When I graduated college as a philosophy major, I left with an uneasy feeling. Craving utility and connection with my childhood interests I took up software development.
I'm glad to finally see an explanation for the letdown I experienced as an enthusiastic but inexperienced scholar. I remember when I asked my first philosophy professor, someone I had struggled with intellectually (and physically during a dinner party) for a recommendation letter to leave philosophy and study law, and his reply that I had "not spent enough time with the classics" for him to feel confident that I was a real enough philosopher.
I am glad now to state that I am not, and that like many my response to its flaws was to turn to other pursuits.
I'm glad to finally see an explanation for the letdown I experienced as an enthusiastic but inexperienced scholar. I remember when I asked my first philosophy professor, someone I had struggled with intellectually (and physically during a dinner party) for a recommendation letter to leave philosophy and study law, and his reply that I had "not spent enough time with the classics" for him to feel confident that I was a real enough philosopher.
I am glad now to state that I am not, and that like many my response to its flaws was to turn to other pursuits.