Philosophy

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Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 day ago

Tabletop Philosophy, Catharine Saint-Croix

Design a philosophy course using short, game-linked RPG modules that pair brief gameplay sessions with focused philosophical analysis and discussion.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
7 hours ago

Supreme Court soon to hear a religious freedom case that's united both sides of the church-state divide

Rastafarian inmate seeks monetary damages after warden ordered forcible shaving, raising complex religious freedom questions before the Supreme Court.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
5 hours ago

Seeking Existential Solidarity in the Age of AI

AI cannot provide existential solidarity: the comfort of hearing fellow mortal humans speak authentically about shared existential struggles.
#confucianism
fromWarpweftandway
1 day ago
Philosophy

New Book: Song, Debating Transcendence: Creatio ex nihilo and Sheng Sheng

Confucian concepts Tian and Taiji are analyzed for possible transcendence comparable to the Creator God, distinguishing Confucian metaphysics from Daoist perspectives.
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago
Philosophy

Lecture: Tiwald, Confucian Disagreements About Autonomous Understanding (zide)

Confucian sources present competing views on epistemic autonomy, contrasting deference to tradition and expertise with claims about zide (self-attained understanding) and ethical cultivation.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
8 hours ago

Virtual APAs? A Dialogue

Online conferences increase accessibility and disciplinary engagement for those constrained by caregiving, cost, or travel despite weaker in-person networking.
Philosophy
fromAeon
9 hours ago

A glimpse of daily life for people in isolated, war-torn Myanmar | Aeon Videos

Myanmar's fragile democratic opening ended with the 2021 military coup, triggering civil war, human rights criticism over the Rohingya genocide, widespread suffering, and persistent citizen optimism.
Philosophy
fromAeon
9 hours ago

Declared dead last year, the Anthropocene is very much alive | Aeon Essays

The ICS rejected recognition of the Anthropocene as a geological epoch, yet 'Anthropocene' endures as a concept for understanding human planetary impacts and futures.
fromBig Think
5 hours ago

Plato meets game theory: How Schelling points explain the power of great books

Some idealists set out to build a new community from scratch. They saw themselves as unusually clear-headed and logical - people determined to build a society based on reason rather than on the accidents of tradition. If there was a better way to do something, they wanted to find it. At first, the experiment went smoothly. They shared work, rotated responsibilities, and debated policy late into the night.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromYoga Journal
15 hours ago

The Final Mercury Retrograde of 2025 is Almost Here. This is What You Need to Know, Including Your Horoscope.

Mercury retrograde Nov 9–29, 2025 prompts reevaluation of perspective, personal truths, and meaning as it moves from Sagittarius into Scorpio.
Philosophy
fromAxios
18 hours ago

Jim VandeHei's 6 roles for the modern man

Manhood centers on living honorably, loving deeply, thinking deeply, and practicing grit rather than greed.
Philosophy
fromBuzzFeed
4 hours ago

This Psychological Term Explains How Republicans Continually Justify Harm

Claiming innocence or helplessness allows individuals and institutions to avoid responsibility, enabling continued harm despite available choices and feedback.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 day ago

Bad Bunny and Puerto Rican Muslims: How both remix what it means to be Boricua

Bad Bunny embodies Puerto Rican identity through music blending reggaetón, protest, spirituality and diaspora, while Puerto Rican Muslims similarly express resilience, heritage and faith.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 day ago

Racing rising tides, volunteers work to save a bird on the brink | Aeon Videos

Saltmarsh sparrows face extinction from sea-level rise and lack U.S. legal protection; volunteers race tides to protect vulnerable ground-nesting hatchlings.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 day ago

Philosophy in our times: a call for submissions

Philosophy graduate study is a transformative, uncertain passage; highlighting interdisciplinary and nontraditional career backgrounds enriches the field and invites diverse reflections.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

Alberto Casas, physicist: Free will is an illusion created by our brain. Everything that is going to happen is already written'

Time is a necessary coordinate for describing events, while human perception of its passage and simultaneity can be illusory due to relativity.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Is the universe conscious? Panpsychism, religion, and the modern search for meaning

Panpsychism claims consciousness pervades the universe and challenges strictly physical explanations of consciousness.
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
1 day ago

Would We Rather Humanities "Be Ruined Than Changed"? (opinion

Our Greek forebears, as early as Hippocrates, coined the term "kρίσις" to describe a "turning point"; kρίσις, a word related to the Proto-Indo-European root krei-, is etymologically connected to practices like "sieving," "discriminating" and "judging." In fact, the most widely mentioned skill we humanists offer our students, critical thinking, originates from the same practice of deliberate "sieving." Thus, when we call ourselves critics and write critical theory, we admit that crisis might just be our natural habitat.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 days ago

Episode 27 of "This Is the Way": Mohism-Two Arguments for Impartial Caring

Impartial caring (jian'ai) prescribes equal concern for all, offering more reliable protection and moral consistency than partial, familial favoritism.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

How the French philosopher Jean Baudrillard predicted today's AI 30 years before ChatGPT

Jean Baudrillard predicted digital culture and AI decades early, theorizing hyperreality, screens/networks, and isolating personal devices like smartphones.
fromApaonline
2 days ago

Love in the Age of Its Digital Reproducibility

Since the release of ChatGPT in November 2022, chatbots and AI assistants have swarmed almost all fields of human enterprise, including commerce, business, transportation, communication, medicine, education, music, art and culture in general. No wonder the domain of our private lives is not excluded, even their most private parts-romantic relationships. Since, based on a recent survey, nearly one in five US adults have so far engaged in romantic exchanges with chatbots, it seems very likely that in the near future.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWIRED
2 days ago

The Mathematician Who Tried to Convince the Catholic Church of Two Infinities

Georg Cantor believed his set theory revealed divine infinity and sought support from the Catholic Church, but met resistance and experienced mental decline.
Philosophy
fromAeon
3 days ago

Can young and old coexist at a feminist co-living residence? | Aeon Videos

Elfvinggården, founded as an all-female safe haven for single women, now faces intergenerational tensions as younger residents change community norms.
Philosophy
fromAeon
3 days ago

Science needs disagreement. What makes some disagreement useless? | Aeon Essays

Disagreement drives scientific progress, but science denialism and politicized rejection of consensus harm research and policy; criteria are needed to distinguish valuable dissent.
fromApaonline
3 days ago

Gangster Philosophers and Actual Philosophers

Academic philosophy, it goes without saying, is increasingly seen as a venerable yet useless relic-a field of human inquiry relevant only at a bygone time, when science (as we know it today) did not yet exist. The scientific, techno-optimist mindset dominant in many circles today-with its emphasis on empirical testability and measurable results-is increasingly seen as the most effective, and efficient, method to address the concerns that have traditionally fallen under the purview of academic philosophy.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
3 days ago

Investors prefer 'I' over 'we' when CEOs apologize

CEOs' choice of apology wording—'I apologize' versus 'We apologize'—affects investor reactions and can influence stock prices.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Is Psychotherapy Speech?

Conversion therapy is the discredited and harmful practice of attempting to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender identity. The therapist in the case (Kaley Chiles) argues that this law is an unconstitutional restriction on her speech: psychotherapy is, on her view, a kind of speech, and thus the state law violates her First Amendment rights. The state responds that psychotherapy is a medical procedure,
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
4 days ago

Resisting Resignation

My footsteps echo across the floors of a gallery that seems nearly empty of people or art. Yet as I wander the gallery, I am mirrored by swarms of people that seem to flurry across the walls. From behind the glass of orderly, and often rather small, black and white photos, jubilant masses rush towards me arms raised, sometimes alongside grim-faced placard-carrying companions, while in others children play amidst rubble, friends embrace, and couples kiss.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
4 days ago

2026 Midwest Conference on Chinese Thought CFP

The Midwest Conference on Chinese Thought was created to foster dialogue and interaction between scholars and students working on Chinese thought across different disciplines and through a variety of approaches. We invite submissions on any aspect of Chinese thought, as well as comparative work that engages Chinese perspectives.The 2026 conference will take place in person at Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on April 3-4, 2026.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Why Immanuel Kant Still Has More to Teach Us

Immanuel Kant's philosophical work is revolutionary and has had far-reaching, lasting influence across philosophy and natural science.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

AI and the New Rhythm of Thought

We collapse uncertainty into a line of meaning. A physician reads symptoms and decides. A parent interprets a child's silence. A writer deletes a hundred sentences to find one that feels true. The key point: Collapse is the work of judgment. It's costly and often can hurt. It means letting go of what could be and accepting the risk of being wrong.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Wisdom of Temporal Perspectives in Decision-Making

The answer requires what I call wisdom of temporal perspectives in our decision-making. The wisdom of temporal perspectives involves the temporal appraisal of the current situation, where we take into consideration past factors that give rise to the situation and future consequences that may transpire when solving problems and making decisions. It is a form of transformational wisdom that is particularly important in a complex world of challenges today.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Close Encounters of the Cognitive Kind

Two cognitive frameworks contrast: language as a modular instinct enabling stable common knowledge versus language as an emergent, messy system making shared truth unstable.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Don't believe everything you see: why Buddhist scepticism is vital in the age of generative AI | Bertin Huynh

Human experience arises from Five Skandhas that are empty, showing sensory-derived reality is unreliable, a concern amplified by generative AI's threats to objective facts.
Philosophy
fromWIRED
1 week ago

AI Is Not God

Tech elites in Silicon Valley began replacing technocratic messianism with explicit Christian faith and organized religious outreach.
fromFast Company
1 week ago

How to make rational decisions, according to a psychologist and philosopher

What's the big idea? There is no such thing as a calculator for life's decisions. Try as we might to quantify, count, and calculate in search of the "right" choice, that is simply not how wise decision-making happens. Qualitative judgment and consideration of preferences and values are required when identifying the best option before us. Listen to the audio version of this Book Bite-read by Barry-below, or in the Next Big Idea App.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromMedium
1 week ago

Right narratives shape lasting products

Humans are fundamentally narrative creatures whose invented stories and meta-narratives structure perception, provide meaning, and help navigate complexity, identity, belonging, and purpose.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Rachel Dratch Gets Metaphysical on Her Woo-Woo Podcast

Dratch, who wore an all-navy outfit with a small bird-pendant necklace, was exploring Stick Stone & Bone, a West Village boutique that hawks woo-woo wares: gems, jewelry, incense. Nose-ringed clientele browsed quietly; jazzy piano twinkled softly from above. The shop had been recommended by Amy Poehler, Dratch's close friend and podcast guest. On the show, Dratch and her co-host, Irene Bremis, a comedian and Dratch's high-school pal, are regaled by familiar faces' woo-woo tales: Tina Fey's spooky Jersey vacation town, Will Forte's Ouija high jinks, Gloria Steinem on the intuition of the oppressed. Dratch said that Poehler is, generally, "the ultimate skeptic" of woo-woo-ness.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

5 Reasons Forgiveness Is Not a Good Way to Heal

Forgiveness is often offered as a powerful solution, as an agent to not only help you heal from painful events but also allow you to move forward. The general idea is that holding onto anger can make you bitter and hold you back from healing from harm that someone has done to you. But the problem is that there are several serious complications when we try to use forgiveness as a solution.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
6 days ago

The Trouble With Ghost Hunting

The Whaley House in Old Town San Diego, built in 1856, is widely considered America’s most haunted house due to deaths and reported ghostly experiences.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
6 days ago

APA Member Interview, Ilgin Aksoy

Ilgin Aksoy defends a unified mereological ontology of powers in Spinoza, arguing substance as whole with dependent parts and studies related modal and epistemological issues.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

The Jew in King Shaka's court: How a 19th-century castaway shaped a Zulu leader's legacy

Nathaniel Isaacs' 1836 memoir helped shape the global mythology and popular-culture image of King Shaka Zulu.
fromAeon
5 days ago

Our political moment is ripe for David Cronenberg's body horror | Aeon Essays

What does government govern? What, in other words, is government the government of? The answer - at least in the West - has shifted over time. In the age of religion, kings and queens ruled over souls, preparing them for the divine beyond. After the Enlightenment, the soul gave way to the mind as the focus of governance. By the late 18th century, the target had shifted again.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

'Only death can protect us': How the folk saint La Santa Muerte reflects violence in Mexico

When a life-size skeleton dressed like the Grim Reaper first appeared on a street altar in Tepito, Mexico City, in 2001, many passersby instinctively crossed themselves. The figure was La Santa Muerte - or Holy Death - a female folk saint cloaked in mystery and controversy that had previously been known, if at all, as a figure of domestic devotion: someone they might address a prayer to, but in the privacy of their home.
Philosophy
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Why You Should Keep an Open Mind on the Divine

One of the most prominent visitors of the World's Fair was the Russian cosmonaut Gherman Titov, the second man to orbit the Earth. Asked by a reporter about his experience in space, his response made headlines. "Sometimes people are saying that God is out there," Titov said. "I was looking around attentively all day but I didn't find anybody there. I saw neither angels nor God."
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

If humans went extinct, could we re-evolve?

Roughly 136,000 years ago, its ancestors - white-throated rails from Madagascar - flew to Aldabra and found a predator-free paradise; no sharp-toothed prowlers or featherless bipeds with pointy sticks. And so, the rails evolved into flightless versions. Why waste effort and energy on flying when there's no point? Then came a catastrophic flood. The island went underwater. The rails couldn't fly, and they couldn't swim. They went extinct.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
1 week ago

Why Silicon Valley's obsession with logic is breaking the world

Take a moment to think about what the world must have looked like to J.P. Morgan a century ago, before his death in 1913. A shrewd investor in emerging technologies like railroads, automobiles, and electricity, he was also an early adopter, installing one of the first electric generators in his house. Today, we might call him a Techno-Optimist. He could scarcely imagine the dark days ahead: two world wars, the Great Depression, genocides, the rise of fascism and communism, and a decades-long Cold War.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromMedium
6 days ago

The paradox of tolerance

Tolerance often becomes defensive armor that protects personal moral identity rather than fostering open, curiosity-driven dialogue and genuine disagreement.
Philosophy
fromEarth911
1 week ago

Earth911 Podcast: Thinking Through Post-Growth Living With Philosopher Kate Soper

Prioritize time, relationships, and slower consumption—an alternative hedonism—over material accumulation to achieve sustainable, less anxious, and more fulfilling lives.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

How to Start Living the Life You Deserve

Embracing discomfort from life upheavals can lead to existential authenticity by acknowledging life's fragility and taking responsibility for choices.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Resilience is overrated: Unlock the real secret to business longevity

Andrew Markell blends trauma therapy, yiquan martial arts, and scientific and ancient healing methods to train leaders and build resilient systems that transform under pressure.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Essential Element in Every Creative Endeavor

Curiosity is an innate drive that expands perspectives, generates possibilities, and propels creativity and lifelong exploration beyond comfort zones.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Experimenting With a Life of Being

How people are—how they encounter and relate to events—matters as much as actions; controlling mindset and setting daily intent improves meaning and performance.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
5 days ago

Can you measure love? 3 experts discuss

Compassion can be identified neurologically and culturally cultivated through practices and an expanded Love Ethic to counter isolation and mistaken views of kindness as weakness.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

How Love Helps Us Flourish

We all desire to be loved. We only fully flourish when we are loved. Being loved affirms our goodness as human persons. Our search for love shapes so many of our actions and pursuits. Some have even suggested that all of our reasons for action arise from love, and that all of our various emotions and passions are ultimately grounded in love.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromwww.metrosiliconvalley.com
1 week ago

Spartan Values: The Columnist Returns to His Alma Mater

B. R. Ambedkar championed social, intellectual, economic, and political freedom, converted to Buddhism, and helped draft India's constitution while opposing caste.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

No-One Else Can Look in the Mirror For You

No one can see your reflection or determine what you want to see; each person alone controls their self-view and perspective.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Extreme Fear and Pain of Being Criticized

Responsibility enables accountability, fairness, and repair, while blame weaponizes shame to attack character and obstructs justice and growth.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Don't Believe the Hype About Yourself, or the Haters

The wisdom here isn't about self-deprecation, but rather embracing what Davis et al. (2011) refer to as the "just right view of the self." When we clearly understand both our strengths and weaknesses, we gain a better understanding of the value we bring to our environment as well as where we need additional support. In theory, when we recognize this, neither flattery nor insult should have the power to distort our self-worth.
Philosophy
fromYoga Journal
1 week ago

This Yoga Teaching Transforms Your Struggles Into Strength

In the second chapter of the Yoga Sutras, Patanjali begins his discussion on how to practice yoga with the word tapas -and he's not talking about Spanish cuisine! Sometimes tapas is translated as "learning from our suffering," but it basically means "to burn" in the way that you might burn away impurities by heating gold. This is why I often call yoga a form of alchemy.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Communicating Credibility

It will be frustrating or worse when our contributions do not seem to be understood, accepted, or appreciated. We are wise to pay attention to how we are being perceived in personal life (e.g., how an in-law regards us as a parent), in professional life (e.g., how an administrator evaluates a project we created), and in community life (e.g., how family or friends react to a speech we present).
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

Watch as the rhythms of traffic create a mesmerising score | Aeon Videos

An overhead Dublin motorway is transformed into a meditative piano-and-strings piece where each vehicle crossing a central vertical line triggers a musical note.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Where does human thinking end and AI begin? An AI authorship protocol aims to show the difference

AI products can now be used to support people's decisions. But even when AI's role in doing that type of work is small, you can't be sure whether the professional drove the process or merely wrote a few prompts to do the job. What dissolves in this situation is accountability - the sense that institutions and individuals can answer for what they certify. And this comes at a time when public trust in civic institutions is already fraying.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

The Rose Field takes Philip Pullman's 'Dust' to its philosophical conclusions

Dust is a conscious, creative substance central to the trilogies, opposed by the Magisterium but affirmed as good by Lyra, Pantalaimon, and allies.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Ever Thought Your iPhone Was Listening to You?

Voice assistants do not continuously record conversations; they use wake-word detection, yet collect metadata to build user profiles used for targeting and inference.
fromblog.apaonline.org
1 week ago

Treating Each Other Well in Online Spaces

Think about if you're having a discussion with a mutual friend on a Facebook post instead of at a gathering in someone's house, if you're venting to another friend over text instead of in the pub, or if you're interviewing for a job on a video call instead of in real life. The words you use might all be the same, but there's less to go on overall. Information, here, should be taken very broadly.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Writing Fungal Flesh

Writing should prioritize sensitivity and loving perception, treating words as living energy that can heal rather than wound.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Defending Democracy Through Deliberative Capacity Building

Deliberative democracy offers a means to strengthen democratic capacity against authoritarian backsliding, elite capture, and institutional erosion by fostering authentic, inclusive, consequential deliberation.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

The Americas' oldest book is an intricate work of Maya astronomy | Aeon Videos

The Códice Maya de México is an 11th–12th century codex combining mythological scenes and Venus-related calendrical notations, revealing ritual-astronomical integration in Maya society.
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Chinese-Greek Philosophy Forum Lecture by Jana S. Rosker

On Tuesday, November 4, 2025 at 9:00pm Beijing time the Chinese-Greek Philosophy Forum Geju yu Dongjian 格局与洞见 ( Horizons and Insights) will host a lecture by Professor Jana S. Rošker (University of Ljubljana) titled "Zeno of Elea and Hui Shi 惠施 Through the Lens of the Flying Arrow".
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Bring Public Ethics to Life: Host the Bowl in Your Campus (PBS Documentary + Event Guide)

A 30-minute PBS documentary, The Bowl, offers early-access screenings and free educator kits to promote Ethics Bowl participation across campuses, high schools, and communities.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Rediscovery of African American burial grounds provides long-overdue opportunities for collective healing

Forgotten African burial grounds in the U.S. reveal erased histories and require respectful recovery, reburial, and community-led remembrance to promote healing and reconciliation.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Washington state settles controversy over child abuse law that tested the limits of 'priest-penitent' privilege

Washington's SB 5375 made clergy mandatory reporters, but enforcement for information learned during confidential rites was suspended after clergy lawsuits and federal intervention citing religious freedom.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Why do we think hard work is virtuous? Max Weber's Protestant Ethic gives a sharp answer

Overwork has become a moral virtue rooted in Protestant-influenced capitalist values, celebrated through public boasts and cultural examples like Musk and Gates.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

2021 Central Division Dewey Lecture: Some Historical Observations

Please provide the full text or a transcript of the lecture, or upload the audio file, so I can analyze it and extract accurate takeaways, extended summary, and quotes.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

The Trajectory of a Life: Steven M. Cahn and Christine Vitrano

A good life combines happiness with moral action, and life trajectory (early success versus late success) should not override overall achievements and well-being.
fromAeon
1 week ago

Some people refer to New Mexico as 'O'Keeffe Country'. I don't | Aeon Essays

'When I got to New Mexico, that was mine. As soon as I saw it, that was my country. I'd never seen anything like it before, but it fitted to me exactly. It's something that's in the air, it's just different. The sky is different, the stars are different, the wind is different.' That landscape was her enduring love and her legacy, painted over and over in vibrant hues, under scudding clouds and pale blue skies.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Deadnames and the Philosophy of Language

Names are a big deal in the philosophy of language. Gottlob Frege taught philosophers about sense and reference with "Hesperus" and "Phosphorus." Bertrand Russell used names to demonstrate how the surface form of a sentence can differ radically from its logical form. And Saul Kripke used observations about names to motivate theses in modal metaphysics. Names are a big deal outside of philosophy, too. We don new names to symbolically mark changes in self-identity (due to marriage or religious conversion, etc.).
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

Close-ups reveal how caterpillars live long enough to cocoon | Aeon Videos

Caterpillars near Raleigh, North Carolina demonstrate biodiversity, survival strategies, and metamorphosis, including rare footage of a butterfly's first flight.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

An Indigenous approach shows how changing the clocks for Daylight Saving Time runs counter to human nature - and nature itself

But as an Indigenous person who studies environmental humanities, this sort of effort, and the debate about it, misses a key ecological perspective. Biologically speaking, it is normal, and even critical, for nature to do more during the brighter months and to do less during the darker ones. Animals go into hibernation, plants into dormancy. Humans are intimately interconnected with, interdependent on, and interrelated to nonhuman beings, rhythms and environments.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

How did the Roman Empire view nature and its seasons? | Aeon Essays

Zanker's analysis of the altar captures the tension between such images of nature's plenty and the sense of micromanaged design - a desire by the architect to convey a 'model of perfect order', as he puts it in The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus (1988). Close to the altar was an obelisk, a trophy of Roman imperial expansion into Egypt. This seems to have acted as a monumental timepiece, or gnomon, which cast shadows over the sundial plate (solarium) where it was positioned.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

What's the difference between ghosts and demons? Books, folklore and history reflect society's supernatural beliefs

Ghosts and demons are distinct supernatural concepts whose meanings vary across cultures and historical periods and are shaped by religious, social and literary contexts.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

ToC: Asian Philosophy 35:4

Cross-cultural and Chinese philosophical studies examine intuition, Xunzi on human nature, cultural dispositions, harmony terminology, goodness origins, and Buddhist nominalism.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Many Lenses of Consciousness

Recent research suggests that consciousness can be understood as the process of experiencing information through unique filters or "lenses." This ability extends beyond humans to animals, plants, and even bacteria. The Universal Nature of Awareness This lens metaphor helps explain how different organisms perceive reality differently. Just as optical lenses bend light to create images, biological systems filter and focus information to create consciousness.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Recently Published Book Spotlight: Signs from the Future. A Philosophy of Warnings

A philosophy of warnings reframes warnings as invitations to reevaluate future priorities rather than predictions, emphasizing ontology and interdisciplinary critique.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

APA Member Interview: Arash Babaei

Specialist in philosophy of education integrates ethics, values education, philosophy for children, and AI ethics to design workshops, counseling, and AI-based educational profiling for children.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Living in Sunlight: The Well-Souled Life

Psychological health (eupsychia) is an integrated self achieving harmony under wise governance, where reason rules while emotions and appetites perform proper roles.
Philosophy
fromCornell Chronicle
1 week ago

Which discipline should survive the end of the world? | Cornell Chronicle

Five professors will argue which single academic discipline should be preserved in an apocalypse-proof box to save knowledge for a nearly extinct future.
Philosophy
fromemptywheel
1 week ago

Examples Of Not-Free People - emptywheel

Existential ambiguity generates responses—infantile, sub-men, serious—that explain how people abdicate freedom, enabling tyranny and informing argument strategies with authoritarian supporters.
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
1 week ago

Carly Ozard: Singing Love Into Action Across Coasts - San Francisco Bay Times

In the philosophy of Practice Makes Love Easy (PMLE), love is not just a feeling-it's a daily discipline, a creative force, and a communal rhythm. It is with great honor to present Carly Ozard (they/them/she) as the ninth accomplished individual featured in this column. Few embody the ethos of PMLE as fully as Ozard, who is a non-binary entertainer, educator, and activist whose voice carries across stages and communities from San Francisco to New York. Ozard's work is a living testament to love practiced boldly, inclusively, and with deep intention.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromFortune
1 week ago

Stanford athlete turned wealth guru had everything he wanted by 30, but was miserable: 'I had the high-paying job, the title, the house, the car' | Fortune

True wealth includes financial, time, social, mental, and physical dimensions; prioritizing money alone leads to emptiness and an unfulfilled life.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

Taisu Zhang at Neo-Confucian Studies Seminar on 11/7

Law and legality supply the Party-state with perceived sociopolitical legitimacy, increasing public acceptance of legalized constraints and signaling rejection of Confucian political morality.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Undoing Cycles of Violence with a New Concept of Protest

Narcissism profoundly distorts political protest and civic relations, turning witnessing and accountability into self-centered performance.
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Building a stable 'abode of thought': Kant's rules for virtuous thinking

Thinking can be both active and passive. We can choose where to direct our attention and use reason to solve problems or consider why things happen. Still, we cannot completely control our stream of thought; feelings and ideas bubble up from influences outside our control. One kind of passive thinking is letting others think for us. Such passive thinking, Kant thought, was not good for anybody.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

A radical reimagining of physics puts information at its centre | Aeon Videos

A proposed law of increasing functional information treats information as fundamental, explaining rising complexity across systems and offering insight into the nature of time.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Japan's sumo association turns 100 - but the sport's rituals have a much older role shaping ideas about the country

Sumo preserves Shinto-derived ceremonial practices within a modern regulated sport, with rituals like salt throwing and clapping that shape foreign perceptions of Japan.
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Slackers Against Narrativity

Slacker does not follow a traditional narrative structure. It follows 100 characters around the UT Austin area in a way that seems completely random. There is no protagonist, no story, no thread linking the individual events. Yet, somehow, it is a completely coherent and engaging movie that sparks as many reflections as the number of scenes it has.
Philosophy
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