Philosophy

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fromsfist.com
2 hours ago

Peter Thiel Speaking In SF Tonight, Thinks He Knows Who the Antichrist Is

Several wealthy lucky right-wing tech bros will get to hear Peter Thiel speak tonight at SF's Commonwealth Club on the topic of the Antichrist, which is a funny thing to claim to know about when you've got all manner of Jeff Epstein connections. There is apparently an emerging evangelical Christian movement going on in wealthiest pockets of the tech industry. This stands to reason I guess, because tech wants to control the masses, and religion has always proven an excellent way to control the masses.
Philosophy
#chinese-philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
16 hours ago

Hidden volcanoes: are we ignoring the next big eruption? | Aeon Essays

El Chichón erupted explosively in 1982 (VEI 5), unexpectedly destroying jungle and settlements, causing thousands of casualties and widespread ash, lahars, and long-term landscape damage.
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
14 hours ago

Conspiracy Theories & Not Reading it Right

Conspiracy theories spread through misinterpretation, sensational headlines, and reposting, exemplified by the Bill Gates microchip vaccine myth's evolution.
#rhetoric
fromApaonline
12 hours ago
Philosophy

Leonine Chameleons: Relativism and Fascism

Some philosophers' disdain for rhetoric and sophistry undermines their ability to counter fascism and to communicate effectively with opponents.
fromA Philosopher's Blog
6 days ago
Philosophy

Refusing" vs "Declining" Vaccines, Revisited

Word choice (e.g., 'refuse' vs 'decline') shapes moral perception, signaling active rejection or decline and altering whether an action appears morally positive or negative.
Philosophy
fromAeon
16 hours ago

A Kichwa activist on ayahuasca's rise - and what it really means to her people | Aeon Videos

Nina Gualinga links extractivism and commodification to threats against Sarayaku's land, spiritual traditions, and Indigenous rights, highlighting environmental justice and community resilience.
#consciousness
Philosophy
fromThe Verge
9 hours ago

Google thinks it can have AI summaries and a healthy web, too

Maintain free 10 blue links search model while adding contextual summaries to meet changing user preferences and preserve a healthy internet ecosystem.
Philosophy
fromKotaku
9 hours ago

Don't Bring Me Trolley Problems, Bring Me Trolley Solutions

The Trolley Solution gamifies classic trolley-problem variants into absurd, comedic 3D scenarios and mini-games that complicate moral choices with surreal, original twists.
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
2 days ago

Bergson and Intuitive Knowledge

Bergson argues that lived duration is absolute reality and direct intuition can access it, opposing Kant's view that time is merely a mental category limiting knowledge.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Are Bullies Responsible for Their Choices?

It is only in this existential reality of the present where decisions, choices, behaviors, and actions can be initiated. What that then means, in terms of bullying, which only takes place as a choice in the present, is that one can choose to be a bully, or one can choose not to be a bully. Either choice will have consequences, for which the individual will be and is responsible (Falla et al., 2023; Menesini et al., 2013; Purje, 2014).
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromTechCrunch
1 day ago

Users turn to chatbots for spiritual guidance | TechCrunch

AI-powered chatbots are increasingly used for religious engagement while risking reinforcement of users' preexisting beliefs and misinformation.
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
2 days ago

Race/Gender Swapping: Why Not Just Create New Characters?

Race/gender swaps in fiction often trigger objections that can be genuine aesthetic questions or covert dog-whistle expressions of racism and sexism.
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
2 days ago

3-2-1, Leap! - San Francisco Bay Times

You may have seen my TEDx talk. If so, you know its premise is having the courage to take a leap. My first story was about the first time I jumped off a high dive at the swimming pool. The second story was the leap of coming out. Both of those were scary. Did they prepare me for leaping out of plane 14,500 feet in the air? Not so much. You can't die from the first two.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

Michael J. Sandel: The left needs to learn to speak the language of patriotism'

Then they return with force, helping us understand today's world, explaining how and when it fell apart, and what allowed someone like Donald Trump to rise to power. The American theorist, a leading voice in progressive thought, dissects causes and consequences with surgical precision in each of his books, and never shies away from bringing some of the great ideas of classical and contemporary thought to everyday citizens.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
3 days ago

Fictional Outrage at Fiction, Revisited

Manufactured outrage over fictional works weaponizes hyperbole and falsehoods, causing real-world harm like harassment and political polarization.
Philosophy
fromAeon
3 days ago

When dementia took her husband, she took on his story | Aeon Essays

Mike developed progressive behavioral changes—apathy, compulsions, poor judgment, hygiene decline, and occupational decline—leading to public intoxication and marital strain.
fromApaonline
3 days ago

Step Away from the Chatbot: a Letter to a Student about AI and Creativity

I'm glad this letter reached you before you fed that assignment prompt from your Creative Writing professor into ChatGPT. I'd like to share some ideas that may be helpful as you decide whether to follow through on that plan. First of all, I'm sorry you've been finding the poetry unit of Introduction to Creative Writing so tedious and uninspiring. It's true that you probably won't be writing much poetry in your future career.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
3 days ago

Social scientists have long found women tend to be more religious than men - but Gen Z may show a shift

Historical pattern of women being more religious than men is narrowing in the U.S., especially among younger cohorts like Generation Z, though evidence remains mixed.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
3 days ago

Cosmism: The 19th-century movement to reach space and immortality

Death can be overcome through scientific and technological advancement, uniting humanity toward immortality as promoted by Russian Cosmism and echoed by contemporary futurists.
Philosophy
fromYoga Journal
3 days ago

Mercury is Messing With You Again. And No, It's Not in Retrograde.

Mercury cazimi—Mercury within one degree of the Sun—infuses the mind with renewed clarity, potency, and expanded consciousness.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Externalities of a Digital Life

To what extent does the digital world create a culture in which responsibility is denied or avoided, and what are the consequences of this failure to take ownership of a problem? Taking responsibility may well be a predictor of psychological good health. Owning one's own problems empowers individuals, and creates internal motivation-lessening the chances of depression, produced by a sense of powerlessness; and reducing anxiety created by not seeing how to cope with an issue.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBoston.com
3 days ago

A Thoreau impersonator bids a fond farewell to Walden Pond

Richard Smith retired from portraying Henry David Thoreau at Walden Pond after 26 years, leaving the replica cabin on the historical Sept. 6 departure date.
fromA Philosopher's Blog
4 days ago

Ivermectin & Epistemology, Revisited

While this drug is best known as a horse de-wormer, it is also used to treat humans for a variety of conditions and many medications are used to treat conditions they were not originally intended to treat. Viagra is a famous example of this. As such, the idea of re-purposing a medication is not itself foolish. But there are obvious problems with taking ivermectin to treat COVID.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
4 days ago

How David Hume split literature from philosophy | Aeon Essays

David Hume challenged the use of character sketches in philosophical method, helping separate literature from philosophy.
fromAeon
4 days ago

Dive deep into an egg cell to see how ageing reboots when a new life begins | Aeon Videos

The biomedical animator Drew Barry is known for his dazzling visualisations of biological processes that unfold on microscopic scales. As enlightening as it is arresting, his imagery straddles the line between science and art, as seen in his work as the in-house animator for the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research in Melbourne, Australia, and in his music video collaboration with Björk.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
4 days ago

Neither One, nor Two. Philosophy of Pregnancy

Pregnancy profoundly transforms bodily experience and subjectivity, challenging views that treat it as merely biological and external to women's agency.
Philosophy
fromHarvard Gazette
4 days ago

What is creativity without sweat and tears? - Harvard Gazette

Outsourcing creative effort to generative AI risks depriving individuals of meaning and credit derived from struggle and invested resources.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Are You Wise? Also... What, Actually, Is Wisdom?

Wisdom is a higher-order, metacognitive capacity tied to maturity, reflection, and life experience, yet it often lacks a clear, consistently taught definition.
Philosophy
fromFatherly
4 days ago

What 28 Years Later Can Tell Us About Men Today

An aspirational masculinity grounded in provider, procreator, and protector roles can counteract lost, toxic, and aimless male identities.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

Sacred texts and 'little bells': The building blocks of Arvo Part's musical masterpieces

Arvo Pärt's tintinnabuli and Orthodox-informed compositions achieved global influence across concerts, film, and diverse artists, evoking profound spirituality and 'bright sadness'.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
5 days ago

Historical Models and Representative Democracy

Classical republican ideas were adapted by anti-colonial nationalists in British India to critique liberal representative democracy and inspire civic republican claims.
Philosophy
fromAeon
5 days ago

A neglected Dominican sugar town, as seen through the eyes of a 12-year-old local | Aeon Videos

Children in Dominican bateyes face poverty and limited services yet find joy and purpose through creativity, baseball, and rap despite the sugar industry's decline.
#analogical-reasoning
#existentialism
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Problem With Your Authentic Self

Our world is obsessed with authenticity. As I illustrate in my latest book, we want authentic brands, authentic leaders, authentic influencers, and authentic products. "Authenticity" is slapped on labels from organic food to handmade soap to political campaigns. On social media, being "raw" or "real" is the ultimate currency. Even at work, organizations urge us to "bring our whole selves" to the office, as though that were always desirable for anyone involved.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
5 days ago

Fearing death keeps us from living. 3 experts explain.

Death is more than a medical endpoint; it underpins evolution, shapes psychology and society, and should be reclaimed from medicine's exclusive control.
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

Shame can silence, subjugate and damage us - a philosopher considers its implications

To read Frederic Gros's A Philosophy of Shame is to be reminded of how vulnerable we are to the emotion's inhibitions and agonies. We shame, we are ashamed, and we expend significant energy imagining shameful situations so we might avoid them. Shame makes us vulnerable to humiliation and ruin, and provides a method by which we can humiliate and ruin others. The cycle is often self-perpetuating: shame begets shaming.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
6 days ago

Why might the Big Bang theory be in crisis very soon? | Aeon Essays

The Universe began in a hot, dense state (Big Bang), but the theory contains unresolved problems and recent observations may soon challenge it.
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

You want to talk about a world of lies?' Teaching philosophy in prison | Jay Miller

At 8.30am sharp, a white van pulls up to the North Carolina college campus where the Outsiders are huddled in their black shirts, sleepy-faced but in good spirits. They pile in quickly, knowing there is a tight schedule to stick to. A 10-minute drive from campus, then the van pulls up under the arch of a large metal gate crowned with razor wire.
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Does Society Have Too Many Rules?

My wife and I, our son and daughter, and my in-laws share a single house in the Long Island suburbs. Our place is big, but crowded: all of us have hobbies, and so every shelf or surface contains toys, books, art supplies, sporting goods, craft projects, cameras, musical instruments, or kitchen gadgets. Before the table can be set for dinner, it must be cleared of a board game or marble run.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

At Its Best, Decision-Making Is an Art as Well as a Science

Rational Choice Theory's reliance on quantification can be misleading; decision-making requires qualitative judgment and an artful balance with quantitative analysis.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Are Some People Evil?

Ordinary people can commit harmful or abusive acts under particular situational pressures, and understanding those causes may enable prevention.
Philosophy
fromThe Nation
6 days ago

The Ghosts of Ingeborg Bachmann

Ingeborg Bachmann's early novella anticipates lifelong themes—language's limits, sexual violence, and a shift from realist clarity toward later oneiric, mystical concerns.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Invitation to Pre-college Philosophy

As a master's student in philosophy at Ewha Womans University in South Korea, I joined the Ewha Saturday Philosophy Class (ESPC), a Philosophy for Children (P4C) program, as both an organizer and lecturer. ESPC is a semester-long, biweekly program for students ages 8-16, based on Matthew Lipman's P4C curriculum. As a philosophy Ph.D. student at the University of Iowa, I've been co-teaching middle school students at ESPC (this time online) and participating in the Iowa Lyceum, a week-long online summer philosophy program for high school
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Access Intimacy & Killjoy Kinship

Access intimacy emerges when people disclose access needs and others respond with understanding and enthusiastic care, transforming hostile academic spaces into mutual support.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Cyber-Intimacies: Emotional Harms, Sexual Liberation, and Education in the Digital Age

Emerging technology has permeated our intimate relationships, altering how we connect, maintain bonds, explore desires, and define love. Online dating platforms, virtual dates, and romantic exchanges via social media remain essential beyond the pandemic, sustaining relationships in the digital realm. Meanwhile, pornography algorithms, innovations like smart sex toys, sexbots, and AI companions can enhance physical intimacy and challenge taboos, providing new avenues for individuals to engage in sexual practices on their own... or directly with artificial products.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

How an invasive shrub derailed visions of prosperity in Kenya | Aeon Essays

Kenya's arid north has always stirred the imaginations of those who visit. Its open, scorched bushland distributed over exposed geological formations and crosscut by riverine tentacles never fails to elicit impressions of emptiness and remoteness. To most outsiders, this is a timeless land. It is beautiful but unproductive, so the imaginary goes. It is backward. Its vulnerabilities - drought, famine, conflict, poverty - are inherent. Radical change is needed: a new way of doing things to unlock vast untapped potential and bring prosperity.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

After the fall of the Iron Curtain, a young couple discovers a strange, newly open world | Aeon Videos

For this intimate project, he dusted off his parents' long-buried VHS recordings, most of them shot before he was born, after the fall of the Iron Curtain. The footage depicts the pair as their homeland was experiencing a fragile new sense of hope, and follows them on their travels while working for the World Bank, documenting journeys to countries including Vietnam, India and Cuba.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Work-in Progress resuming sessions for Autumn, 2025

We are delighted to announce a new call of applications for the "Works in Progress" series, a part of the 四海为学 "Collaborative Learning" Project. This series aims to provide an academic forum for graduate students and early career scholars engaged in Chinese or comparative philosophy to share and improve upon their projects with peers in conference-style panel presentations. Each session features a chairperson, 2-3 presenters, commentators, and an audience of participants who will provide constructive feedback on content, structure, or presentation style.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Marina van Zuylen, author: We spend our lives acting for others'

Academic and writer Marina van Zuylen, who holds a PhD in Comparative Literature from Harvard, left Columbia to devote herself to an unusual project: Bard College's Clemente Course in the Humanities, which offers free humanities courses that can later be converted into college credits. She taught there voluntarily for 25 years, until a philanthropist decided to fund the initiative and turn her commitment into a professorship. This is a clear example that Van Zuylen's priority is not personal recognition.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromDefector
1 week ago

Thank You, Melvyn Bragg | Defector

Melvyn Bragg hosted In Our Time for 26 years, shaping a wide-ranging public-education radio programme using three-expert conversations across disciplines.
Philosophy
fromYoga Journal
1 week ago

What the Upcoming Eclipse Season Means for You, According to Your Astrological Sign

September 2025 eclipse season — lunar eclipse in Pisces on Sept 7 and solar eclipse in Virgo on Sept 22 — catalyzes significant aligned personal transformation.
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Briely Noted Book Reviews

Augustine's African heritage influenced his theological self-conception; teen films charted adolescence's rise as a distinct cultural, economic, and social demographic.
fromThe Wire Magazine - Adventures In Modern Music
1 week ago

Against The Grain: Mattie Colquhoun on Mark Fisher's cultural pessimism - The Wire

For Fredric Jameson, for instance, while modernism "thought compulsively about the New and tries to watch its coming into being", postmodernism "looks for breaks, for events rather than new worlds". The latter definition, encapsulating the cultural logic of late capitalism, is all the more intriguing in the context of music culture, since it has found so many breaks to play around with.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

Value Vagueness

Florida Republican leaders claim to champion freedom while enacting laws that restrict speech, curriculum, and personal health choices, revealing value vagueness and inconsistency.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How to Deal with Insults

Assess insults by their truth, source, and motive; learn from fair-minded critics, ignore or pity baseless insults, avoid anger or retaliation.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Job Opening: Associate Professor/Assistant Professor (Daoism / Religious Studies) at CUHK

The Chinese University of Hong Kong is hiring an associate/assistant professor specializing in Daoism in the Department of Cultural and Religious Studies.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

ToC: Asian Studies 13:3

Philosophical concept of nothingness is examined across Asian and Western traditions, including Buddhism, Daoism, aesthetics, structuralism, and comparative analyses.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Upcoming Collaborative Learning Project Roundtable

四海为学 Collaborative Learning Project hosts a roundtable on Studies and Translations of the Tsinghua Manuscripts on September 9 at 20:30 Beijing time.
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

Woke Elites, Blue Collars and Race

"Wokeness", like "cancel culture" and "critical race theory", is ill-defined and used as a vague catch-all for things the right does not like. In large part, the war on wokeness has been manufactured by the right's elite. In part, the war arises from grievances of the base. There are even some non-imaginary conflicts in this war -at least on the part of the Americans that can be seen as blue-collar workers.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Why Perfectionists Are Obsessed With Proving Themselves

Perfectionism is philosophically encapsulated by an existential conviction. Many perfectionists are not only certain of the objective validity of their rigid way of living; they're also emboldened by the sense that their lives have an objective meaning, afforded to them in the way a god may grant his messiah a grand objective. Peers and loved ones question the perfectionist's obsessiveness because its root is often hidden, protected from the slings and arrows of reason. Perfectionism persists in large part because it remains unchallenged.
Philosophy
fromMedium
2 weeks ago

Musk thinks UX and coding are the same, this absurdity leads to chaos

Bruno Latour is an intriguing person. He first caught global attention with his (and co-author Steve Woolgar's) 1979 book Laboratory Life. In this work, Latour and Woolgar observed laboratory scientists ethnographically. Meaning, they'd follow scientists similar to how primatologists would follow chimpanzees in the wild. White coats were investigated in their natural habitat. This way, Latour thought he could analyse the behaviour of scientists and verify how discussions, negotiations, and rivalries shape what becomes "knowledge."
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How to Navigate Life's Overlapping Systems

Individuals navigate overlapping social systems by social learning, but misinterpreting others' experiences and dynamics can cause harmful decisions while balancing agency against larger systemic forces.
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

Bias & Medical Devices

Medical devices and their software can produce biased results, performing worse for women and people with darker skin, due to sensor limitations and nondiverse training.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

APA Member Interview, Claire Becerra

Claire Becerra is a Ph.D student in philosophy at Northwestern University, with interests in the philosophy of language, social epistemology, and the philosophy of education, all of which are informed by her indigeneity. She is a member of the Tohono O'odham Nation, and currently splits time between Chicago, New York City, and Arizona. What are you working on right now? These days, I'm spending most of my time developing my dissertation, which applies a philosophical lens to indigenous land acknowledgments.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Astrology's appeal in uncertain times

Astrology remains popular as a resource for making sense of identity and uncertainty rather than primarily for predicting the future.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Put down your phone and engage in boredom - how philosophy can help with digital overload

Digital platforms convert human attention into exploitable resources, producing relentless distraction that erodes silence, slowness, and capacity for deep reflection.
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

Mandatory Vaccination, Revisited

Mandatory pandemic vaccination for students is morally justified by utilitarian prevention of greater harm, with medical exemptions and contested employer mandates.
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

Pollution: The Ethics of NIMBY

Pollution is concentrated on the poor, politically uninfluential, and racial minorities, who bear disproportionate health and environmental burdens.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

3 states push to put the Ten Commandments back in school - banking on new guidance at the Supreme Court

State laws requiring Ten Commandments displays in public schools face federal court blocks as litigation seeks to overturn a 45-year Supreme Court precedent.
fromBoston Condos For Sale Ford Realty
1 week ago

A Parable About A Boston Leather District Condo Broker Boston Condos For Sale Ford Realty

A Boston Leather District condo broker, hearing of a distant land with a single, magnificent pearl, left his prosperous real estate office and journeyed for years to find it. He endured hardship, faced dangers, and spent his fortune. Finally locating the fabled shore. There, to his dismay, he found the pearl was not an object, but the land itself-a place of peace and beauty discovered only by those who embraced true spiritual wealth through their faith.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How to Cope With Bad News

Contextualization, negative visualization, and transformation are three Stoic cognitive strategies that reframe bad news to generate perspective, resilience, and constructive emotional responses.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Civil servant exodus: How employees wrestle with whether to stay, speak up or go

Federal civil servants view their work as a mission-driven calling, but widespread firings and political attacks have forced many to leave or consider leaving.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

CFP: Franciscan and Neo-Confucian philosophy

Call for abstracts to compare Franciscan and Neo-Confucian philosophies by exploring their metaxological space, mutual influences, divergences, and contemporary significance.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Friday, September 19: "Engineering the Dao: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Trust the Mengzi" Columbia Society for Comparative Philosophy

Mengzi constructs dao as pragmatic frameworks that engineer moral behavior and institutions using human psychology, cultural forms, and existing political structures.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

Why we should tune into the orchestra of the animal world | Aeon Essays

Sound underpins life, healing, and human connection to nature, shaping embodiment, harmony, and cultural practices across traditions.
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

Space Joyrides for the Rich

While the rich have long enjoyed luxury cars, mansions and yachts, their newest luxury vehicle is the spaceship. Musk has the most useful rockets as his SpaceX vessels can put satellites into orbit and reach the International Space Station. While they do make some innovations, they are more of an evolution of existing rockets rather than a revolution in space travel. Virgin Galactic has a spaceplane, which can be likened to a passenger version of the old X-15.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Angle Reviews Li, Reshaping Confucianism

Chenyang Li synthesizes and refines groundbreaking Confucian philosophical arguments across harmony, care, ritual, gender, freedom, equality, friendship, longevity, and civic education.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Alchemy of Opposites

We are told from childhood to "play nice," to keep the peace, to smooth things over. But what if this instinct toward harmony is actually holding us back? The real danger to our relationships, workplaces, and communities isn't conflict-it's indifference. Conflict, when engaged constructively, is the spark that ignites growth. It is the friction that polishes rough ideas into breakthroughs, the heat that forges raw ore into something enduring.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How Music Can Help You Flourish

Music education and creative aging promote human flourishing, meaningfulness, and well-being; promoting happiness should be a central aim.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Ethical Leadership, Trevor Hedberg

Ethical Leadership develops leaders' moral responsibility, moral reasoning skills, interdisciplinary understanding, and oral, collaborative, and project-based assessment methods.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

What happens when the progressive idea of cultural 'safety' turns on itself?

Safety-focused speech rules and cultural-safety requirements have led to speaker withdrawals and cancellations, sometimes restricting progressive voices and being repurposed against marginalized discourse.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Walking toward Wisdom: the Aporetics of Hiking

Intentional hiking deepens attention, resilience, community bonds, and ethical engagement with self, others, and the environment.
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

Should Police be a Protected Category?, Revisited

While most states have hate crime statutes, only about five include law enforcement officers as a protected category. Utah is one of these states. After a 2021 traffic stop for speeding, Lauren Gibson is alleged to have stomped on a "Back the Blue" sign while "smirking in an intimidating manner" at a deputy. She was charged with a hate crime for her actions. These leads to two issues. The first is a specific matter: did her actions constitute a hate crime?
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

The cold-plunge fallacy: Why some fads may never work for you

Evaluate actions by considering immediate pleasures and their before-and-after consequences rather than focusing solely on momentary benefits.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Europe is the core America joined as an offshoot': the historian challenging what the west' means

The West remains resilient; Europe forms its enduring core even if American leadership wanes, and the West can persist without permanent US dominance.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Personal power v. socialized power: What Machiavelli and St. Francis can tell us about modern CEOs

Niccolò Machiavelli, the infamous author of " The Prince," wrote in the 1500s that the ideal leader makes and breaks solemn agreements. He creates alliances with weak allies to defeat a powerful enemy and then eliminates them one by one. He blames his next-in-charge for his own mistakes, and he executes opponents in public. St. Francis of Assisi was the antithesis of a Machiavellian leader.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

No suffering, no death, no limits: the nanobots pipe dream | Aeon Essays

In 2000, Bill Joy, the co-founder and chief scientist of the computer company Sun Microsystems, sounded an alarm about technology. In an article in Wired titled 'Why the Future Doesn't Need Us', Joy wrote that we should 'limit development of the technologies that are too dangerous, by limiting our pursuit of certain kinds of knowledge.' He feared a future in which our inventions casually wipe us from the face of the planet.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Cultivating Ethical Attention in Psychology

Train attention to cultivate presence, perception, and responsiveness so psychologists notice micro-ethical moments and act with care rather than rely solely on rules.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A Short History of Stupidity by Stuart Jeffries review comfortably dumb?

Stupidity is a multifaceted, historically shifting concept with definitional ambiguity, encompassing ignorance, foolishness, obtuseness, and cognitive failings reframed by the Enlightenment.
Philosophy
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago

Remembering What Truly Matters in a World Chasing Success - Tiny Buddha

Meaning-driven work yields deeper fulfillment than fame, visibility, and productivity-focused definitions of success.
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