minervx wrote:
1. Perhaps you may know the truths of the universe, but they aren't going to benefit you financially, socially, and on the whole, other people generally don't care if your extremely smart in philosophy.
True. The only benefit here is that studying philosophy often allows one to be a better thinker. BUT, philosophy generally doesn't arrive at a lot of truths.
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2. Many philosophical arguments are just manipulations and exploits of language, rather than of serious substance. Words break when you push them too hard, and many things you cannot prove with words alone. Also, philosophers have hid behind ambiguity to protect themselves from being refuted.
Agreed. And that's kind of why philosophy often ends up being so useless. Now, a good thinker with philosophical background will be able to learn when and where this occurs, if only due to an intuition about the matter, however, philosophy is not the crowning gem many philosophers think it is. It isn't as if philosophy is the sum total of knowledge, where all non-philosophers wait breathlessly to find the next conclusion, but rather they have knowledge already, philosophers are just trying to make the excuses for why this knowledge is supposed to be accepted.