Can you make a living as a philosopher?

All the serious philosophizing in society takes place on the SDMB, and you know it.

I’ve my doubts. I generally can understand quite readily a legal reasoning, or make sense of a bunch of statutes, but faced with a philosophical text, I’m generally :confused::confused:.

I don’t think it’s the same kind of thinking. However, I assume that studying philosophy, ethics or such things, and how they relate to justice and law might be intellectually valuable for a future lawyer.

In practice, law has little to do with philosophy, but the skills that a philosophy student learns, such as symbolic logic, argument, inductive proof and reasoning, the ability to read and digest zillions of pages of extremely boring stuff in one night, and so on, are valuable skills to have in law school. Many, many law students in the Common Law system study philosophy before law school for this reason.

Outwith?

Slightly off-topic, a high-school friend of mine is now a philosophy professor. I cannot even understand the titles of his articles.

Philosophy students also are familiarized with the “Socratic method”, which is used to teach most if not all law school classes, particularly in the first year.

Back when I was a philosophy undergrad, I heard rumblings that there was a demand for PHIL grads in the field of artificial intelligence. The theory was that philosophers know how people think, and therefore could be useful consultants when designing artificial intelligence systems. Sounded pretty neat, but life didn’t take me down that path.