First off: The humanities in general have been hemorrhaging majors since about 2008. English in particular has been hammered. In the 2000-2001 academic year, 4.5% bachelor's degrees recipients were English majors. Now it's 1.7%. [1]
[declining humanities majors; click to enlarge and clarify]
Since philosophy started out low, its decline is not as visually evident in the graph. Here are the raw numbers.
Year: Philosophy BAs awarded (as a % of all Bachelor's degrees)
2001: 5836 (.49%) 2002: 6529 (.52%) 2003: 7023 (.54%) 2004: 7707 (.57%) 2005: 8283 (.60%) 2006: 8532 (.60%) 2007: 8541 (.59%) 2008: 8778 (.59%) 2009: 8996 (.59%) 2010: 9268 (.59%) 2011: 9292 (.57%) 2012: 9362 (.56%) 2013: 9427 (.54%) 2014: 8820 (.49%) 2015: 8184 (.44%) 2016: 7489 (.40%) 2017: 7572 (.39%) 2018: 7667 (.39%) 2019: 8074 (.40%) 2020: 8209 (.40%) 2021: 8328 (.40%) 2022: 7958 (.39%) 2023: 7550 (.38%) 2024: 7091 (.36%)
As you can see, there were grounds for hope around 2019-2021. However, since 2021 the number of bachelor's degree completions in philosophy has fallen from 8328 to 7091 -- a 15% decline in just three years. The percentage of college students receiving philosophy degrees is at an all-time low.
Bachelor's degree completions in general have declined somewhat. They peaked at 2,068,932 in the 2020-2021 academic year and have declined slightly in every subsequent year, down to 1,959,325 for the 2023-2024 academic year -- a 5% decline overall. Possible explanations of this general trend include: a hangover from the pandemic, demographic shifts, or a decline in the perceived value of a university education.
I was curious whether the decline in philosophy majors would be more pronounced at schools with fewer philosophy majors. In a post from 2021, I had found that from 2010-2019, just 20 schools accounted for 17% of philosophy degrees awarded in the U.S. Returning to those same data for the 2023-2024 academic year, I found that the top 20 schools now account for 22% of all philosophy degrees awarded.
Another way to examine the increasing concentration is to check Carnegie classifications. Carnegie classifies undergraduate institutions as "selective" if they are in the 40th-80th percentile of selectivity in undergraduate admissions based on test scores, and "more selective" if they in the 80th-100th percentile of selectivity. Fifty-two percent of philosophy degree recipients are from "more selective" schools, compared to 25% of bachelor's degree recipients overall; and 84% of philosophy degree recipients are from either selective or more selective schools, compared to 62% overall. In 2010-2019, 45% of philosophy BAs were from more selective schools (vs. 23% overall) and 80% were from either selective or more selective schools (vs. 60% overall), confirming the increasing concentration.
Thus, relatively elite schools award disproportionately many philosophy degrees -- and this tendency has increased as the percentage of students earning philosophy degrees has declined.
For those who are curious which universities awarded the most philosophy degrees in 2023-2024, according to the NCES IPEDS classifications, it is:
University of Pennsylvania 193 University of California-Los Angeles 117 University of California-Santa Barbara 93 University of California-Berkeley 91 University of Washington-Seattle Campus 88 University of Southern California 84 New York University 76 University of Maryland-College Park 75 University of Chicago 71 Boston College 71 University of Colorado Boulder 69 Boston University 67 Arizona State University Digital Immersion 65 University of Wisconsin-Madison 57 Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 56 University of California-Davis 55 Emory University 55 Columbia University in the City of New York 53 University of Michigan-Ann Arbor 51 University of California-Santa Cruz 48 University of Florida 47 Arizona State University Campus Immersion 46 University of Pittsburgh-Pittsburgh Campus 46 The University of Texas at Austin 46
Note: Some of these numbers include interdisciplinary philosophy majors, such as Penn's Philosophy, Politics & Economics major.
All of these universities except the two Arizona State universities are Carnegie classified as "more selective".
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[1] Method: The NCES IPEDS databases, custom data files, EZ group U.S. only, completions by CIP number, including both first and second majors, CIP categories 16 for foreign language and literature, 23 for English, 54 for History, and 38.01 for Philosophy. Each year captures the academic year ending that spring. For example 2024 is the 2023-2024 academic year.
Hey Eric! I'm confused. The part about the concentration of philosophy majors at certain schools is interesting and potentially troubling. But in what sense is the philosophy major "plummeting"? It looks like philosophy is unique among these humanities fields in that it is not plummeting.
ReplyDeleteGemini and Me: What is conscience.."Rights without responsibility: A major concern is that viewing a corporation as a machine could justify treating it as having rights without the moral or ethical responsibilities of a human. Critics worry that, if not carefully regulated, granting rights to AI or AI-run corporations could lead to entities that can leverage legal protections but lack a Conscience"...
Delete...Academics, please use Philosophy for the sake of Conscience...
Not sure which view is accurate here. I came late to the rodeo because I had less experience thinking. Wasted years, trying to find a "fit" for myself, while worrying about fitting. What I have noticed is there is something like a cyclical acceptance and rejection of things philosophical. A clue here may lie in which philosophers have been accepted; which, rejected and what was going on in society generally at those respective times. This is work-in-progress...
ReplyDeleteSo, congruent with your stats, the west coast has most of the sunshine for philosophy degree recipients. I wonder if that is somehow consistent with my notions, or, if the skew is due to some other influence(s)? No, I have no analytical evidence, one way or another---nor do I know from where such evidence could emerge. Attitudinal differences, place to place, are difficult to gauge. Except maybe for political attitudes? Well, there are trends and tendencies, right? I can't easily measure these influences in trying to assess that. Can anyone? Hmmmm... Philosophy is so uncertain, eh?
ReplyDeleteHmmmmph...Seems we have a CEO (using the designation, loosely) whose ego, vanity and narcissism are hazardous. I am alluding here to Arnold & Gemini's observations today@PDT. Conscience requires something more than solely an "argument" for AI consciousNESS. In my primitive mind, consciousness is a term of endearment. I don't think AI has capacity to grasp such distinctions, in any but an artificial way. Hell, PEOPLE are losing the capacity,and the sentience that goes with it. Seems to me.
ReplyDeleteFolk wisdom, updated: You can make orange juice from oranges; apple juice, from apples. The products are juice. But the one is not the same as the other. If, and only if, I am missing something important here, my bad, and, I do not care. Looks like many feel the same way? Hmmmmph...Sure.