Reason Before Opinion: Why Philosophy Remains the Foundation of Thinking in an Age of Obedience
Reclaiming the Discipline That Teaches Us How to Think, Not What to Think
Keywords:
Philosophy; education; critical thinking; logic; rhetoric; reason; obedience; university; STEM; language; truth; intellectual freedom; argumentation; analytical reasoning; ethics; communication; modern education crisisSubscribe
Introduction – The Unteachable Subject
The modern university purrs about “critical thinking” the way a chain-store café purrs about “artisan.” It is a word placed on the window to reassure passers-by that something noble is happening inside, even as the kitchen quietly stops making anything that requires a real palate. The paradox is now so routine that it barely raises an eyebrow: institutions trumpet critical thought while dismantling, downsizing, or politely strangling the very disciplines that teach people how to think in the first place. One can scarcely blame the students for thinking that “critical thinking” is a software feature that arrives automatically with tuition, like free Wi-Fi, rather than a craft that takes years of bruising practice and an intolerance for nonsense.
This drift did not come by meteor. It came by memo. Universities have been pulled, pushed, and bribed into vocational training centres—places where a degree is marketed as a career starter pack rather than an instrument of thought. The language gives the game away. “Employability outcomes.” “Industry ready.” “Skills pipelines.” As if the mind were a warehouse to be stocked to spec, not a sovereign territory to be cultivated. The humanities are invited to justify themselves in the tone of a budget meeting, and when they cannot compress conscience into a spreadsheet, they are told, with sympathetic smiles, that austerity is destiny and relevance is a wage packet.
Yet there remains another memory of what a university can be, and it is not a museum piece. In my M.A. in Philosophy at Birkbeck, the atmosphere was not of credential production but of intellectual confrontation. Ideas were not treated as lifestyle accessories; they were treated as claims that must survive cross-examination. One did not “have an opinion” and swagger away. One had to define terms, expose assumptions, trace implications, and accept the embarrassing possibility of being wrong. The classroom was not a consumer service. It was a forge. It made thinking hard on purpose, because freedom depends on minds that have learned to sweat under the weight of truth.
That experience stands as a counterexample to the current anti-intellectual tide. Philosophy is not a relic of the past, not a hobby for those too delicate for proper work, and not a graveyard of dead Greeks to be quoted at dinner parties. It is the operating system of rational civilisation. It teaches how to dismantle deceit without needing the comfort of a tribe, how to define truth in a culture addicted to vibes, and how to resist manipulation in an age where obedience comes wrapped in convenience and delivered by algorithm. Strip philosophy out of education and you do not make society more practical. You make it programmable.
Section I – The Death of Thought and the Rise of Obedience
There was a time when a university was a place where a mind might be made dangerous in the right way: sharpened against error, baptised in doubt, taught the slow arrogance of reason. Today it is more often a place where minds are made useful in the wrong way: streamlined for employability, padded with credentials, and trained to perform competence without ever touching judgment. The shift wears the costume of progress. It calls itself “relevance,” “skills,” “industry alignment,” and other phrases that sound like adults speaking sensibly while quietly selling the furniture.
The culture changed first, and the institutions followed like frightened animals. Once education was redefined as a pipeline into jobs, every discipline had to justify itself in the language of immediate utility. A degree became a career starter pack, a product with a promised salary attached to its label. Under that regime, philosophy was not merely inconvenient; it was structurally intolerable. Philosophy does not promise a neat output in four years. It does not advertise a single job title as its destination. It produces something harder to measure and therefore easier to despise: people who ask why the destination exists, who interrogate the map, who refuse to clap just because a manager says “innovation.”
So philosophy is removed, not always with a guillotine but with a slow administrative smile. It is folded into electives. It is rebranded as a communication add-on. It is “integrated” until it is diluted into nothing. The public is told this is efficiency. The real function is obedience. A population trained only to execute is easier to manage than one trained to examine. Bureaucratic systems thrive on conformity not because every bureaucrat is a villain, but because the machine itself feeds on predictability. The less a citizen can question, the more smoothly a programme runs. The less a graduate can argue, the more easily a policy can be imposed. The less a worker can define terms, the more readily they accept the definitions that suit power.
This is why the change is not accidental. It is not simply that budgets are tight or fashions have shifted. It is that the modern state and the modern corporation have converged on a shared ideal citizen: technically skilled, procedurally fluent, and morally docile. Give that citizen enough training to keep the system running and not enough education to ask what the system is for. Teach them to code without teaching them to reason. Teach them to measure without teaching them to interpret. Teach them to comply without teaching them to judge. The result is what we now call a “knowledge economy,” though the knowledge is often little more than tool-use plus slogan-recall.
When people are trained only to execute and never to question, society ceases to think; it merely reacts. It becomes a creature of stimulus and reflex. A headline lands, outrage follows. A statistic is waved, assent dutifully arrives. A new policy is announced, and the only debate is about which tribe it flatters. Reason, being slow and indifferent to fashion, is treated as delay. Doubt is treated as disloyalty. Clarity is treated as elitism. The mind’s sovereignty is traded for the comfort of belonging.
Listen to the rhetoric that now governs education and you hear the confession in plain speech. Governments celebrate “skills for jobs” and “work-ready graduates.” Corporations praise “agility” and “delivery.” Universities promise “employability outcomes.” Notice what is missing. The word “reason” is avoided the way a thief avoids a mirror. The word “truth” is replaced by “data.” The word “judgment” is replaced by “competency.” The system does not need to ban thinking. It only needs to make thinking economically irrational, culturally suspect, and institutionally optional. That is how obedience rises without ever declaring itself a tyrant.
Section II – What Philosophy Actually Teaches
There is a lazy caricature of philosophy that survives because it flatters the lazy. In that caricature, philosophy is the hobby of quoting dead Greeks at each other, an elaborate form of name-dropping for people who like their thinking embalmed. The caricature is convenient for administrators, for politicians, for anyone who wants the word “critical thinking” without the trouble of cultivating it. If philosophy were merely a museum tour of ancestors, it would deserve its exile to the elective shelf. But philosophy, in its living form, is not an antiquarian pastime. It is intellectual self-defence. It is the discipline that teaches a mind how to recognise when it is being lied to, when words are being used as weapons, and when an argument is a costume stitched to a vacuum.
Philosophy begins with the argument, because civilisation itself runs on arguments whether it admits it or not. Laws are arguments with police attached. Policies are arguments with budgets attached. Advertisements are arguments with music attached. A person who cannot dissect arguments is condemned to live inside other people’s conclusions. Philosophy takes the everyday flood of claims and forces them to stand still long enough to be examined. What is being asserted, exactly. On what grounds. With what definitions. What follows if the claim is true. What collapses if it is not. This sounds simple until you try it, because most public discourse is designed to prevent precisely this kind of inspection. Philosophy is the practice of refusing that prevention.
Logic is the grammar of reason. Without grammar, language becomes noise; without logic, thought becomes noise. Philosophical training cultivates precision in defining terms because most deceit starts with sloppy words. It trains you to notice when a speaker changes a definition mid-sentence, the way a pickpocket changes your wallet’s location mid-handshake. It teaches you to identify fallacies not as academic trivia but as the standard operating methods of modern persuasion. It teaches you to test coherence, to ask whether the parts of a claim actually fit together or merely sit beside each other like mismatched furniture on a stage. In a culture that rewards speed and outrage, coherence is a revolutionary demand.
Mathematical logic is pure and mechanical. It is a beautiful machine for handling formal relations where the human mess has been stripped away. In that realm, once axioms are fixed, conclusions follow with the indifference of gravity. Philosophical logic operates in the realm where axioms are precisely what is contested. It is contextual, human, moral. It deals not only with validity but with meaning, with hidden assumptions, with the way language smuggles values into premises that pretend to be neutral. Mathematical logic can tell you what follows if your starting points are true. Philosophical logic asks why you believe the starting points, who benefits if you do, and whether the starting points are even intelligible outside a textbook. One is a tool of calculation. The other is a tool of liberation.
Think of philosophy as the geometry of truth. Geometry does not give you the world; it gives you the structure by which you can build in the world without your constructions falling over. Philosophy teaches how to construct arguments that stand upright, bearing weight without collapsing into self-contradiction. It also teaches how to recognise arguments that collapse under cowardice—cowardice in the sense of refusing clarity, refusing consequence, refusing the discipline of stating what you mean and meaning what you state. A mind trained in this geometry can walk into any debate and see where the beams are real and where the façades are painted on.
The contemporary world is saturated with fallacies precisely because so few people are trained to see them. Equivocation is everywhere: a word is used in one sense to win sympathy, then in another sense to win conclusion, and the audience is carried across the gap without noticing. False analogy is the darling of lazy politics: two situations are declared “the same” because the speaker wants to import the emotions of one into the other, even when the structures differ like a cathedral and a tent. Ad hominem is so routine that it now passes for wit: refute the person so you never have to touch the claim. None of these are exotic tricks. They are the daily grammar of headlines, boardrooms, parliaments, and feeds. They persist not because they are persuasive to a trained mind, but because they are persuasive to an untrained one.
So what philosophy actually teaches is not reverence for old names, but competence in the only skill that makes all other skills safe. It teaches how to think when others want you to react, how to define when others want you to chant, how to demand proof when others want you to join a side. It is the discipline by which a mind becomes less programmable. That is why it is dismissed as impractical by those who benefit most from the practicality of obedience.
Section III – The World of the Unexamined Opinion
Philosophical illiteracy does not announce itself with a siren. It arrives as confidence. It produces a population that feels informed because it is saturated with information, yet cannot distinguish truth from noise because it was never taught the tools of discrimination. The result is not merely ignorance. It is an aggressive, self-perpetuating kind of error: people do not know how to think, but they know they have thoughts, and they mistake the second fact for the first.
This is why misinformation spreads so effortlessly in the modern world. The usual excuse is that people lack data. They do not. They are drowning in data. What they lack is the capacity to interpret it—skills that philosophy teaches by force of habit: how to test premises, how to spot a non sequitur, how to ask what a term means before letting it lead you by the nose. Without those skills, data becomes a kind of decorative tyranny. Numbers impress. Graphs dazzle. Correlations are taken as causes because the mind has never been trained to slow down and ask what follows from what. The measure becomes the meaning because the measure is all that remains.
The internet amplifies this into a full cultural pathology. It has produced an environment of intellectual inflation: infinite opinions, zero reasoning. Publishing is no longer a privilege tied to discipline; it is a reflex tied to connectivity. Every moment of irritation becomes a post. Every half-formed impression becomes a public verdict. Every slogan becomes a worldview in the hands of those who have never learned to build one. The velocity of expression outpaces the formation of thought, and the platforms reward velocity, not coherence. What goes viral is not what is true, but what is legible to an untrained mind and flattering to a tribe.
“We’ve built a world full of people who can use devices they don’t understand to express opinions they never learned to form.”
That line is not a flourish. It is a summary of the present order. People carry in their pockets machines of astonishing complexity, and they operate them with the casual entitlement of a child switching channels. Yet the intellectual habits required to use those machines responsibly—to evaluate the claims delivered through them, to understand incentives, to detect manipulation—have been stripped from education in the name of “skills.” The result is technologically fluent credulity: humans upgraded in hardware and downgraded in judgment.
This is the deeper meaning of “data-driven” culture. In theory it sounds admirable. In practice it often replaces thinking with measuring. People now believe that numbers guarantee truth even when logic is absent. A statistic is waved like a talisman, and the crowd bows. But a number without argument is merely a digit with attitude. It tells you nothing unless you know what was counted, how it was counted, why it was counted, and what counting can’t tell you. Philosophy trains those questions. Without philosophy, “data-driven” becomes a rhetorical costume for whatever the speaker wants you to believe.
So reason without philosophy becomes rhetoric with a spreadsheet. It keeps the outward form of rationality—the charts, the dashboards, the brisk managerial tone—while abandoning the inward substance: coherence, definition, inference, and moral clarity. A society like this does not lose truth because truth vanished. It loses truth because the public no longer knows how to recognise it when it appears. The mind’s immune system has been weakened, and the infections that follow—conspiracies, populist fevers, elegant lies—are not anomalies. They are the expected ecology of a culture that traded the discipline of thought for the glamour of opinion.
Section IV – Universities and the Betrayal of Learning
The modern university still wears the architecture of a house of learning, but inside it often runs like a factory that prints certificates. The student is processed through modules, assessed by rubrics, and issued a credential that functions as a ticket for employment rather than as evidence of a mind enlarged. This is not merely a vulgarisation of mission; it is a structural betrayal. A centre of education aims at formation: it treats the student as an intellect in development, not a consumer purchasing a future salary. A credential factory aims at throughput: it treats learning as a product to be standardised, priced, and delivered with minimal friction.
The administrative takeover of academia is the engine of this shift. Bureaucracy values compliance and funding over intellect because compliance and funding are what bureaucracy can count. The administrative class grows not by cultivating truth but by managing risk, producing reports, ensuring regulatory alignment, and maintaining the institutional brand. Teaching and inquiry become subordinate to audit culture. Professors are evaluated by metrics that simulate quality—student satisfaction scores, publication counts, grant revenue, “impact” targets—rather than by the actual depth of what they teach or discover. The machine does not ask whether ideas are true. It asks whether they are fundable, marketable, and safe.
In such a climate, philosophy is uniquely vulnerable. It cannot be easily monetised, and it cannot be easily tamed. It thrives on disputation, ambiguity, and the unglamorous labour of reasoning. Its product is not a patent but a person capable of asking why the institution exists at all. Once philosophy was the cornerstone of the university because the university was conceived as a community of inquiry. The medieval model, for all its limitations, understood that learning was a collective search for truth under the discipline of argument. The trivium and quadrivium were not quaint relics; they were the intellectual scaffolding for any serious mind. A university was a guild of thought, not a marketplace of credentials.
The modern model is transactional. It speaks the language of “value for money,” “service delivery,” and “customer experience.” Inquiry is tolerated so long as it does not disturb the institutional appetite for grants or the cultural appetite for safety. Students are encouraged to treat education as a purchase: pay the fee, receive the qualification, exit into the labour market. The relationship is no longer apprentice to craft, but client to provider. In that relationship, the provider cannot afford to offend the client, and the client is not required to endure difficulty as the price of genuine learning.
So philosophy, once central, is now treated as expendable: a soft target for budget cuts, a decorative elective, a department that must endlessly justify its existence in the language of immediate utility. The justification is always the same and always false. Philosophy is dismissed as unproductive. Yet what the university now calls productivity is often mere institutional survival. It is the production of compliant graduates for a managed economy, not the cultivation of independent minds for a free society.
This is not progress. It is regression. The rejection of philosophy marks a return to dogma, only now dogma is enforced by algorithms and HR departments rather than by priests. The old church told you what to believe to save your soul. The new institution tells you what to say to keep your credential and your career. Both fear the same thing: a mind trained to question its premises. A university that abandons philosophy does not become modern. It becomes pre-modern in a new costume—an authorised centre of orthodoxy in a civilisation that has forgotten the difference between learning and training.
Section V – Logic and the Human Condition
Logic, when grounded in philosophy, is not a sterile game of symbols. It is the discipline by which a human being learns to keep faith with reality under pressure. Strip logic from philosophy and you get formulaic reasoning: neat, fast, and often blind. Anchor logic in philosophy and it becomes something larger — a way of navigating not only what follows from what, but what ought to follow from what, and why any of it should matter to a creature who must live among other creatures.
Computational logic is powerful, and it is narrow. A machine can calculate with flawless speed once the premises have been formalised, the definitions fixed, the goal specified. It can discover patterns, optimise routes, test millions of possibilities, and return an answer that satisfies the parameters it was given. But it cannot justify the parameters. It cannot decide what should count as a goal. It cannot explain why one outcome is better than another in human terms. Computers can calculate; only humans can justify. And justification is where civilisation either stands upright or collapses into managed barbarism.
Philosophy teaches this distinction by refusing to pretend that life is a closed system. Outside textbooks, ambiguity is not an error to be eliminated but a permanent feature of existence. Motives conflict. Values collide. Evidence is incomplete. Language is slippery. Deceit is endemic. Mathematics and programming, magnificent as they are, do not resolve these conditions; they presuppose them away. Philosophical logic works where formal logic ends: in the rough terrain where words mean different things to different people, where intent matters, where a technically valid procedure can still be morally obscene. It trains the mind to ask not only “Is this inference valid?” but “What have we assumed to make it look valid?” and “What happens to human beings if we follow it?”
Ethical reasoning is one of the places where this becomes unavoidable. A risk model can rank outcomes, but it cannot tell you whether sacrificing the few for the many is justice or tyranny in disguise. An algorithm can recommend a sentence length, but it cannot tell you what punishment means, what mercy is for, or when law itself becomes a machine of cruelty. Language analysis matters because much of modern domination is linguistic: terms are redefined, categories smuggled in, reputations destroyed by implication rather than argument. Epistemology matters because in a world of endless claims, the first freedom is knowing how knowledge is made and how it is faked. These are philosophical arts. Without them, people become efficient at executing systems they do not understand and morally helpless when those systems veer into abuse.
Look at AI ethics and the point is immediate. A predictive system can decide who gets a loan, who gets parole, who is policed more aggressively, who is ranked as employable. It will do so with an air of neutral calculation. Yet every such system carries hidden premises about fairness, risk, and human worth. If society cannot interrogate those premises, it will accept the output as fate. The result is automated injustice with a polite interface. Philosophy is what lets a public ask whether the machine’s “logic” is in fact a disguised value judgment wearing mathematical clothing.
Look at misinformation and the same need appears. The problem is not a shortage of facts but a shortage of reasoning about facts. People are manipulated not merely by falsehoods, but by true statements arranged to imply a lie. That is a logical problem, not a data problem. Look at social engineering — the craft of hacking human beings — and the vulnerability is again philosophical illiteracy: those who cannot spot fallacies, motives, and framing effects are easy to steer by fear, flattery, or tribal cues.
So the claim lands cleanly. In a technological world, philosophical literacy is not optional garnish. It is the difference between using machines and being used by them. Logic without philosophy makes humans into efficient instruments. Logic with philosophy keeps them human: capable of justification, resistant to deceit, and able to live in a civilisation without surrendering their minds to whatever calculates fastest.
Section VI – Philosophy as Resistance
Philosophy is rebellion against manipulation, and it is rebellion conducted with the most dangerous weapon a civilisation possesses: clarity. It is not the noisy revolt of mobs who want a different master. It is the quiet insurrection of a mind that refuses to be mastered at all. In an age that rewards speed, group loyalty, and the comforting narcotic of approved opinion, philosophy is the disciplined refusal to outsource judgment. It is the act of thinking when the world demands obedience, and that act is already a form of resistance because every system of control depends on unthinking compliance.
Socrates is the template because his trial reveals what power fears most. He did not lead an army. He did not publish a manifesto. He simply asked questions that exposed the hollowness of fashionable certainty. Athens tolerated many vices, but it could not tolerate a citizen who treated public opinion as something to be examined rather than worshipped. His insistence that the unexamined life is not worth living remains radical because it denies authority its easiest food source: the unreflective soul. A society can govern bodies by force. It governs minds by habit. Socrates attacked habit at its root. The hemlock was not a punishment for blasphemy; it was a confession that the city preferred obedient order to uncomfortable reason.
Genuine philosophical inquiry threatens every authoritarian system for the same reason. Authoritarianism is not merely a political arrangement; it is an epistemic one. It survives by declaring certain premises unquestionable, certain definitions fixed, certain narratives sacred. The moment a mind begins to examine premises, definitions loosen. The moment definitions loosen, narratives wobble. The moment narratives wobble, obedience becomes a choice rather than a reflex. That is intolerable to any regime that depends on reflex. Power can survive argument only by preventing argument from becoming visible.
This is why definitions, clarity, and logic are acts of power in the proper sense. They reclaim discourse from those who weaponise language to control thought. The tyrant’s first move is always linguistic: rename coercion as safety, rename dissent as harm, rename failure as progress, rename privilege as justice. Once the words are captured, the mind follows, because most people think in the terms provided to them. Philosophy is the counter-capture. It asks what a word means, whether it is being used consistently, and what hidden values ride inside it. To define a term honestly is to strip away the fog in which manipulation breeds. To insist on coherence is to force a claim to stand naked in daylight. To expose a fallacy is to puncture the spell before it hardens into ideology.
The modern world is thick with intellectual cowardice precisely because it has made thinking socially expensive. It is safer to repeat a slogan than to test it. It is safer to declare loyalty than to interrogate the tribe’s premises. It is safer to call a contradiction “complexity” than to resolve it. Philosophy resists this cowardice by refusing to let comfort outrank truth. It teaches the mind to endure the embarrassment of being wrong, the loneliness of dissent, and the hard labour of rebuilding belief on sound foundations. In doing so, it restores personal sovereignty.
So philosophy is not passive contemplation. It is active defiance through understanding. It does not merely criticise the world; it breaks the mechanisms by which the world bullies people into accepting falsehood as normal. It produces citizens who cannot be easily managed by fear, seduced by rhetoric, or herded by algorithmic mood. That is why it is sidelined in every age that wants obedience without admitting it. And that is why restoring philosophy is not a cultural preference but a political necessity. In a society that forgets how to think, resistance becomes impossible because manipulation does not look like manipulation anymore. Philosophy keeps the eyes open. It keeps the spine straight. It keeps freedom alive at the only place it can never be fully seized: inside the mind.
Section VII – Restoring the Geometry of Truth
If philosophy is the operating system of rational civilisation, then restoring it is not a matter of nostalgia but of maintenance. You do not keep a society free by hoping its citizens will somehow acquire reasoning by osmosis. You build reasoning deliberately into education and public life in the same way you build literacy: early, centrally, and without apology. The objection—“but philosophy is not practical”—is precisely why it must return. Practicality without reason is a machine without a steering wheel. It moves fast until it hits something human.
The first reform is straightforward and unglamorous: compulsory logic and reasoning across all university disciplines, including STEM. Not as a token first-year elective that students can dodge, but as a core requirement that follows them through their training. The engineer who cannot argue coherently about risk, fairness, and responsibility is not fully trained. The programmer who cannot define terms, test premises, or recognise fallacies is not fully trained. The scientist who cannot articulate the ethical and epistemic limits of a model is not fully trained. Technical skill without reasoning is skilled obedience, and skilled obedience is how modern systems produce disasters with clean documentation.
Clarity of language leads to clarity of action. That is not a slogan; it is the mechanism by which thought becomes policy and policy becomes life. Where language is muddy, motives hide. Where definitions shift, power slips its hand into the debate and rearranges the conclusions. A population trained to demand clear terms is harder to manipulate because it refuses to let words do the smuggling. Without philosophical structure, even splendid scientific progress risks ethical collapse. One can build astonishing systems and still be morally childish about what they do to people. The twentieth century was full of technical brilliance harnessed to barbarism precisely because intellect outweighed judgment. The same risk now exists with AI, biotechnology, surveillance infrastructures, and data-driven governance. If reasoning is not taught alongside capability, capability becomes a tool for whoever shouts loudest.
Institutionally, that means embedding critical reasoning into curricula rather than quarantining it in one department that can be cut when budgets tighten. Every discipline should teach its students how arguments in that field are built, how evidence is evaluated, where the common fallacies lie, and how moral assumptions enter supposedly neutral methods. Interdisciplinary courses should not be fashionable ornaments; they should be structural joints. Ethics tied to engineering is not optional when engineering shapes lives. Philosophy tied to AI is not optional when AI increasingly mediates truth, opportunity, and punishment. Rhetoric tied to data science is not optional when the public is being governed by charts that often conceal assumptions more than they reveal realities. Such integrations do not dilute disciplines; they stabilise them, giving technical work the ballast of human judgment.
Public life must also be re-philosophised, because education alone cannot carry the load if the culture ridicules thought. Media, schools, and civic institutions should treat reasoning as a normal expectation rather than an elite hobby. That means rewarding argument over outrage, precision over vibes, and the willingness to change one’s mind over the performance of tribal loyalty. A culture that can’t honour thought will not keep thought alive in classrooms, no matter how well syllabuses are written. The mind learns not only from teachers but from what society applauds.
Learning to think is the most revolutionary act in an age of intellectual automation. Machines can generate language, optimise decisions, and simulate expertise, but they cannot assume responsibility for meaning. They cannot justify ends. They cannot live with the consequences of what they recommend. Only humans can do that, and only humans trained in the geometry of truth will dare to. If a civilisation wants to remain free, it must teach reasoning as its first civic defence, not as an elective for the already converted. The future will not be saved by more skills alone. It will be saved by minds capable of using skill without surrendering sovereignty.
Conclusion – Reason Before Opinion
The argument returns to a claim so simple that modern institutions have learned to fear it. Philosophy is the last defence against a civilisation that mistakes conformity for intelligence. It is the discipline that trains minds to stand upright under pressure, to test what they are told, and to refuse the sweet narcotic of unexamined consensus. Remove it, and you do not get a more advanced society. You get a more manageable one.
Across these sections the pattern has been consistent. Education has been reduced to employability, and employability has been repackaged as virtue. Universities have become credential factories run by administrative logic that prefers auditability to truth. The humanities have been pushed into the margins because they refuse to be turned into quick, measurable outputs. In the void left behind, opinion swells like a gas in an unventilated room. The internet accelerates it into a storm: infinite assertions, minimal reasoning, a culture that confuses having a view with having a case. Misinformation thrives not because facts are unavailable, but because the public has been stripped of the tools needed to interpret facts at all. Data becomes a substitute for thought, and spreadsheets become the newest kind of rhetoric. The result is a society increasingly incapable of distinguishing truth from noise, and therefore increasingly vulnerable to whoever controls the loudest megaphone or the most flattering algorithm.
Philosophy is not ornamental. It is structural. It teaches definition where language is weaponised, coherence where propaganda spreads by contradiction, and humility where ideology demands certainty. It is the immune system of civilisation: reason detecting infection, doubt preventing delusion from hardening into identity. Without that immune system, the social body becomes feverish, twitching toward whatever story feels good, whichever tribe offers belonging, whichever authority promises comfort. Convenience then becomes the soft chain that replaces the old hard ones. People obey not because they are forced, but because they are trained to equate compliance with competence.
A civilisation that stops teaching people how to think will eventually be ruled by those who know only how to command. That is not a melodramatic warning. It is the normal outcome of intellectual disarmament. When the public cannot argue, it cannot govern. When it cannot define terms, it cannot resist redefinition. When it cannot follow a line of reasoning, it cannot detect when the line is being bent into a leash. The state, the corporation, the algorithmic feed—each grows more confident, not because they are inherently wise, but because their audience has been trained into passivity.
So the moral is blunt and non-negotiable. Learn to think before you learn to code. Reason before opinion. Everything else—skills, careers, technologies, even political freedoms—depends on that inner sovereignty. Without it, the rest is theatre, and theatre is a poor substitute for liberty.