Some do though. |
The point is that these are all strong philosophy programs. |
like a lot of things, you have to show interest in activities done out of school. very few high schools have deep programming in bio medical engineering or AI or agricultural research or sustainable architecture. This is all done outside school. But agree, if kid hasn't done research or summer programming and just jots Philosophy in major box, it's not helpful. The opposite probably. |
| I don't feel like reading this entire thread so this may have already been mentioned but Pitt. They have a top ranked Philosophy department (or at least used to. Not sure what it is now) |
At that point, just go to Williams |
I'm a Pitt grad. Pitt Honors would be an excellent safety for this kid. More strongly recommended if the kid has very specific and individual research interests. And in study abroad (Oxford/Cambridge/ Marshall's Scholar competition). My hesitation relates to internships. The prestige white collar job market is bad right now. Liberal arts majors have to find their own internships at most universities. At lower-ranked schools, the high-paying prestige corporate internships are more for business students than econ/liberal arts. I think OP is hoping for a Top 10 university acceptance based on internships. So will have to decide what to prioritize in safety schools. Not likely to get all desired features. |
Philosophy has almost no math at all, it has the basics of logic, but proof based math is much more difficult. |
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Boston College and Fordham have large and excellent phil departments.
U of Toronto is superb in philosophy. Huge, diverse faculty covering just about any type of philosophy. Indiana U. doesn't have engineering, so you can actually major in something like philosophy without being laughed at. Excellent faculty, too. |
The report states that "some strong regional liberal arts colleges have much stronger faculties (Illinois Wesleyan and Lawrence University are examples)." However, with just two full-time professors in its department (plus two adjuncts), Illinois Wesleyan appears to have too few faculty to teach a reasonable range of sub-areas of philosophy; Lawrence, at four full-time faculty, does somewhat better, but still appears lacking. As a suggestion, for a good range of coverage of sub-areas of philosophy, seven or eight faculty would seem to be sufficient and desirable, while substantially fewer than this figure may be problematic. |
Illinois Wesleyan had some retirements or departures (I can think of one very good philosopher who retired or left) around the time that passage first appeared in the PGR. So I think it's just an innocent mistake. (No department with only two t-track faculty should be in that parenthesis.) |
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For a less common major such as philosophy you may benefit from considering the size of the student community at colleges of potential interest. As a resourse for this, IPEDS is convenient. As examples, these show the number of graduates with a "first major" in philosophy from Hamilton (11) and Amherst (8) in a recent year:
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Hamilton&s=all&id=191515#programs https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/?q=Amherst&s=all&id=164465#programs |
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just skip college and get a low paying job that doesn't require all that spending on college!
or get a degree that is more marketable and do philosophy as a hobby. |
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OP, are you sure your S knows enough about philosophy to know he wants to major in it?I used to be an alum interviewer and now and again I'd get an interviewee who claimed to want to major in philosophy. Most of the time, after asking questions, it became evident that the only kind of philosophy they were interested in was political philosophy. The way many colleges are structured, that usually leads to majoring in political science, not philosophy.
Hey, if he actually IS interested in philosophy,I'm not trying to discourage him. I'm just aware that many students don't fully understand what majoring in philosophy means. He should at least read through the list of required courses for philosophy majors at some schools of interest to him if he hasn't already done so. |
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2018/02/20/mark-cuban-philosophy-degree-will-be-worth-more-than-computer-science.html |
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Sometimes it’s also good to follow the money in your research: https://giving.jhu.edu/story/bill-miller-philosophy-gift
JHU has lots of $ to invest in philosophy now and into the future. Strong in philosophy of mind among other areas. |