@Ansiktsburk As poorly as you expressed your original question, it nevertheless invokes a most elemental problem: the relation between the philosopher and scientist to the political community, which has a very long history indeed...
The original philosophers were the “natural” sort, ie, the mathematicians physicists and astronomers. They were born with a love for the understanding of, and an ability to understand, the rationale for the movement of earthly and heavenly bodies, the laws governing geometric figures and the behavior of levers and sunlight, etc. The study of man, however, was of little interest to them at that time, probably because of his precarious nature, due to the admixture of chance in him, his free-will...
But these natural philosophers, the Pre-Socratic, though all they really cared about were their circles and squares, their their atoms and astral bodies, were prone to become exiles and enemies of the state whenever their discoveries conflicted with the religious beliefs of their communities. For example, the findings of Thales, the first to predict an eclipse of the sun, showed that the heavenly bodies move by natural law, not by Zeus’ will...
But they could also be protectors of their communities, as Archimedes proved to be when, through engines of war designed by his novel art of mechanics, he held off from Syracuse the invading Roman army, burning and wrecking their fleet with his mirrors and cables...
Archimedes, nevertheless, ordered that all his manuscripts on engineering be burnt upon his death as being beneath the dignity of posterity...thus proving himself to be of pure philosophic impulse, caring only about things theoretical and disdaining the practical.
These ancient examples encapsulate the difficulties philosophy or science face when confronted with its relation to community, the mass of untheoretical men it must live with down here on earth, a Thales falling into a well, or an Archimedes being run through by a Roman soldier because he refused to quit his geometrical meditation before its completion rather than be led to the conquering Marcellus. Later philosophers began to turn their attention, therefore, to the human things, and soon men like Socrates were reasoning about the just and unjust, good and evil, the well and poorly lived life, becoming introspective and examining their relationship to other men.
The most powerful earliest attempt to solve the problem was Plato’s dialogues, and he took the side of theory over practice, appealing to the most influential in Ancient Greece, the young aristocrats who were best educated and best positioned to gain power (only remember Alcibiades) and thus condemn to death or exile philosophers. Plato’s Socrates is shown to be their best friend, using his theory to help them examine their own accidental lives for the benefit of all, and thusly promoting an acceptance of, if not participation in, the theoretical life a very few men only are blessed to be endowed with by nature...
After the Dark Ages, however, and the Renaissance, when philosophers (who had never disappeared or become extinct, only gone underground) re-emerged, for some reason, perhaps because of the advance of natural science, perhaps from weariness of persecution, led by Machiavelli, and and followed by Locke, Hobbes, Hume, et al, they began to promote the practical side of philosophy, what good it can do for men at large in a radical about-face to Plato and Aristotle and the medieval philosophers. Their impulse was political: if philosophers become willing, against their nature, to benefit men, maybe men will become more acceptant of them, who only want to understand the nature of things, and will then see them more as an Archimedean military engineer, and not so much as a Thalian well-dweller, who, looking up to heaven, failed to appreciate that he lived on earth, where you can step into pot-holes while contemplating the divine...
Btw, Thales, beset by accusations that his science was impractical, entered the olive trade and had great success, proving that problem solving can be used by thoughtful men to solve men’s many practical problems, whether in business or trade...
...but the same problem remains for philosophers, for theoretical men to our day: “am I a lover of truth first, or a benefactor of ppl? Am I a seeker after the nature of viruses, or the man who tells you how best to arrange public policy to avoid its spread? Am I the discoverer of the effects of greenhouse gases on the environment, or am I the one who best shapes public policy to curtail emissions?