As the case happens to be with all other
courses in the Humanities and most of the Social Sciences, studies
in Philosophy or Government and Politics do not constitute
professional training in the strictest sense. This does not
however imply that these areas are not of importance to any present or future careers you may
be engaged in. It so happens that almost all aspects of
professional and management-related occupations require a certain
range of intellectual skills and competencies for which the
subjects of Philosophy and Government can provide a solid
foundation. Both subjects also help, in great measure, to gain an
insight into the nature of all the other allied Social
Sciences.
Some of the key benefits associated with
learning Philosophy include the
following:
The ability
- * To
understand and appreciate your own culture as well as other
cultures. * To compare and evaluate different arguments as an
aid to the re-examination of your own positions and
viewpoints. * To present ideas and to communicate information
(both literally and orally) in a detailed, relevant and convincing
fashion. * To become aware of yourself as someone among many in
a diverse world; to be able to see the benefits of tolerance, and
to learn to protect your own interests and those of others. *
To understand the currents of the history of thought, and the
basis of our intellectual tradition.
Benefits of learning Government and Politics
include:
The ability
- * To become
acquainted with the behavioral elements in human nature that
necessitate political socialization and the need for
government. * To understand the basic structures of organized
society and its main institutions. * To comprehend the
principles and rules that explain the relationships within the
political system, the responsibilities of government, on one hand,
and those of citizens, on the other. * To perceive the factors
that determine political attitudes, governmental (un)popularity,
voting behavior, and special interest groups in
society. * To
gain an insight into electioneering processes and the techniques
of political decision-making and procedures. * To understand
the interaction between the domestic and the external
relationships of individual states.

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