I think, broadly speaking, you fail to miss the point that there are two forms of 'progress' and knowledge: let's just call them 'vertical' and 'lateral'. Maths and sciences, where new ideas spring from old ones and are synthesized based on prior knowledge, kinda scale vertically, based on everything that has come before. humanities research and philosophy, on the other hand, are often lateral: they don't logically progress in a way you can trace on a chart, they sort of evolve out of a protean mass of ideas and discourse - dialogue between disciplines, departments, countries. in that way a more whole picture of 'knowledge' as it stands today is developed. i think you're expecting literal jerks and ruptures and leaps forward in understanding like you get with a science/math 'breakthrough'. there are no breakthroughs in humanities or philosophy. things slowly accrete and gain definition. this is done through the work of many many research papers and, again, dialogue and debate between them. you're looking exclusively for one form of knowledge and advancement whilst entirely discrediting the other. it's like you only think with one half of your brain or something. it's only half of the picture of human understanding. the post made earlier by carnifex (?) made this point rather eloquently.Dilbert_X wrote:
So what? Society will evolve just fine without people studying it. Darwins finches didn't need Darwins help. Art and culture will continue just the same, so will intellectualism.and so if we only fund sciences and maths and masculine, useful, build-shit degrees now... what happens in 20 years time? we have a generation of engineers and scientists, fully funded. okay great. we've had no study of the arts or culture or history or philosophy or anything for 20 years. the academy has ground to a halt. academic discourse has dried up. there is no debate anymore and no new researchThere needs to be a demand side for that to happen.the supply-demand model kicks up and starts giving funding to philosophy majors?
What I think you fail to appreciate is academic communities are often closed communities, especially so for the humanities side. The world will progress just fine despite not being studied or having theses written about it.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/