Philosophy

[ follow ]
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
4 hours ago

How does 'common knowledge' shape our individual lives and our societies? Steven Pinker has some ideas

Common knowledge—when everyone knows that everyone knows—shapes rituals, enforced silences, and social harmony, and making it explicit can disrupt social order.
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
21 hours ago

Hannah Arendt and Exile

Human rights and democratic belonging cannot rely solely on nation-state sovereignty; citizenship and rights must be reimagined around human plurality beyond national affiliation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
10 hours ago

Readers reply: Why do people become leftwing or rightwing?

For me, it was seeing that what was offered (by rightwing parties) was not relevant to where I was at the time as a student. I had no money, no job, no connections and no clue about where I wanted to go with my life. But I did know I didn't want to work in London, wearing formal office attire and being a slave to the nine-to-five grind for the rest of my days. The leftwing parties seemed to offer more inclusion and be more welcoming to ordinary folk like me. So that's where I looked for my political home.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
7 hours ago

Is Fake the New Normal?

We live in an era where the difference between real and artificial no longer startles us. Every day, it's there buzzing behind our screens and selfies. From avatars to synthetic voices and AI-generated images, the fake has become familiar and is an accepted part of our techno diet. But the more interesting question to me isn't how these illusions are made, it's why we all so easily believe them.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromFortune
12 hours ago

'Psychology of Money' author Morgan Housel follows the same morbid success measure as Warren Buffett-a "reverse obituary" | Fortune

Measure success by the legacy you want—prioritize relationships, community, and purposeful spending over material possessions and follower counts.
fromwarpweftandway.com
1 day ago
Philosophy

Upcoming Collaborative Learning events

The Collaborative Learning Project will host free, open events on October 14 (Commitments and Devotion roundtable) and October 17 (book event on Meritocratic Democracy).
#chinese-philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Ant Flight and the Ascent to Truth

Education should instill a deep dedication to truth rather than merely promote economic productivity or enforce ideological conformity.
Philosophy
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

How to Use Regret Instead of Wallowing in It

Regret results from free will and can be instructive when briefly felt, helping learn about oneself and reconcile past choices with present growth.
#peter-thiel
fromWIRED
1 week ago
Philosophy

The Real Stakes, and Real Story, of Peter Thiel's Antichrist Obsession

fromWIRED
1 week ago
Philosophy

The Real Stakes, and Real Story, of Peter Thiel's Antichrist Obsession

Philosophy
fromAeon
2 days ago

Harold Rosenberg exhorted artists to take action and resist cliche | Aeon Essays

Institutional bureaucracies, market seductions, and ideology block truth and authentic action; connecting aesthetics, judgment, and public action can restore genuine political engagement.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

The new president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will inherit a global faith far more diverse than many realize

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints faces mourning and leadership change amid global growth and persistent misconceptions of being predominantly Utah-based and white.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 days ago

The Ivory Tower We Do Not See: On Science, Politics, and Philosophy

Philosophy of science has shifted from focusing solely on theories to examining scientific practice, experiments, data, and the science-society relationship, questioning the old social contract.
#existentialism
Philosophy
fromRMNB
2 days ago

Spencer Carbery takes reading inspiration from outside of sports: 'I'm more of a business book person'

Spencer Carbery favors business and leadership books—especially Ryan Holiday's stoic works like The Obstacle Is the Way—to inform coaching and resilience in hockey.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
3 days ago

Longtermism and its Limits

Future people vastly outnumber the living, so minimizing existential risk for future generations should take priority and may outweigh current-generation interests.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
3 days ago

From Synthetic Data to the Reshaping of Approaches to Representation

Synthetic data and datasets fundamentally shape AI design and outputs, raising ethical, social, and intellectual property concerns requiring careful governance.
Philosophy
fromAeon
3 days ago

History's shaming fascination for the so-called 'idiot savant' | Aeon Essays

Some individuals with profound developmental impairments can possess extraordinary, isolated talents—savant abilities—frequently linked to autism and neurodivergence.
fromAeon
3 days ago

In an act of resistance, Elahe forgoes a hijab at a family party | Aeon Videos

In her critically acclaimed short documentary A Move, the London-based director Elahe Esmaili returns to her hometown of Mashhad, Iran, to help her parents relocate for the first time in four decades. Esmaili's husband, the Iranian documentary producer Hossein Behboudi Rad, captures the trip as moments of familial tenderness and friction unfold. Inspired by Iran's 'Woman, Life, Freedom' movement, which was sparked by the death
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPhilosophynow
3 days ago

News: October/November 2025

Mazviita Chirimuuta won the 2025 Lakatos Award for a book on simplifying neuroscience; research suggests large language models could support philosophical counselling access.
#uncertainty
fromPhilosophynow
3 days ago

Philosophers on Chocolate

Pop songs are usually about variations on the theme of love; tracks like Rose Royce's 1976 hit 'Car Wash' are the exception. Philosophers, likewise, tend to have a narrow focus on epistemology, metaphysics and trifles like the meaning of life. But occasionally great minds stray from their turf and write about other matters, for example buildings (Martin Heidegger), food (Hobbes), tomato juice (Robert Nozick), and the weather (Lucretius and Aristotle).
Philosophy
fromTheoldguybicycleblog
3 days ago

The Stoic Cyclist: Lessons from the Road and the Ancients

Long-distance cycling cultivates Stoic habits: accept discomfort, control reactions, and pursue clarity through disciplined endurance.
fromPhilosophynow
3 days ago

What My Sister Taught Me About Humanity

The comment caused controversy, with many calling it upsetting and insensitive. What his comment also did, though, was get me to think about my own experiences with disability from a philosophical perspective. I am not disabled myself, and I specialise in Comparative Philosophy, not Philosophy of Disability. What experience of disability, then, do I have? It is rather, the experience I had with someone else that explains why I feel that I have a genuine stake in this debate.
Philosophy
fromPhilosophynow
3 days ago

The Mediation of Touch

Desire is a human way of passing from a physical attraction to a psychic and even a spiritual feeling. Being rooted in nature, desire can transform a merely natural belonging into a psychic or spiritual belonging which can remain sensitive [capable of feeling], thus peculiar to each. Desire builds bridges between our body and our psyche and our mind, but also between us as living beings,
Philosophy
fromBig Think
3 days ago

If you want to be miserable, then spend your money like this

When faced with a difficult problem - and how to spend money in a way that will improve your life certainly is - it can help to work backward, reducing and excluding what doesn't work until what's left over is a decent approximation of favorable traits. Evolution works in similar ways, so thoroughly destroying what doesn't work that what's left over tends to work quite well.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

There's a Day Coming When No One Will Speak Your Name Again

There is something deeply ironic about how only the thought of our deaths gives us reason to truly think about our lives. Memento mori is a tradition as old as it is haunting, and the brief encounters we have with our own mortality can stop us in our tracks, until life inevitably pulls us back into its folds and we regain our blissful ignorance about how the curtains will one day fall on us as they have on everyone else before us.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Many Downsides of the Psychology Behind Babifying Animals

Infantilizing animals as cute, baby-like commodities misrepresents them, creates entitlement to their bodies and attention, and undermines their autonomy and wellbeing.
fromPhilosophynow
3 days ago

Moral Decision-Making for a Job Search

Back in 2018 I found myself in an interesting spot. I had decided to leave academia and education to pursue something new in my working life. Despite the downsides, it's easy to feel morally comfortable with being a teacher, but many other jobs can give pause. The timing and my background placed me in a near perfect position to think about how ethics factors into choosing a career. So on what criteria does one base the moral legitimacy of a job? I realized that:
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Life Only Lasts an Instant

Present experiences are the only experiences that can be changed, and contentment occurs when present experience matches what is wanted.
fromPhilosophynow
3 days ago

Collective Action & Climate Change

This argument is problematic given the current threat climate change poses for our lives, for it could lead to apathy and defeatism about the climate crisis. It raises the problem of collective impact, which concerns how the aggregation of individually inconsequential actions can produce a morally bad outcome overall. First, I shall formally set out the argument against us having a moral reason to reduce our individual emissions.
fromAeon
4 days ago

Finding the spirit of Haiti through a tour of its contemporary art | Aeon Videos

The short documentary IntranQu'îllités is a rich tour of Haiti and its arts scene, guided by some of the country's most celebrated contemporary artists. Tethered together by evocative narration from the Haitian poet James Noël, the film presents an eclectic array of writers, musicians and visual artists who grapple with questions of personal and national identity, challenging stereotypes about the small Caribbean nation and its people in the process.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
4 days ago

Striking a Balance: Reconciling Democratic Citizenship and Epistemic Agency

Responsible epistemic practices can paradoxically weaken democratic participation and shift power in ways that harm democratic governance.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The False Idea That Forgiveness Is for Me, Not the Offender

Forgiveness, defined as a moral virtue, benefits both the forgiver and the offender. Yet, misunderstanding forgiveness as self-serving distorts its true essence. True forgiveness involves good-willed actions towards offenders, not just self-healing. Distinguishing forgiveness from emotional relief preserves its moral virtue. I often say when interviewed about forgiveness that about 99 percent of the people who attend my talks actually misunderstand what forgiveness is.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
4 days ago

How humans create reality through language and beliefs

Belief, language, inner speech, and rituals, shaped by postnatal brain development and culture, combine to create distinctive human cognition and reality-constructing capacities.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
4 days ago

The bias that is holding AI back

AI inherits human biases from training data, reproducing and amplifying anthropocentric assumptions and social prejudices in its outputs.
Philosophy
fromAeon
5 days ago

How foreign capital can hinder, or help, economic development | Aeon Essays

Unrestricted foreign investment often brings capital but can hinder domestic technological development unless host countries tightly regulate and align foreign capital with national priorities.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

From the pulpit to the picket line: For many miners, religion and labor rights have long been connected in coal country

Cecil Roberts, a sixth-generation coal miner, will retire in October 2025 after 30 years as president of the United Mine Workers of America.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
5 days ago

New Book: Valmisa, All Things Act

Agency is not an individual capacity but an emergent sociomaterial function of networks of human and nonhuman entities acting together.
Philosophy
fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

Dear James: I'm Tired of People Invoking God

Religious platitudes that assume shared belief can alienate nonbelievers and fail to meaningfully address suffering or acknowledge differing perspectives.
Philosophy
fromDefector
5 days ago

The Pleasures Of Reading Jane Ellen Harrison | Defector

Personal journey from childhood Catholicism to atheism and back led to embracing secularism, rejecting simple oppositions, and valuing humane atheism over cynical faith.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

How Arguments Go Wrong-and How Bad Arguments Can Go Right

Formal logic helps us build and evaluate rational arguments, which helps us to test claims, explain our reasoning, and keep discussions clear. The first step in learning formal logic is learning about deductive arguments -what they are, how they are structured, and how they can go wrong. The Parts of a Deductive Argument Deductive arguments are built out of premises and conclusions. For example, here is a simple deductive argument: The first two sentences are the premises. The last sentence is the conclusion. Premises are statements that support the conclusion.
Philosophy
fromHi-Fructose Magazine - The New Contemporary Art Magazine
5 days ago

Younguk Yi's Journey Through Repetition, Fragmentation, & The Modern Human Condition - Hi-Fructose Magazine

In addition to the visual impact of his work, Yi's titles play a significant role in shaping the viewer's experience. His titles, often drawn from everyday life, are carefully chosen to provoke thought and create an open-ended dialogue between text and image. His titles add a layer of meaning to the otherwise abstract composition, suggesting a narrative without dictating a specific interpretation.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

What Motivates People to be Contrarians?

Autonomy and contrarianism drive innovation by resisting conformity, while society also depends on conformity for security and social stability.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
5 days ago

A fresh take on the Buffett-Munger axis of genius

Buffett and Munger exemplify disciplined, long-term thinking and practical teaching, revealed through primary-source transcripts and shareholder letters.
Philosophy
fromAeon
6 days ago

Dale Purves, the neuroscientist who makes sense of the brain | Aeon Essays

Perception and action are shaped by context, species-specific sensory limits, bodily abilities, and changing environments.
fromApaonline
6 days ago

Are we free to act or determined by causality?

The question of whether we are free to act compels us to accept that there are different degrees of determinism and that even freedom and causality might be compatible. That was already announced by Saint Augustine, for whom divine providence did not preclude free will. An incompatible position, in which determinism excludes true freedom, could hardly be reconciled with such indisputable phenomena as spontaneity, repentance, rebellion, or resistance, and the capacity for the future, which only finds their place in freedom.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

Conflict at the counter: When pharmacists' and patients' values collide

Pharmacists' conscientious refusals to dispense medications create conflicts among religious freedom, patient access to care, and professional obligations.
Philosophy
fromAeon
6 days ago

Are observers fundamental to physics, or simply byproducts of it? | Aeon Videos

Observers may be central to physics or merely byproducts of phenomena independent of consciousness; quantum experiments and fine-tuning considerations probe their significance.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
6 days ago

A Call to Public Scholars During Turbulent Times

The Academy risks becoming an insular echo chamber, professionalizing critique and detaching scholarship from democratic engagement and solidarity with affected communities.
Philosophy
fromBusiness Matters
1 week ago

Adil Quraish on Values, Faith, and the Future of Leadership

Enduring values—integrity, service, responsibility, and faith—anchor leadership and sustainable wealth, guiding decisions beyond shifting strategies and short-term gains.
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Don't Kill Spotted Lanternflies

This year in D.C., when so much has felt existential and out of our control, a clear, actionable way to care for the planet has emerged: kill spotted lanternflies. The ecological case against them is real: They are invasive, destructive, and bad for trees. But I still can't bring myself to do it. Each time I see one, with its flickering polka-dotted wings and its clumsy jumps, I hesitate. I know what I'm supposed to do.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

"Bird Song"

Nature persists beyond human names; people grow tired of naming while reflecting on observation, memory, and the transient human sense of dominance.
Philosophy
fromMedium
6 days ago

Negotiating truth

Media delivery biases determine which knowledge endures: durable, slow media preserve memory while fast, scalable media spread information but promote forgetfulness and negotiated truth.
#free-speech
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
1 week ago

Punishment and Forgiveness

Unconditional forgiveness can undermine victims' protection and justice because withholding resentment, blame, or punishment may sometimes be morally necessary and instrumentally valuable.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Positive thinking can make success feel like the only acceptable option. But humility allows for grace | Jackie Bailey

Humility balances belief in personal capability with recognition of systemic limits, allowing pride in achievements while acknowledging limits and room to learn.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Three Reasons You Have an Undercover Scarcity Mindset

Embrace small, process-focused purpose (little p) to cultivate an abundance mindset and lasting happiness rather than relying on big, goal-oriented purpose.
fromAeon
1 week ago

How 'nothing' has inspired art and science for millennia | Aeon Essays

In 1952, John Cage shocked audiences by staging four minutes and 33 seconds of silence. His composition 4'33" was an attempt to make nothing audible. It was inspired in part by Robert Rauschenberg's White Paintings (1951), entirely white canvasses that work as blank screens to register shifting shadows and reflections, and project them as art. 'A canvas is never empty,' says Cage, quoting Rauschenberg, and 4'33" bears that out, as random ambient sound - coughing, shifting, programmes rustling - becomes a kind of music.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

One-Semester Position at Wesleyan

Wesleyan University's College of East Asian Studies seeks a Visiting Professor or Instructor in Pre-Modern Chinese Philosophy and Culture for one semester starting January 2026.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

APA Member Interview, Zara Anwarzai

There is no generalizable scientific relationship between effort and skill; effort is empirically intractable and highly variable across skill domains.
fromAllyogatraining
1 week ago

9 Yoga Disciplines in Sanskrit for Mind, Body & Spirit

Yoga is often seen as postures, but the yoga discipline in Sanskrit traditions describe complete paths that balance body, mind, and spirit. The Sanskrit word "yoga", derived from the Sanskrit, means "union" and mārga means "path." Each discipline in yoga is a doorway to harmony and liberation, created for different temperaments: devotional, intellectual, active, or contemplative. The beauty of these traditional yoga disciplines is that every yoga practitioner can find a path that feels authentic and sustainable.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

The dry-stacked stones of Zimbabwe are a medieval engineering wonder | Aeon Videos

The dry-stone ruins of Great Zimbabwe, central to national identity, are preserved using traditional techniques by local masons and archaeologists.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

One woman's eye-witness account of life under Taliban rule | Aeon Essays

A young Afghan woman with a disability recalls Kabul's fall to the Taliban, the ongoing trauma, interrupted education, and her refuge in writing.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

MMA and Stoicism: The Knockdown You Didn't See Coming

True strength combines disciplined restraint and composure: face unexpected blows with trained self-control, choosing justice over cruelty even amid confrontation.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Age and the End of Ambition

I retired two years ago, which threw me (not all at once, but in waves) out of the resume-building, ladder-climbing life I'd known since my early twenties. And it has slowly been relocating my center of gravity from what author Albert Brooks calls resume virtues to eulogy virtues-from those devoted to earthly success to those devoted to emotional and spiritual fulfillment.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago

34 Reasons Formerly Religious People Left The Church And Happily Never Looked Back

People distanced from faith after trauma, moral crises, and conflicts between religious teachings and LGBTQ+ or neurodivergent identities, sometimes finding solace in more accepting communities.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

A long and winding path to philosophy through the law

A late-career lawyer transitioned into academic philosophy, earning a master's after retirement to pursue philosophical writing and community.
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Call for New Editors: Journal of Global Ethics

JGE provides a forum for inquiry into ethics and values in their relationship to globalisation, human development, international relations, peace and war, social movements, environmental justice, economics and politics insofar as these subjects pertain to global justice. We make a point of openness to contributions from practitioners and activists as well as academics, and from relevant non-philosophical disciplines such as theology, law, politics, and international relations.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Race and Animals, Maya von Ziegesar

A philosophy course explored animalization and the entanglement of race, colonialism, and human supremacy across theory, material conditions, ideology, political futures, and art.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

STAMPS, SEX AND SECOND SEX

Simone de Beauvoir is often remembered as a formidable philosopher, feminist theorist, and novelist-one who reshaped modern thought on freedom, gender, and ethics. Yet her legacy also resides in the complexity of her private writings. Beauvoir's letters to Nelson Algren, long considered a source of discomfort for some and revelation for others, function as a messy and volatile laboratory where the emotional raw materials of The Second Sex were first tested.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Violent acts in houses of worship are rare but deadly - here's what the data shows

On Sept. 28, 2025, at least four people were killed and eight others injured during a Sunday service at a Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints chapel in Grand Blanc, Michigan. Just a month earlier, two people died and 21 were injured during a Mass for students at the Catholic Church of the Annunciation in Minneapolis. These tragedies may feel sudden and senseless, but they are part of a longer pattern that we have been tracking.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Conventional anti-corruption tools often fail to address root causes - but loss of US leadership could still spell trouble for efforts abroad

U.S. FCPA enforcement narrowed by 2025 policy changes prioritizing national-security and competition, likely reducing prosecutions while minimally affecting global corruption levels.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

For 3 billion years, life was unicellular. Why did it start to collaborate? | Aeon Videos

Unicellular microbes with limited multicellular behaviours provide clues to how cells cooperated and specialized to form animals.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Job Opening: HKUST Substantiation-track Position

HKUST Division of Humanities seeks substantiation-track Philosophy faculty beginning 2 July 2026; all ranks invited, preference for Confucianism, ethics, bioethics, or related areas.
Philosophy
fromArtforum
1 week ago

Call of the Wild

Hyperrealistic sculpture can mimic natural forms so precisely that the revealed material difference highlights a fundamental binary between art and nature.
fromBig Think
1 week ago

The sci-fi hypothesis that explains why you click with certain people

Sometimes, you can be talking to someone for hours, and it feels like only a few minutes. You natter and natter without ever having to think of what to say or cringe through any awkward silence. There's a gentle sway to things - you listen, they speak, they listen, you speak. The chat dances to the easy and comfortable rhythm of the conversational tide.
Philosophy
fromPinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news
1 week ago

Philosopher Judith Butler issues stark warning to the world

We are witnessing the restoration of patriarchy, nationalism, racism and capitalist individualism. It is the nostalgic fury of right-wing movements that want to return to an idealised past, one that perhaps never truly existed, and to re-establish hierarchical orders. We need to revive a Marxist analysis in light of the new social movements. We must commit to saying what we want to see realised, and not just complain about what is going wrong.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
1 week ago

Why the best way to solve problems may be to think backwards

Thinking forward is an automatic process. Cause, then effect. Input, then output. A to B. It feels logical-and normal to start with a conclusion, then find justification around it.But we can always take our thinking a step further. Sometimes, the best way to get the answers you want is to think backwards. It's called mental inversion. Turn the whole thinking process upside down. As the great algebraist Carl Jacobi said, "Invert, always invert."
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Black Boxes, Clear Duties: Owning AI Risk When the Guardrails Are Gone

As AI adoption accelerates, the consequences-intended and not-are becoming harder to ignore. From biased algorithms to opaque decision-making and chatbot misinformation, companies are increasingly exposed to legal, reputational, and ethical risks. And with the rollback of federal regulation, many are navigating this landscape with fewer guardrails. But fewer guardrails doesn't mean fewer consequences-only that the burden of responsibility shifts more squarely onto the businesses deploying these systems. Legal, financial, and reputational risks haven't disappeared; they've just moved upstream.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

What can positive thinking do for a cancer patient? | Aeon Essays

Rectal adenocarcinoma produced relentless, escalating pain that resisted initial misdiagnosis and standard analgesics, profoundly altering the patient’s physical comportment and daily life.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

5 great thinkers who rejected their own ideas

Philosophers rarely change major positions, even though debate and counterarguments should encourage frequent self-revision and intellectual humility.
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Judaism I Thought I Knew

For most of my life, I attended reluctantly, dreading the long hours of prayer. I was proud to be Jewish, taking satisfaction in my people's survival and success despite the attempts to annihilate us. But I was also embarrassed by what I perceived as Judaism's weirdness and obsolescence: all those nitpicky laws, and that implausible, reward-and-punishment God I thought was portrayed in the liturgy.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromNature
1 week ago

Technology leaders should 'pay back' society to support the common good

Communication technologies and algorithms must be designed and used to preserve and promote the common good across physical and digital spheres.
fromAeon
1 week ago

Sebastian Castellio and the deep roots of religious tolerance | Aeon Essays

In terms of judicial killings in Europe, the period between 1500 and 1700 outstripped any era before or after. The new heresies of the Protestant Reformation prompted an initial burst of executions: approximately 5,000 people were put to death for their religious beliefs in the 16th century. This was followed by far deadlier witch hunts, which saw about 50,000 people legally exterminated for witchcraft.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

The Shock of the Old: The Epistemic Challenge of Personal Transformation

Here is the beginning of an answer. At least for some people, some of the time, loving someone means altering the shape of one's identity to include the beloved. That is, the beloved becomes part of one's identity. Among the many ways one thinks of oneself-as someone with a certain profession, a certain taste in music, or in art-there's also seeing oneself as someone's partner.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

Inside a tattoo parlour where hateful images are covered for free | Aeon Videos

Three men with white supremacist tattoos undergo free cover-ups at a Springfield parlour, revealing social pressure, personal change, and the possibility of redemption.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

How generative AI is really changing education by outsourcing the production of knowledge to big tech

Generative AI is fundamentally reshaping how knowledge is produced, understood, and used in education, shifting epistemic authority toward technology companies.
[ Load more ]