Philosophy

[ follow ]
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
16 hours ago

Summer Seminar in Asian Philosophy and Scholasticism, 2026

Comparative seminar examining Neo-Confucian and Scholastic perspectives on mind, metaphysics, cognition, and their relevance to contemporary science will convene in Rome, June 18–27, 2026.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
16 hours ago

ToC: Asian Philosophy 36:1

Buddhist, Confucian, Daoist, and Islamic mystical traditions examine creation, uncertainty, relational personhood, epistemic virtues, commitment, and critiques of Confucian self-cultivation.
Philosophy
fromSilicon Canals
10 hours ago

8 things people do trying to seem intellectual that actually make educated people cringe - Silicon Canals

Performative intellectualism—jargon, name-dropping, and overcomplication—undermines credibility; genuine intelligence communicates simply and uses precision only when necessary.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
14 hours ago

Ways to Build Personal Integrity and Self-Esteem

Self-worth grows by living according to compassionate, honest, and accountable personal standards focused on love, integrity, transparency, and responsible use of power.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 day ago

The elaborate places one's mind wanders in solitary confinement | Aeon Videos

Long-term solitary confinement in the US isolates about 122,000 people in small cells for 22 to 24 hours daily.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 day ago

Inherited wealth is a natural byproduct of a healthy, growing economy | Aeon Essays

Rising inheritances do not necessarily threaten economic growth or entrench a hereditary aristocracy; their effects on inequality depend on composition and policy.
fromThe Nation
1 day ago

How Was Sociology Invented?

What I mean is that 'religion' was the way the classical sociologists like like Emil Durkheim, Georg Simmel, and Max Weber first managed to turn 'society' into something you could actually study. Durkheim's Elementary Forms defines religion as a system of beliefs and practices tied to sacred things, and what matters there is how those beliefs and rituals bind people together into a moral community-the church. For him, the believer isn't wrong to think he depends on a higher power.
Philosophy
#stoicism
Philosophy
fromOpen Culture
1 day ago

Why Jerry Seinfeld Lives by the Stoic Philosophy of Marcus Aurelius

Jerry Seinfeld cultivates meticulous, philosophical craft, refining jokes obsessively and drawing inspiration from philosophical figures like Marcus Aurelius.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

Not all mindfulness is the same - here's why it matters for health and happiness

Mindfulness is widely adopted but lacks a consistent definition and measurement, causing inconsistent research findings and complicating comparisons and consumer choice.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 days ago

Our Universe has light not by chance but by necessity | Aeon Videos

Light in the Universe emerged inevitably from underlying physical laws, not by chance, connected through fundamental physics and experimental evidence.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 days ago

Why Reflections on Teaching Philosophy Matter: A Call for Contributions

Effective philosophy teaching cultivates student participation through course design, assessments, and informal pedagogies that encourage thinking aloud, testing partial ideas, and revising views publicly.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

Trump's framing of Nigeria insurgency as a war on Christians risks undermining interfaith peacebuilding

Framing Nigeria's insurgency solely as persecution of Christians misrepresents complex motives and risks inflaming divisions; violence affects Christians and Muslims alike.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Strength of Character: It's All Up to You

Physical strength develops through the perseverance of training, and strength of character is demonstrated by adhering to and applying integrity-the universal moral and ethical principle of doing no harm. Neither one of these is easy. Both require self‑initiated discipline, dedication, determination, perseverance, and resilience to develop and advance self‑empowerment potential, understood as the individual's inherent capacity for autonomy and agency; yet even with such effort, empowerment is not guaranteed, as it is realised only through consistent action rather than stated intention.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 day ago

"Epistemic trespassing": Why brilliant people can say idiotic things

Experts can overreach beyond their expertise, making unreliable or harmful claims when they assume competence transfers across unrelated fields.
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

How to Figure Out Your Life

Accepting life’s finitude and embracing less control fosters resonance, reduces overwhelm, and increases sanity, freedom, and joy.
Philosophy
fromOpen Culture
2 days ago

Walter Benjamin Explains How Fascism Uses Mass Media to Turn Politics Into Spectacle (1935)

Mechanical reproduction erodes art's aura—its authentic presence—transforming art into mass-mediated spectacle and simulated intimacy while commodifying personality.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Can you become ugly if you have ugly thoughts?

Perceptions of physical beauty reflect judgments about character and emotion more than objective facial features or aging.
fromWarpweftandway
3 days ago

CFP: AAR Indian and Chinese Religion in Dialogue Unit

The Indian and Chinese Religions in Dialogue Unit of the AAR invites panel and paper proposals for the 2026 American Academy of Religion Annual Meeting in Denver. The deadline is Friday, March 6th. Panel and paper proposals covering all Indian and Chinese traditions from diverse theoretical and methodological perspectives are welcomed. Please see below the panel themes already proposed and reach out to the relevant contact person if interested. Proposals of others are welcomed as well. Proposals should be submitted through PAPERS.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
3 days ago

Collaborative Learning Roundtables on the Zhuangzi

Call for 100–250-word abstracts for Zhuangzi roundtables on humor, irony, and absurdity, scheduled April–May; indicate English or Mandarin; events free and open.
fromApaonline
3 days ago

Threading the Needle: Can We Respect Local Knowledge While Resisting Misinformation?

It's common knowledge that we are awash in misinformation that can have severe negative consequences for society. When people hold false beliefs about the safety of vaccines, the outcomes of elections, or the causes of climate change, it is much more difficult for them to make responsible decisions on behalf of their families and communities. It is tempting to respond to this challenge by insisting that expert scientists know best and to dismiss those who challenge the experts.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
3 days ago

Lessons in pluralism from a 17th-century African town | Aeon Essays

Crispina Peres, a powerful 17th-century Cacheu trader of mixed African-European heritage, was prosecuted by the Inquisition for blending African healing practices with Catholicism.
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

The pioneering path of Augustus Tolton, the first Black Catholic priest in the US - born into slavery, he's now a candidate for sainthood

The first publicly recognized Black priest in the United States, Augustus Tolton, may not be a household name. Yet I believe his story - from being born enslaved to becoming a college valedictorian - deserves to be a staple of Black History Month. "Good Father Gus" is now a candidate for sainthood. My forthcoming book, " The Wounded Church," examines ways that the Catholic Church has excluded people during different chapters of its history, from women to African American people.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

For Love of Sophia: Creating a Personal Philosophy

A personal philosophy is the love of birthing and nurturing insight that guides actions and creates who one becomes.
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Why it pays to believe in luck

The oil tycoon J. Paul Getty was rumoured to have said that his three rules for how to become rich were: Rise early. Work hard. Strike oil. It's one of those eminently quotable remarks because it captures something we all know to be true, that luck and chance have as much to do with success as anything else. Yet we don't value people for their luck.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromTheregister
2 days ago

Pope warns flock to raise their faces, protect their voices

Catholics must develop critical thinking to resist harmful AI, avoid attachments to chatbots, protect faces/voices from misuse, and urge ethical AI development over profit.
fromYoga Journal
3 days ago

This is Not Your Typical Balancing Pose in Yoga. Here's What You Need to Know.

Akarna Dhanurasana is a pose of focused attention. "Karna" means the ear and the prefix "a" means near or toward. Since "dhanu" means bow, the image is of an archer pulling back a bowstring. Besides flexibility in the hip joints and vertebral column, the pose demands good balance. Beginning and intermediate students can both benefit from Akarna Dhanurasana. It can relieve back fatigue after vigorous asanas, stretch the hamstrings (back thigh muscles) of the straight leg, and open the hip joint of the bent leg.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Curious Geometry of the Lived Experience

Human thought inhabits multi-dimensional, time-shaped lived space; AI processes sequences without accumulating a continuous self, so meaning arises from life, not mere pattern recognition.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
3 days ago

Solidarity, Self-Deprivation, and Selflessness

People sometimes show solidarity by voluntarily foregoing goods others lack, producing morally praiseworthy yet overall harmful self-depriving acts.
Philosophy
fromAeon
4 days ago

From Michigan to Singapore, a meditation on dreams built on sand | Aeon Videos

Sandcastles links a Michigan ghost town swallowed by sand with Singapore's sand-driven land reclamation, using sand as a metaphor for human-nature precariousness.
#community
fromAeon
4 days ago
Philosophy

The yearnings that take young Europeans into the far Right | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
1 week ago
Philosophy

The yearnings that take young Europeans into the far Right | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
4 days ago
Philosophy

The yearnings that take young Europeans into the far Right | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
1 week ago
Philosophy

The yearnings that take young Europeans into the far Right | Aeon Essays

#bose-einstein-statistics
fromAeon
4 days ago
Philosophy

Why Satyendra Nath Bose was more than Einstein's sidekick | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
1 week ago
Philosophy

Why Satyendra Nath Bose was more than Einstein's sidekick | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
4 days ago
Philosophy

Why Satyendra Nath Bose was more than Einstein's sidekick | Aeon Essays

fromAeon
1 week ago
Philosophy

Why Satyendra Nath Bose was more than Einstein's sidekick | Aeon Essays

Philosophy
fromAeon
4 days ago

The Indian daredevils who feel at home in the Well of Death | Aeon Videos

Well of Death riders perform death-defying wall-circling stunts yet face injuries, friend fatalities and dwindling audiences due to smartphone-driven competition.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
4 days ago

How Trump's Greenland threats amount to an implicit rejection of the legal principles of Nuremberg

President Trump prefers negotiation to invasion but continues to press for U.S. acquisition of Greenland, justifying threats by national interest and rejecting Nuremberg principles.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
4 days ago

What we get wrong about forgiveness - a counseling professor unpacks the difference between letting go and making up

Forgiveness is an internal act of releasing ill will, distinct from reconciliation, and reconciliation may be inadvisable or unsafe in some situations.
#immortality
fromAeon
4 days ago
Philosophy

Would immortality offer a curse of boredom or endless novelty? | Aeon Videos

fromAeon
1 week ago
Philosophy

Would immortality offer a curse of boredom or endless novelty? | Aeon Videos

fromAeon
4 days ago
Philosophy

Would immortality offer a curse of boredom or endless novelty? | Aeon Videos

fromAeon
1 week ago
Philosophy

Would immortality offer a curse of boredom or endless novelty? | Aeon Videos

Philosophy
fromAeon
4 days ago

When we turned time into a line, we reimagined past and future | Aeon Essays

Modern linear representation of time originated in the 18th century; earlier cultures predominantly held cyclical, celestial-based conceptions of time.
Philosophy
fromAeon
4 days ago

Anyons: the two-dimensional particles that reframe reality | Aeon Essays

Anyons constitute a third class of particle with unique exchange statistics whose braided, topological information storage could enable robust, fault-tolerant quantum computing.
Philosophy
fromMedium
3 years ago

The 2,000 Year Old Temple Inscriptions That Sum Up How Self-Improvement Works

Three ancient maxims—Know thyself, Nothing in excess, Certainty brings ruin—remain enduring guidance for self-improvement through iterative self-discovery.
Philosophy
fromYogaRenew
3 days ago

The Ahankara

True identity is the eternal soul; the ahankara (false ego) creates a mistaken 'I' that attaches to transient labels and roles.
Philosophy
fromMail Online
4 days ago

Scientist claims your memories are merely illusions

The Boltzmann Brain hypothesis proposes that current memories may be spontaneous random-fluctuation brain states rather than reliable records of an external past.
fromdzone.com
3 days ago

Agile Manifesto: The Reformation That Became the Church

In 1517, Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to a church door to protest the sale of salvation. The Catholic Church had turned faith into a transaction: Pay for indulgences, reduce your time in purgatory. Luther's message was plain: You could be saved through faith alone, you didn't need the church to interpret scripture for you, and every believer could approach God directly.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
4 days ago

The brain-deep emotion that matters more than happiness

Joy differs from happiness: it coexists with pain, is not dependent on circumstances, and sustains people when happiness cannot.
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Prophecy from apocalyptic 'messiah' warns of widespread death

Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, also known as the Promised Messiah and the Imam Mahdi, wrote a 1905 poem describing massive earthquakes and destruction across the world, which some have now interpreted as a warning of World War III. In the poem, published around the time of his death in 1908, Ahmad predicted streams of blood flowing from widespread death, entire regions being wiped out, a massive earthquake, and even strange sky events beyond scientific explanation.
Philosophy
fromBustle
3 days ago

Your Tarot Reading For The Week Of January 26 - February 1

Throughout the week, keep an eye out for all the habits that keep you on edge - like waking up super late, putting off projects, leaving texts on read, driving around on E - and make it your mission to stop. Get the gas, answer your friend, set the alarm. Even if you just change one thing, it could relieve some pressure, and add some much-needed structure into your schedule.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
4 days ago

CFP: AAR Confucian Traditions Unit Submissions are Open

Call for submissions to the AAR Confucian Traditions Unit with deadline March 6 accepting panels and individual papers on Confucian themes.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Thoughts That Are Born in Darkness

Genius idea generation is mysterious, distinct from academic skill, and unlimited information access risks replacing original thought.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

Peter Neumann, philosopher: Without the idea of progress, only resignation remains'

The twentieth century combined catastrophic events with persistent utopian projects that, despite failures, shaped cultural responses and attempts to reinvent society.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Is Metaphysics Useful?

Analytic metaphysics often relies on armchair intuition and common sense, making it unreliable and potentially obstructive compared with empirically grounded science.
fromFast Company
6 days ago

Why everything you think about yourself could be an illusion

For most of my life, I thought of myself as a fixed entity: This is me. These are my traits. This is who I am. I assumed I was essentially that same person who loved sugary cereal at age 8, fried chicken at 12, and tequila at 21, and who still loves those things now, even if my stomach disagrees. But this is an illusion. Neuroscience, physics, and Buddhism all agree: There is nothing fixed about us-not even close.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

Sure, AI can 'do' writing. But memoir? Not so much | Aeon Essays

Poetry and creative expression served as decisive tests for distinguishing human from machine intelligence via the imitation game.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Is being virtuous good for you - or just people around you? A study suggests traits like compassion may support your own well-being

Compassion, patience, and self-control often increase personal well-being by enhancing positive feelings and perceived meaning in everyday moments.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

APA Member Interview: Sophie Grace Chappell

Sophie Grace Chappell is Professor of Philosophy at the Open University, UK. She has been Executive Editor of The Philosophical Quarterly since 2021, and serves as a member of the APA's LGBTQ representation committee. Her books include Reading Plato's Theaetetus (Hackett 2004), Knowing What To Do (OUP 2014), Epiphanies (OUP 2022), Trans Figured (Polity Press 2024), and A Philosopher Looks At Friendship (CUP 2024).
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
6 days ago

Recently Published Book Spotlight: The Rise of Polarization: Affects, Politics, and Philosophy

Prevailing accounts of affective polarization misdiagnose the phenomenon by focusing on survey patterns instead of the underlying narrative and affective practices that shape political life.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
1 week ago

Why AI can't automate science, according to a philosopher

AI aids scientific workflows yet cannot replace human scientists because it relies on human-curated data and lacks commonsense reasoning.
Philosophy
fromEarth911
1 week ago

Earth911 Inspiration: Nothing In Vain

Nature acts with grace and yields miraculous results from 13.4 billion years of experimentation, inspiring people to prioritize the planet every day.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
1 week ago

How our mattering instinct builds and divides our relationships

People are primarily motivated by needing connectedness and by the mattering instinct—the desire to know one’s life matters to oneself.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Our Obsession With Hypocrisy Is Making Things Worse

Hypocrisy elicits intense moral disgust and is widely condemned across religion, literature, and philosophy as deeply corrupting to character.
fromAeon
1 week ago

From Michigan to Singapore, a meditation on dreams built on sand | Aeon Videos

A sprawling tale of two Singapores, the short documentary Sandcastles draws connections between Singapore, Michigan - a 19th-century ghost town swallowed by sand following widespread deforestation - and the island country of Singapore, where rapid development and land reclamation has, for decades, been enabled by the importation of sand. More poetic exploration than call to action, the work surveys waterways, cycles of development and the transient nature of sand - deceptively sturdy over short timescales but, over decades, quite volatile.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Is Panpsychism Just Snake Oil?

I regret using that term now somewhat, not because I have changed my mind, but because the term immediately provokes a defensive reaction and makes a neutral evaluation of my arguments more difficult. I saw a comment, in a response piece to my post by Nino Kadić, that they were immediately annoyed and could not move far beyond the title, and perhaps this is unsurprising.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Buried alive, leeched, and attacked with a poker: The dark history of nostalgia "cures"

Nostalgia was historically treated as a dangerous, physical illness linked to bodily symptoms and fatal outcomes before becoming viewed as a largely benign emotion.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Tohu v'Bohu: The Void Before Creation

The universe and creative beginnings are best understood as a productive, formless chaos—tohu v'bohu—rich with potential rather than mere waste.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

A Third Kind of Philosophy

Naturalist philosophy is a distinct third philosophical approach, fundamentally different from analytic and continental traditions and oriented toward continuity with science.
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Rick Rubin, Kant, and the Tasteful Genius

In §46, Kant defines genius as "the inborn predisposition of the mind through which nature gives the rule to art" (5:307). Because beautiful art cannot be created according to fixed rules, the artistic genius is a kind of channel for the way beauty appears spontaneously in nature. (My slideshow includes Angelus Silesius's "Die Rose" on this point: "The rose is without why.") For Kant, genius has a talent that cannot be learned or taught, and it cannot give an account of itself.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

In the Midst of a Crisis: Relational Liberalism and the Contemporary Challenges to Democratic Legitimacy

Contemporary democracies face a legitimacy crisis driven by widespread erosion of trust, causing representation breakdowns, unchecked power, and extreme asymmetries in wealth, status, and influence.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Call for Papers - Special Issue: "Science, Technology, and East Asian Philosophy"

Special issue solicits papers examining how East Asian philosophical traditions illuminate, challenge, or reframe understandings of science and technology in historical and contemporary contexts.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Bearing witness after the witnesses are gone: How to bring Holocaust education home for a new generation

Joe Engel, an Auschwitz survivor, became a prominent Holocaust educator in Charleston and helped establish a permanent memorial as survivor voices fade.
Philosophy
fromiRunFar
1 week ago

Classical Texts for Running and Life

Excellence is difficult and requires sustained effort; running and reading cultivate virtue and classical books offer enduring guidance for improving character.
Philosophy
fromLady Freethinker
1 week ago

When 'Cow' Becomes 'Beef': How Language Shapes the Way We Treat Animals

Language shapes moral perception of animals, reducing individuality through labels and justifying harm, thereby influencing empathy and societal treatment.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

How a small shop in Kyoto connects mastery with meditation

A centuries-old family workshop preserves tea through meticulous, unchanging craftsmanship, modest growth, and a purposefully understated presence.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

What 'hope' has represented in Christian history - and what it might mean now

The Vatican ended Holy Year 2025 “Pilgrims of Hope” amid global turbulence, while Christian tradition and ancient myths portray hope as enduring in humanity.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Homo HURAQUS 2050 and the Disruptive Techno-Convergence Era: How Humanoid Robotics, AI, Quantum and Synthetic Biology Are Recasting The Future of Humanity

Civilization faces systemic frontier risks as converging transformative technologies outpace governance, enabling redesign of life, intelligence, and agency.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

AI cannot automate science - a philosopher explains the uniquely human aspects of doing research

Consistent with the general trend of incorporating artificial intelligence into nearly every field, researchers and politicians are increasingly using AI models trained on scientific data to infer answers to scientific questions. But can AI ultimately replace scientists? The Trump administration signed an executive order on Nov. 24, 2025, that announced the Genesis Mission, an initiative to build and train a series of AI agents on federal scientific datasets "to test new hypotheses, automate research workflows, and accelerate scientific breakthroughs."
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

What ChatGPT Gets Wrong About Therapy: On The Ethical and Relational Limits of AI as Therapy

During one session, the male partner rushed into my office and handed me a printout of his exchange with ChatGPT. I shared a knowing glance with his wife before skimming it over. The transcript included his version of an argument they'd had alongside ChatGPT's commentary. ChatGPT reinforced his view, labeling his wife's communication as "highly problematic," "abusive," and even suggesting traits of "narcissistic personality disorder."
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromNature
1 week ago

Study decision-making to understand how technology will affect behaviour

Encounters with novel technologies can transform users' values and preferences unpredictably, making behavioral predictions based on experiments inadequate.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The End of Analytic Philosophy?

Analytic philosophy is degenerating, but naturalized philosophy offers a viable successor paradigm emphasizing empirical methods and interdisciplinary integration.
#consciousness
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago
Philosophy

What's the Point of Philosophy?

Scientific inquiry can remain neutral about consciousness's metaphysical status, while philosophy examines meta-philosophical criteria and reasons for preferring competing theories.
Philosophy
fromAnOther
1 week ago

A Reading List by Ocean Vuong: Part Two

Post-success disillusionment reveals pride, a false vocation to teach without knowledge, and pervasive self-deception among artists.
fromAeon
1 week ago

There's a gentle artistry to a museum taxidermist's craft | Aeon Videos

This short captures Tim Bovard, the staff taxidermist for the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, as he reflects on over five decades spent perfecting his craft. Sparked by a childhood fascination with the museum's dioramas that never faded, Bovard has devoted his career to shaping what he calls the 'illusion of life' - a process that requires both scientific precision and imaginative interpretation.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

The Threats of CEO Activism to the Democratic Process

Right-wing CEO activism surged after 2024, intensifying concerns about threats to democratic processes and shifting scholarly attitudes toward CEO political speech.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

The West's forgotten republican heritage | Aeon Essays

Power to shape daily life has shifted to markets, corporations, and data systems, leaving citizens feeling powerless and fueling a turn toward authoritarian politics.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Episode 30 of "This Is the Way": Confucianism and Reverential Reading

Reverential attention combines disciplined bodily posture, sustained alertness, deep familiarization, reflective personalization, and ongoing doubt to make reading transformative yet objective.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

The Gandalf Effect: The most important thing for any leader

Leadership is a cultivated character formed by repeated virtuous practice, conscious self-work, and imitating moral exemplars to develop traits like fairness.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Did God fix a football match? Welcome to the great divine intervention debate | Ravi Holy

Belief in prayer and divine intervention is compelling for believers but problematic when assumed to micromanage specific outcomes.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

Why the best way to understand the self is to build a robot one | Aeon Essays

The self is dual: simultaneously subject (the knower) and object (the known), extending beyond the body to include possessions, actions, and self-concepts.
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

Why Hume is better at explaining modern capitalism than Marx | Aeon Essays

Left-leaning regions of the United States and elsewhere in the world among the richest? When Japan and South Korea sought to become economic powerhouses in the later 20th century, they adopted Leftist policies such as strong public education, universal healthcare and increased gender equality - if countries seeking to compete in capitalist arenas adopt broadly Leftist policies, then how do we explain why Leftists are always talking about overthrowing capitalism?
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Thecla, the beast fighter: The saint who faced down lions and killer seals is one of many 'leading ladies' in early Christian texts

The Christian apocrypha highlight prominent, courageous women like Thecla who preached, baptized, and performed miracles, unlike the New Testament where women rarely star.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

When we turned time into a line, we reimagined past and future | Aeon Essays

The modern linear conception of time arose in the 18th century; earlier Western thought conceived time as cyclical, tied to celestial cycles and eternal recurrence.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

Dying to be green: are new eco funerals a false promise? | Aeon Essays

Traditional burial and cremation significantly harm the environment, prompting development of ecological alternatives such as tree burial, human composting, and microbial transformation.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Environmental Bioethics and the Problem of Interdependence

Environmental bioethics reframes ethical focus toward interdependence, bridging individual-focused clinical bioethics and community-focused public health ethics across approach, scale, and scope.
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

APA Member Interview, Mark Coppenger

My dad (PhD, Edinburgh) was teaching Bible, theology, and church history courses in a small Christian college that needed a philosophy teacher. They drafted him to fill the gap, so he took some summer courses at GWU and UC-Boulder to get up to speed. The family accompanied him on these trips, and I began to pick up on intriguing references to "dialectical materialism," "John Dewey," etc. I admired my dad,
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

The loving lies a father wrote to his daughter from a gulag | Aeon Videos

The Russian meteorologist Alexei Vangengheim, who was once a respected government official and loyal member of the Communist Party, fell victim to a Stalinist purge in 1934. Named a 'traitor to the motherland', Vangengheim was sent to a gulag on the Solovetsky Islands and executed three years later in 1937, before being posthumously 'rehabilitated' by the Soviet Union in 1956.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

A breezy ode to wind ponders its power, beauty and utility | Aeon Videos

Wind Keepers cinematically reveals how wind shapes daily life in Viana do Castelo through intimate images and collaborative student filmmaking.
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

How islanders of Oceania built fearsome armour without metal | Aeon Videos

Visually striking and intricately crafted, the traditional armour and weaponry of the Kiribati islands in the Pacific Ocean were built from coconut fibre, human hair, sharks' teeth and porcupine fish. Yet, fearsome and lethal as these objects were, the people of this remote archipelago weren't especially warlike, as British colonists had long assumed, but were instead part of a ritualised style of combat intended to keep violence between clashing groups to a minimum.
Philosophy
[ Load more ]