they're good little sheep who can follow directions. They don't want anyone who can shake things up because that would go against the agenda of the corporate slavemasters who want you to study information so you can know it, but they don't want you to apply it in any way that can significantly give you power to change anything.
I'm not going to quit, though, I'll persevere. But I know that essentially I'm never going to be honest with myself if I concede to the wrong people's expectations, and as I go through this system I'm understanding more and more that there are very few 'right people.'
This semester, however, introduced me to the rigid academic nature of the field. I had the good fortune to take two classes where the professors really didn't care about any ideas you had to contribute, and basically only wanted you to study and regurgitate the information. It doesn't help that the subjects themselves were really uninteresting for me. They were both related to metaphysics and I guess that it's just not my thing.
I've already been disillusioned with academia since I started college. 90% of the classes you take either test you on rote memorization, or they want you to argue things like you're in a fucking courtroom. It makes me wonder, do any of the professors (or anyone in this world, period) actually care about original ideas? We study all these thinkers like Descartes, Locke, Nietzsche, who actually thought of new things, revolutionary guidelines and principles which served as a blueprint for the future of humanity. I understand that rote memorization is part of being an educated person, but I don't believe that it gives you any credibility as far as intelligence is concerned. All it shows is that professors just want students to learn this stuff so that they can give a good grade and boost the rep of the school, and then the students show their grades to their employers so their employers can see that they're good little sheep who can follow directions. They don't want anyone who can shake things up because that would go against the agenda of the corporate slavemasters who want you to study information so you can know it, but they don't want you to apply it in any way that can significantly give you power to change anything.
I'm not going to quit, though, I'll persevere. But I know that essentially I'm never going to be honest with myself if I concede to the wrong people's expectations, and as I go through this system I'm understanding more and more that there are very few 'right people.'