This from a reader:
I have a concern about the philosophical life. While I do think philosophy is intrinsically valuable, and while I do deny that one is obligated to "do the most good" with one's life (I'm not a consequentialist), I wonder if there are better ways to live than to devote one's life to philosophy. Prima facie, devoting one's life to solving global poverty or curing cancer seems better than focusing on philosophy. If so, then even if one isn't obligated to solve global poverty or cure cancer, why not devote one's life to these causes instead?Perhaps the philosophical life is better than these other options, but that isn't clear to me. It seems more plausible that, all things being equal, a life that saves countless lives is better lived than a life that doesn't save a single life. Again, I'm not saying we're obligated to save lives, I'm just making a comparative judgment.
I can't refute what you say, but I can offer an alternative point of view. If you consider it, it may help you better understand your own point of view even if it does not motivate any modification of it.
One question concerns the best life humanly possible. Aristotle discussed it in his Nicomachean Ethics. He considered lives devoted to pleasure, material acquisition, politics, and philosophy. I set forth his answer here.
But the best life possible for humans might not be the best life for a particular human. Whether or not the best life is the philosophical life, not everyone is 'philosophy material.'
Philosophy is a vocation, and only some are called to it. (I am speaking in ideal terms here: what passes for 'philosophy' in the 'universities' falls far short of the ideal.)
The best life for you will depend on your aptitudes, values, and worldview. Everyone has a worldview of sorts even if unexamined and unarticulated. Suppose your outlook is broadly secular. And suppose you find secularism obvious. Then you will not be inclined to question it and will have no need for philosophy. You have 'your truth,' a worldview you believe is true, and therefore feel no need to investigate whether it is true in whole or in part. Doubt is the engine of inquiry, but you have no doubts. For you philosophical inquiry would be idle. You would be left cold by the Socratic, "The unexamined life is not worth living."
And if the people you associate with share your tacit worldview, then you will have no need to articulate and defend it. The existence of competing worldviews might trouble you or then again it might not. You might be the sort of person who is not disturbed or given pause by the disagreement of others.
For me, disagreement is a goad to inquiry. I have a consuming need to know. And a life lived without examination is definitely worth little or nothing. Such a life remains on the animal level. A human life, speaking normatively, is a transcending life, a life of self-transcendence and aspiration.
Primum vivere deinde philosophari. I agree. We must live and live fully to gather the grapes of experience from which to press the wine of wisdom. We don't gather grapes to gather grapes, but for the wine. The vita activa subserves the vita contemplativa.
You say it is not clear to you that the philosophical life is superior to, say, cancer research. Then I say you should leave philosophy alone. The quest for the ultimate truth about the ultimate matters is the highest calling and it demands total commitment. I can argue for this conviction, but I can't prove it, and I will persuade only those who already sense its truth.
In the early '80s I heard a speech by the American politician, Mario Cuomo, in which he touted the political life as the highest life. I thought to myself: "He can't really believe that!" But I soon concluded that he did believe it. I can give my reasons why Cuomo is wrong, but these reasons, which suffice for me, will make no impression on those who think the political life the highest. (To me, politics is like taking out the garbage or unplugging the toilet: it's a dirty job and it has to be done and done properly; in an ideal world, however, there would be no State and no need for politicians. As things are, our fallen predicament makes the State practically necessary, a necessary evil, along with its agents.)
My advice is, first of all, know thyself. Having honestly assessed your abilities, do with your life what you think is the best, and what you are fit to do.
I realize that this advice is of very little practical value. Listen to others, but keep your own counsel, and follow the urgings vouchsafed to you in the highest moments of existential clarity and discernment.
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