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I also did 2 philosophy first year subjects. You forgot to mention the bit where the 'special people' get embroiled in semantics completely irrelevant to the question at hand. Or, the fact that there are so many 'special people' that their unique blend of retardation becomes, well, rather common-place, sadly.I took a first year philosophy subject as a gened. First year philosophy is dead easy like most first year arts classes. It's sort of interesting though, made me want to take a more challenging second year subject, but then I remembered the people during discussions in my tutorial groups, there was a huge deficit of reasoning skills and an over abundance of "I'm going to use my HSC english skills to express my estrogen driven, non-sequitur opinion on this topic" (at least in the people doing the talking).
I might have done philosophy as a minor if it had more people in there who actually did some more thinking and reasoning which is what philosophy is all about.
The subject is interesting, and I've had some very interesting conversations with people taking the subject, but you just might meet one or two"special" people who lack the reasoning skills to be taking the subject, and it can ruin it for you if they tend to speak a lot.![]()
I'm doing metaphysics and epistemology as well; and I find my tutorials are pretty enjoyable. I have doubts that I will continue with philosophy though.I agree with chucknthem and litany. I'm doing a philosophy course in metaphysics and epistemology at the moment and when I read the literature, I start looking forward to discussing it over in the tutorials. And then I get to the tutorials and we're talking about completely irrelevant things. To me it feels like a weekly disappointment, not really worth the tuition fees. Maybe it's different in other philosophy courses or tutorial groups.