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Post 0

Friday, September 4, 2015 - 10:24amSanction this postReply
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I'm considering my options about what to do with my life. I've distilled it down to several possibilities based on my strengths and interests. One of my major passions is linguistics and foreign languages. I can't, however, figure out how to turn the practise of translation/interpreting into a central purpose. It's really something you just go in and do. There's no overall progression or overall long term outlook. The writer writes for express something they wish to see expressed. And the inventor changes the world. The businessman grows his business. The musician... etc.Another concern is that linguistics is useless. Or that I'll have all these language skills and nothing interesting to say.

Post 1

Friday, September 4, 2015 - 1:25pmSanction this postReply
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The career or sales & business comes to mind.  Businesses that have international customers like to have salesmen & businessmen (project managers etc) who can speak the languages of their customers.  Just the other day Peter Schiff was saying he had job openings for salesmen for his investing brokerage company, and he particularly wanted salesmen who could speak multiple languages.



Post 2

Friday, September 4, 2015 - 2:47pmSanction this postReply
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I'm assuming you are a supporter of Objectivism or Liberatarianism... If that's so, then you could find out what kind of financial rewards exist for translating books by your favorite authors into other languages.  If someone who is a liberal at heart worked for a publisher who paid them to translate one of Ayn Rand's works into another language, I shudder to think of what some of sense-of-life subtelties came out like.

 

There are also books whose copyright has expired, mostly classics, and it might be that you could translate them into other languages and publish them (holding some sort of copyright, I believe).  They could be published digitally.

 

And there are many authors that are currently publishing digitally to Amazon's Kindle and would probably provide a generous split of royalties for translations to other languages.  This is a good time since it is a fairly new market, one that is growing, and other nations lag behind the U.S.  I think Amazon makes public the sales numbers of all books - certainly a nice statistic to guide in which of the books you like might also generate nice royalties in other countries. 

 

(These ideas are just off the top of my head and may have good reasons why they wouldn't work.)

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You wrote:

 

Another concern is that linguistics is useless. Or that I'll have all these language skills and nothing interesting to say.

Being concerned about not having anything interesting to say is the wrong approach.  You shouldn’t speak or write to be of interest to others, but to enjoy the productive process of the writing or speaking.  And if you are still young (twenties?) I'd put more time in becoming the kind of person, in terms of character and basic skills, than working about stepping into just the right job.

 

Only a tiny portion of the population have some kind of passionate career drive that they are clear about early in life.  Most of us have to find those areas where we feel really good about the particular productive activities we engage in.   In that case it often involves some experimentation.

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Just thought I’d mention this:  Leonard Peikoff has a recorded course titled “Philosophy of Grammar” and in its new digital, downloadable audio format, it is very convenient and I highly recommend it.  For you this might be a fascinating step away from the usual linguistics courses – away from the anthropology/phonetics/semantics/semiotics or typical Linguistic Analysis philosophical nonsense to an objective philosophical side of language as a logically functional representation of thought.  I mention this because things are on sale at the Ayn Rand Store for about a week, and because I have the CD version they made this from and can recommend it highly.  It’s available for $17.50 and when the download is unzipped it is over 19 hours of recorded lecture. 

 

https://estore.aynrand.org/p/72/principles-of-grammar-mp3-download



Post 3

Saturday, September 5, 2015 - 10:10amSanction this postReply
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Peter,

A lapsed contributor to RoR, Ted Keer, was interested in linguistics.  An example of one of his discussions is here.   He has reviewed many books on Amazon regarding language and word origins.  He was one of the smartest people on the board and very interesting.  I think if your interest goes there, follow it.  Only good things will come of it.  Best regards.



Post 4

Saturday, September 5, 2015 - 10:50amSanction this postReply
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Another possibility is to master a particular language or two and make a career as an academic or a translator. A specialist in French, for example, or Asian languages could still make use of a broader interest in languages by doing linguistics or comparative literature.



Post 5

Saturday, September 5, 2015 - 7:37pmSanction this postReply
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I work as a technical writer. Right now, I had to pass on a job opportunity that requires knowledge of Korean.  I am just saying that opportunities exist.  Moreover, they are independent of government security services, such as the NSA, that always are looking for people with language skills. I do not know Klingon, however, I experienced a physical resonance with ST:E's "Hoshi" who said that she does not "study" languages, she "perceives patterns."  I have had classes in German, Italian, Arabic, and Japanese. I have greeted my neigbors in Uzbek, and my co-workers in Hungarian.  But, then, at my community college, I heard two people speaking Fortran 20 years before I took a class in Java.

 

My advice: Go for it.



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