Thoreau says that we have professors of philosophy but not philosophers. He

Thoreau says that we have professors of philosophy but not philosophers. He

Thoreau says that we have professors of philosophy but not philosophers. He said that over 150 years ago and it's obviously more true in 2009 than it was then. Could it be that what's missing today is leisure for philosophic souls to contemplate, inquire, wonder, converse, etc? What is the relationship between leisure--in the classic sense of schole or otium--and philosophy? I understand philosophy to be a love of wisdom that manifests itself as a way of life - especially a way of life predicated upon leisure and animated by the endless search for and cultivation of self-knowledge. Am I correct? Is leisure an essential prerequisite for philosophy, or can it be reduced to a mere profession, like law or medicine? What in the world do people mean when they speak of "doing" philosophy?

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