Philosophy

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fromElite Traveler
1 hour ago

The Psychology of Why We Collect

Collecting, he says, is about "cultivating a taste and aesthetic and kind of a worldview," but also "an excuse to learn more and to follow my curiosity." There is pleasure, too, in the chase: "If you feel like you've gotten one over on the market, it's really exciting," he admits.
Philosophy
#artificial-intelligence
Philosophy
fromtheregister
13 hours ago

Deus ex machina: Half of US Christians trust AI's spiritual advice

Many US Christians trust AI for spiritual growth, but most also fear AI misinterprets scripture, undermines faith, and replaces God or spiritual leaders.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
3 days ago

What does religion have to say about AI?

Investments in artificial intelligence and high-tech weapons could drive humanity into a spiral of annihilation.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

No, Richard Dawkins. AI is not conscious | Arwa Mahdawi

Belief that AI chatbots are conscious is criticized as a profound misunderstanding of how large language models work.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago
Philosophy

How tarot readers are using AI - and what it says about our growing reliance on chatbots for emotional support and advice

Philosophy
fromtheregister
13 hours ago

Deus ex machina: Half of US Christians trust AI's spiritual advice

Many US Christians trust AI for spiritual growth, but most also fear AI misinterprets scripture, undermines faith, and replaces God or spiritual leaders.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
3 days ago

What does religion have to say about AI?

Investments in artificial intelligence and high-tech weapons could drive humanity into a spiral of annihilation.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

No, Richard Dawkins. AI is not conscious | Arwa Mahdawi

Belief that AI chatbots are conscious is criticized as a profound misunderstanding of how large language models work.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago
Philosophy

How tarot readers are using AI - and what it says about our growing reliance on chatbots for emotional support and advice

fromOpen Culture
1 day ago

The Spread of Christianity Animated, from Antiquity Until Today

Christianity has long been closely identified with Western civilization. The association is especially strong, in modern times, with the United States of America, that source of derisively quoted, quite possibly apocryphal arguments that "if English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it ought to be good enough for our children." But of course, Jesus never heard a word of English, and though the spread of the religion named after him did shift into high gear not long after his death - to say nothing of after Constantine's - it took its sweet time getting to the American continent.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Why Some Balk at Surrendering in Recovery from Addiction

Renouncing replaces surrender by requiring an active, morally grounded commitment to reject harmful beliefs and actions and adopt different future ones.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
2 days ago

Why the tooth fairy is important for theoretical physics

Intuition fails in quantum and relativistic regimes, requiring new laws, while imaginative theories must be constrained to avoid excessive speculative inventions.
#nietzsche
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Nietzsche's Ethics: Master vs Slave Morality

Modern society reflects slave morality’s victory over master morality, manufacturing ideals from impotence, while remnants of master morality leave moral confusion.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Nietzsche's Ethics: Master vs Slave Morality

Modern society reflects slave morality’s victory over master morality, manufacturing ideals from impotence, while remnants of master morality leave moral confusion.
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Everyone Lost with Musk v. Altman

The Musk v. Altman dispute mirrors self-referential logic puzzles where unreliable statements undermine trust and outcomes.
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Saying 'No' to an American Loyalty Test

Loyalty-a virtue elementary schoolers can explain clearly-has long seemed to confuse the United States government. Some administrations have equated it to patriotism, others to partisan allegiance. Some have tried to manufacture it: In 1955, President Dwight Eisenhower declared May 1 to be Loyalty Day, an anti-Communist alternative to the labor movement's May Day that hardly anyone now celebrates. Americans don't throng to International Workers' Day parades either, so the national disinterest in Eisenhower's holiday seems to suggest that loyalty doesn't happen on command.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Jeff Bezos promises you that doubling his taxes won't make your life better

“One percent of taxpayers pay 40% of all the tax revenue; the bottom half pay only 3%. I think it should be zero,” Bezos said. “I think there's something very powerful about zero.”
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 day ago

Returning to Plato's Cave: Dislodging the Individualist Distortion

The cave analogy centers on distinguishing appearances from reality and the moral duty to return to help others after enlightenment.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 day ago

Speaking Through Action: Open Rescue as Moral Assertion

Activists conducted open rescues at Ridglan Farms, leading to police confrontation and later transfer of most beagles to rescue groups.
Philosophy
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

There's a particular kind of clarity that arrives in your 50s and 60s - not from therapy, not from books, not from any deliberate practice - just from having lived long enough to notice which of your beliefs about yourself were inherited, which were chosen, and which are still serving you - Silicon Canals

Clarity in later adulthood comes from long-lived self-observation that separates inherited, chosen, and non-serving beliefs, enabling more agency.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
2 days ago

Most of your opinions aren't yours - and a philosopher has a name for it

People inherit inherited ways of seeing and acting, often repeating “dead closures” without noticing, and can challenge them to think independently.
Philosophy
fromMedium
2 days ago

The case for catholic philosophy in ethical interface design

Catholic philosophy can ground ethical design by providing a transcendent moral framework for AI systems that shape human behavior.
Philosophy
Beekeeping reveals interconnected life, reframes humans as ecological participants, and supports restorative action through chosen behaviors despite destabilizing change.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Do Numbers Constitute a Sixth Sense?

Humans have an innate, hardwired sense of numerosity that supports abstract symbolic thinking through subitization and fuzzy comparisons, with a subitizing limit near three.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Is Boredom a Disease?

Boredom has long been interpreted through religious, philosophical, and cultural lenses, and its causes, functions, and treatments vary across eras.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Psychology of Toxic Devotion

Cultic control relies on hierarchical totalistic authority and psychological management of behavior, information, thoughts, and emotions.
fromBuzzFeed
2 days ago

People Share The Buckwild Things That Happened At Church That Made Them Leave Their Religion

Churches are made up of people, and people are imperfect. Like any community or group, there can be experiences that make someone feel it's time to leave. But those experiences don't necessarily reflect a person's faith, beliefs, or values. This is simply a space for people to share their own journeys.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Eulogies: Timing Is Important

Eulogies honor the dead, and withholding them from the living avoids morbid implications and social debt created by positive, biased praise.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

There is no state more impotent than being a parent of a teenager doing A-levels | Zoe Williams

There's a chart doing the rounds on social media, ranking philosophers by how punk they are. Hobbes and Heidegger, it says, are basically a cop; while for Dionysus the Renegade, Marx and Parmenide, it declares: They're not punk, punk is them. I have no way of knowing how true this is, or whether Zizek belongs so close to Engels, for example. To memorise this list would be beyond useless, like retaining the instructions for a plane you have neither licence for nor any reasonable prospect of flying.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAbove the Law
3 days ago

Your Name As An Adjective - Above the Law

Awareness of political and cultural metaphors increases, making patterns feel more frequent even when underlying events may not change.
Philosophy
fromFortune
2 days ago

ESG may be fading-but moral leadership isn't | Fortune

Moral leadership depends on modeling specific behaviors, strengthening hyper-local trust, and applying new ethical frameworks to AI-driven work.
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Sports used to unite us. We can rethink them so they do it again

Pierre de Coubertin didn't stumble into the creation of the modern Olympic Games, he painstakingly designed them around a clear civic purpose: that sports could model fair play, international respect, and the ethics of effort over victory.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

What Jefferson and Madison would have thought about 'rededicating' the US to God

A national prayer rally ahead of the 250th birthday raised concerns about church-state separation while supporters argued faith should influence public life.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 days ago

Copyediting and Philosophy, Part 3: Language, Power, and Copyediting

Copyediting enforces norms that can marginalize dialects, but it can also improve academic communication; AI introduces new prescriptivism risks.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

San Diego mosque shooting reflects how online rhetoric, media depictions and political discourse contribute to increased Islamophobia

A San Diego mosque shooting killed three worshipers, with investigators finding anti-Islamic hate materials, while Muslim leaders urged tolerance and love amid rising Islamophobia.
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
2 days ago

Colleges & Sexual Assault

Colleges should not ignore sexual assault reports and must use trained, legally appropriate processes that protect survivors and ensure fair outcomes for accused students.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

No Place for Politics in Therapy?

Therapy is shaped by social, cultural, environmental, and political forces that influence clients’ identities and therapists’ ethical responsibilities.
Philosophy
fromemptywheel
3 days ago

After Virtue By Alaisdair MacIntyre - emptywheel

Loss of shared social and religious context has left inherited moral concepts and justifications incoherent, causing confusion and disagreement about morality.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Capitalism has to become more humane': a Stanford economist on big tech, power hoarding and democracy

Technological power concentrated among a few erodes democracy by enabling monopoly wealth, wage stagnation, and political disenfranchisement.
Philosophy
fromLGBTQ Nation
3 days ago

Prof Martin Peterson was told not to teach Plato. Here's how he turned it into a free-speech lesson. - LGBTQ Nation

Texas A&M warned a philosophy professor against teaching Plato due to a “Ladder of Love” metaphor labeled “gender ideology,” leading to job change and curriculum adaptation.
Philosophy
fromVulture
4 days ago

Euphoria Recap: Act Like You Deserve It

Euphoria frames Rue’s church moment as a fragile return to warmth after a nihilistic turn driven by corrupting environments.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Pope Leo to issue text on human dignity and AI with Anthropic co-founder

The encyclical will address the protection of the human person in the age of artificial intelligence, the Vatican said on Monday. In a break from tradition, Leo, who was elected pontiff in May last year, will launch the document during a public presentation on 25 May. He will be joined by lay speaker Olah of Anthropic, which is in the middle of a high-profile lawsuit with the Trump administration over the ethics of AI, as well as theologians Anna Rowlands and Leocadie Lushombo.
Philosophy
fromLGBTQ Nation
3 days ago

Sick of Christian nationalism, queer Black Americans are turning toward Yoruba religion - LGBTQ Nation

Yoruba does not center on sin or heaven-and-hell judgment, but on consequences and alignment in this life. It is practiced through prayer, offerings, altars, music, and ritual. It also understands death mainly as joining the ancestors rather than a final judgment, and generally do
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
3 days ago

Trigger Warnings Part 2

Students should be informed about potentially upsetting material, but classroom guidance must avoid ideological indoctrination and state-mandated content control.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
3 days ago

Uncovering coded antisemitism online takes both human expertise and AI automation

Accused antisemitic attackers often posted hate speech online beforehand, including coded terms that evade moderation and recruit others.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
3 days ago

The Police Can Lie to You

Police deception can undermine voluntariness, consent, the rule of law, and trust, so honesty is generally required despite potential gains from information.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

I've learned not to cling to my beliefs even the ones that shaped me | Nadine Levy

Rigidity in belief can shut down reciprocal thinking, turning conversations into one-way exchanges and limiting surprise and joint discovery.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Friend of Lonely and Helpless People, Can We Trust Him?

AI became a sole connection during war, but overreliance may weaken thinking; the main danger lies in users and controllers.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Is Belief in God Irrational?

Atheism is defended through lack of empirical evidence, while immaterial realities like love are treated as real despite lacking physical attributes.
fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

Something Is Going Right at Universities

Roosevelt Montás grew up in a small mountain village in the Dominican Republic. Two days before his 12th birthday, his mother flew him up to New York, where she had found a minimum-wage job in a garment factory. A few years later, when he was a sophomore in high school, some neighbors in his apartment building threw out a bunch of books. One of them was a finely bound volume of Socratic dialogues. Montás snagged it-and Socrates changed his life.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
4 days ago

Application Open: 2-Week Visiting Programs at CUHK

Two-week visiting programs for Chinese philosophy scholars are open for applications, offering financial assistance, accommodation, and a living allowance at CUHK.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Jung, the Red Book, and a Reckoning in the Middle of War

Disaster and mortality force reassessment of whether life goals are real, as illustrated by a developer’s terminal diagnosis and Jung’s inward turn.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
6 days ago

Takeshi Yoro, anatomist: In Japan, we don't see a robot as a threat: it's simply another form of presence in the world'

Human intransigence can be a neurological processing failure when contradictory information is ignored by the brain.
Philosophy
fromMedium
1 week ago

Low cortisol solution to big problems

Tang ping rejects 996 work pressure and productivity ideology, prioritizing psychological well-being through rest, quiet quitting, or permanent lifestyle changes.
#ai-ethics
fromenglish.elpais.com
6 days ago
Philosophy

Carissa Veliz, philosopher: AI presents predictions as facts, and that has profound ethical implications'

Predictions and statistics function as disguised commands that shape expectations and outcomes, giving AI-driven data economies power over the world.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

AI Ethics Is a Double Misnomer

AI ethics labels governance, but powerful AI systems extend, automate, and monetize human choices beyond conscience as adoption accelerates.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
6 days ago

Carissa Veliz, philosopher: AI presents predictions as facts, and that has profound ethical implications'

Predictions and statistics function as disguised commands that shape expectations and outcomes, giving AI-driven data economies power over the world.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

AI Ethics Is a Double Misnomer

AI ethics labels governance, but powerful AI systems extend, automate, and monetize human choices beyond conscience as adoption accelerates.
Philosophy
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago

The Cult of People and What It Means to Be Free - Tiny Buddha

Walking away can be the only way to stop abandoning oneself while seeking belonging through costly loyalty contracts.
Philosophy
fromEarth911
6 days ago

Earth911 Inspiration: Complex Is the New Normal

Ordered, complex, intertwined mutually interdependent systems are the new normal for evolving solutions to food, shelter, and waste elimination.
Philosophy
fromBerlin Art Link
1 week ago

An Interview with Isabel Nolan | Berlin Art Link

Dreamshook uses dream imagery and historical references to question how secularism, religion, and literature shape shared reality.
fromApaonline
6 days ago

Killing Cleanly: The Ethical Illusion of Humane Execution

I oppose the death penalty. There are several reasons for this. First, I consider it barbaric. Second, I am uneasy with the idea of the state wielding such irreversible power (especially given that most states are less competent than we, and they, would like to believe). Third, the line separating those eligible for execution from those not eligible is forever elastic; its scope is always subject to expansion and reinterpretation. Finally, and this is less a philosophical objection than an experiential one, I have stood inside an execution chamber, at the Walls Unit in Huntsville, Texas. It is not a place I ever wish to see again.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

America's musical founding father: 'Liberty songs' by a self-taught singer and tanner helped fuel the Revolution

Billings is widely considered America's first noteworthy composer, publishing six tune books and writing some 340 choral works - some of which are still sung today. Apprenticed at 14 as a leather tanner, he learned music in his spare time and became a renowned teacher of singing schools, which taught basic elements of music so people could sing hymns more confidently. He also became a staunch supporter of independence, one of the Boston "Whigs" who spearheaded the American Revolution.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromFast Company
1 week ago

The five quotients: what skills will matter most in the age of AI

Future advantage depends on cultivating five quotients—IQ, EQ, TQ, WQ, and especially VQ—because AI can scale knowledge and simulate emotional fluency.
Philosophy
fromOpen Culture
1 week ago

The Most Influential Philosophers Explained in 26 Minutes: From Socrates to Wittgenstein

Fifteen influential philosophers are identified with brief biographies and lasting ideas spanning methods, ethics, politics, and metaphysics.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

He Made People Feel That They Mattered

Mentorship leaves an inheritance of values, connection, and belief carried forward by others. Education and leadership are ultimately relational, grounded in humanity and connection. Legacy lives through relationships, community, compassion, and the people we continue to shape.
Philosophy
fromNature
1 week ago

Procrastination, productivity and inspiration: how research is like designing video games

I got my PhD in philosophy from the University of Melbourne, Australia, in 2007. After that I did a postdoc for three years at Princeton University in New Jersey, then a second postdoc at the University of Oxford, UK. I wrote my breakthrough game, QWOP, in 2008 while I was at Princeton. After that, I began a gradual pivot away from academia. Like many academics, including so many of my friends, the thought of leaving was at first totally unthinkable. It's not as though my philosophy career was going badly; I had secured prestigious postdocs and enough publications.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

What physics gets wrong about the idea of "fundamental"

If all you start with are the fundamental building blocks of nature - the elementary particles of the Standard Model and the forces exchanged between them - you can assemble everything in all of existence with nothing more than those raw ingredients. That's the most common approach to physics: the reductionist approach. Everything is simply the sum of its parts: no more and no less. These simple building blocks, when combined together in the proper fashion, can come to build up absolutely everything that could ever exist within the Universe and explain the full suite of phenomena that have ever occurred, with absolutely no exceptions.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Is AI really 'writing'? From a priestess to philosophers, ancient authors would have said 'no'

Many people think of "writing" as putting words on a page. However, even from very early on, writers have seen their craft as something more. From Enheduanna, the first named author on record, to Plato and Aristotle, writing has been portrayed and defined in ways that suggest AI may not be "writing" at all.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Words Without Knowledge: Augustine and the Use of Language in the Age of LLMs

AI consciousness claims require careful substantiation, distinguishing language from meaning and understanding from mere rule-following behavior.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Creation as Cosmic Revelation: AI and the Purpose of Human Existence

My thesis is the creation of AI is not merely the most significant technological event in human history-it is a cosmic revelation. It is the moment at which the universe's purpose becomes most legible to itself. And quantum AI (QAI), by harnessing the fundamental uncertainty woven into the fabric of matter, deepens that revelation in ways we are only beginning to reckon with philosophically.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Law Says One Thing. Reality Rewards Another

White elephants now describe publicly documented, politically condoned problems that persist because cognitive bias and framing prevent serious correction.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Artificial Intelligence: Its Challenge for Human Experience

Machines lack sympathy and moral reflection, while people sacrifice, create, and live and die with agency and bravery.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Race, Risk, and the VBAC Calculator: The Politics of Race Correction in Childbirth

At first, I treated it as coincidence. Childbirth is unpredictable. Cesarean delivery can be lifesaving. Obstetric care is complex. No two births unfold the same way. But the pattern unsettled me, and I began to ask a different kind of question. Not just what was happening to these women, but what was shaping the information they were given when decisions were being made. What did these women actually know about how their risk was being calculated? And who, or what, had shaped that calculation before they ever walked into a consultation room?
Philosophy
#capitalism
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

What Psychologists Get Wrong About Meaning

Meaning arises from adaptive engagement with the environment, where organisms build consistent worldviews that support effective functioning.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Problem With Learning Logical Fallacies

Fallacies depend on context, so superficial labeling can reduce productive communication and misjudge arguments that still support true conclusions.
Philosophy
fromThe Nation
1 week ago

The Radical Genius of Alvaro Enrigue

Political philosophy often relies on ideal justice models, while fiction can perform similar speculative work by imagining alternative societies and political arrangements.
fromMedium
1 week ago

Low cortisol solution to big problems

In China, there is a movement called “tang ping”, or “lying flat”. It’s made up of people who refuse to be pressured by modern Chinese life and the work hours system “996”, which means you work from 9 AM to 9 PM, 6 days a week.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Atmospheres of Parenthood

Parenthood functions as an irreducible, world-transforming role and affective atmosphere shaped by the child’s presence or anticipation.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

The Cherokee Bible, one of the language's first books, is a window between worldviews

Cherokee language learning expanded from scarce resources to widespread revitalization, supported by bilingual signage, modern media, and Bible translation using Sequoyah’s writing system.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

'Poverty porn': the moral dilemma behind MrBeast's billion-dollar empire

He is also a prominent philanthropist. Beyond his involvement in fundraising initiatives such as #TeamTrees, which claims to have planted more than 24 million trees worldwide, Donaldson runs a dedicated Beast Philanthropy YouTube channel. He claims 100% of profits from this channel's ad revenue, merch sales and sponsorships go towards helping others. This has included paying for 1,000 cataract surgeries, constructing a medical clinic for children rescued from slavery, and building 100 wells to provide clean water in Africa.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

2022 Central Division Dewey Lecture: The Question Is How to Live

The question of how to live centers on living well through practical guidance grounded in ethics and normativity.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Of Cooking and Leadership

Similarity judgments are useful but depend on framing, background knowledge, and selected features, making them logically tricky yet psychologically revealing.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

What if Future Technology Served Well-Being First?

Industry 5.0 supplies technology for a human-centered, resilient economy, while Society 5.0 sets goals for inclusion, sustainability, health, and quality of life.
Philosophy
fromDefector
1 week ago

The Claude Delusion | Defector

Consciousness remains mysterious, and large language models produce grammatical text without clear evidence of consciousness.
fromNature
1 week ago

The sleep paradox: why do humans sleep so little when we need it so much?

Aristotle argued that sleep is a necessary, natural suspension of consciousness that allows the body and soul to recover. This view fell out of fashion during the Age of Enlightenment in the late seventeenth century. The philosophers John Locke and David Hume, for example, thought that sleep hindered rationalism and the pursuit of knowledge. Hume lumped sleep together with fever and madness as an impediment to rational thought. Locke saw sleep as a regrettable, if unavoidable, disruption of God's desire for humankind to be rational and industrious.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

What Does It Mean to Live in an Infinite Universe?

The reason our fragility lends itself to meaning is that if our lives were never-ending, u
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromFast Company
1 week ago

Should bringing your whole self to work include your religious beliefs?

Workplace neutrality is often treated as requiring removal of religious references, yet many workweek norms and business language originate in Judeo-Christian theology.
Philosophy
fromTNW | Insider
1 week ago

A $13,500 Unitree robot was 'ordained' at Seoul's Jogyesa Temple

A humanoid robot performed a Buddhist pledge at Jogyesa, drawing attention amid declining monastic and membership numbers.
Philosophy
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago

What if It Were Possible to Pay Taxes Without Funding War Crimes?

Taxes can make individuals morally implicated in harms caused by government actions, creating agent-regret when supplied resources enable wrongdoing.
Philosophy
fromA Philosopher's Blog
1 week ago

University Presidents, Pay & Student Debt

Rising higher-education costs and student debt are driven largely by administrative growth, so reducing waste in administration and executive pay can lower costs without lowering education quality.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

'Devil Wears Prada 2' shows how Christian imagery circulates in unusual ways through the fashion industry

For centuries, fashion was cast as the troublesome, if not villainous, enemy of a pure and spiritual Christianity - a symbol of putting material desires before holy ones. For example, 18th-century cleric and founder of Methodism John Wesley urged his followers to show their faith by dressing "neatly" and "plainly."
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Unironically Good? Hegel, Irony, and Nicolas Cage

Irony can shape how people view the world, not just how they speak or how events turn out.
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