Didn't see any counterarguments in the rest of your post, rather further explanations for your standpoint, and didn't see any concrete attacks on mine (except that "reality" nonsense which was just an empty postulate) so sure.
It's not a purely personally developed perspective on things though. My philosophy professor actually told me this could be the case. I know that idiots exist within academia, but he was right about everything else, so meh.
I'm going to respond to this:

You're speaking to a guy who studies humanities, pal. I am not questioning their value, I am questioning the *relevance* of philosophy in this day and age, especially as far as ordinary people are concerned.
You can hold masturbatory philosophical sessions with your similarly inclined friends in a local café
I'm not that guy. Please don't be rude.
as much as you want, but the truth is the general public is largely disinterested in whatever you have to say. Which is a bit of a problem if your predictions of public reactions to this and that are based on philosophy.
My original posts were about the elitary cultural sphere of the literary tradition, but I did not base my public reaction on philosophy. I need to outline the three views in my last post, views that do actually not have anything in common with my original point... I think you're misunderstanding me and not recognizing I'm saying a couple of different things here.
1) The humanities will get a sharp kick in the butt upon finding alien life as they are by humans for humans about defining human things compared to other things.
2) I think everyone will generally be overwhelmed by the findings of life in the universe, but I admit I have no premise for it; I have nothing against conceding that point. I will be surprised myself at least.

3) Peripherical humanities don't really exist as their influential sphere is always great.
And on that, I'm
honestly completely baffled that you study humanities, though. I did not expect that from you, especially with your strange responses. We're part of different schools, I guess? You're still in the Czech Republic, right? I was there a short while ago visiting my ex' cousin - according to what I heard of your schools, you had a much (bear with my terminology here, I'm going to expand on it) stricter and more mechanical view of things. Saying that "philosophy is peripheral" is something quite different from what I'm hearing here, where it is said that influences of everything from philosophy to poetry slam makes... ripples in the cultural waves, so to speak, having an interweaved indirect effect on everything when produced. It's a basic humanist argument I hear when they want to cut down funding for the state-subsidized cultural and subcultural institutions we have: ranging from universities to classical orchestras to poetry cafés to private artists to street performance schools. Basically, cultural influences from the humanities promote creativity or different thought.
"Philosophy is peripheral" might be equally true here, but it's just not important since even peripheral things have influence on everything. According to that thought system, even this is influenced by philosophy:
The issue with that kind of thought is that it doesn't produce any concrete kind of links between the thinker and the effect, which is why it's neglected in more mechanical schools with a more "strict" view on knowledge. It's simply too inconcrete if you want to get profitable results from your universities. I'm not saying it's a bad thing, I'm just saying it's different. (Although there's a tendency to change the Danish system towards those ideals atm.)
Basically, if you think those girls aren't under the influence of philosophy or you think they are, but that it's not notable how and therefore irrelevant, you don't think the same way I do. And there's nothing wrong with that. I am, after all, pretty long-haired, both physically and mentally. I'm most probably just a gay hippie.
