Philosophy

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Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 day ago

Meekness isn't weakness - once considered positive, it's one of the 'undersung virtues' that deserve defense today

Meekness, docility, and condescension are often misunderstood; historically these traits were viewed as virtues that can support a good life.
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

What Walter Benjamin Knew

Walter Benjamin combined stubborn unworldliness with startling prescience, maintaining intellectual pursuits despite internment and imminent danger.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Move over stoics! Why we should all embrace nihilism and discover what really matters in life | Gemma Parker

I was suspicious, even cynical, about what the world insisted was vital to the life of my unborn child. I was partly sceptical because so much of the advice I was getting was contradictory. But I was also suspicious because I'd spent most of my 20s reading Nietzsche. Nietzsche is not, perhaps, a natural choice for a young mother. But he helps to fuel certain questions about values, and purpose, that are central to questions of care.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Quintessential Secrets of Psychotherapy: The Trauma of Evil

been ignored, neglected, minimized, or dismissed by mainstream psychology but can no longer be denied or avoided without serious consequences. As C.G. Jung (1961) presciently put it, "Today we need psychology for reasons that involve our very existence. . . . We stand face to face with the terrible question of evil and do not even know what is before us let alone what to pit against it."
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How to View the Concept of Shaming

If you feel shame, recognize that no one else can shame you; only you can make yourself feel ashamed. Only you have the power to create your emotions-positive, negative, helpful, or unhelpful. The Stoics Hundreds of years ago, the Greek and Roman Stoics advanced that insight. In his treatise the Enchiridion, Epictetus wrote: Men are disturbed not by the things that happen but by their opinions about those things. In his Epistles, Seneca stated: Everything depends on opinion.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Why Expert Predictions So Often Fail

True expertise is judgment under constraints, focused on diagnosing present problems and weighing tradeoffs, not predicting uncertain futures.
Philosophy
fromIndependent
3 days ago

Fionnan Sheahan: In liberal Ireland, you can now expect to be Catholic-shamed for having ashes on your forehead

An Ash Wednesday ritual performed in memory of a devout father was interpreted as 'far right' despite being a private act of remembrance.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

Is AI really 'intelligent'? This philosopher says yes

Large language models show convincing competence without genuine understanding, fueling AGI hype, backlash, and calls for clearer, cooler thinking about intelligence.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
4 days ago

Normothermic Regional Perfusion, the Dead Donor Rule, and the Metaphysics of Causation

Normothermic regional perfusion restores organ circulation after circulatory death to reduce ischemic injury but raises significant ethical concerns about causing the donor's death.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
4 days ago

APA Member Interview, Stacy S. Chen

PhD candidate studying how decision-making environments shape medical choices, informed consent validity, and physician-patient relationships, with interests in public health and advocacy.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
4 days ago

I'm a philosopher who tries to see the best in others - but I know there are limits

Interpreting others charitably—seeing them as protagonists who do their best—promotes understanding, cooperation, and productive learning across differences.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Star Trek and the Psyche

Plato's Politeia (the work we call The Republic thanks to Cicero's Latin mistranslation) describes the soul as having three parts: reason ( logistikon), spirit ( thumos), and appetite ( epithumia). But throughout the dialogue, Plato also describes a fourth element... repeatedly, and by name. He calls it the auto politeia (self-constitution): the governing principle that determines how the three parts relate. Plato has it in the text. His readers have looked right at it and counted three for 2,400 years.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Who Is to Blame for Our Choices?

Do you blame others for the choices you are making? Have you blamed others for the previous choices you have made? To shed more light on these questions, you might also ask yourself: "What am I responsible for, and what power do I have?" From there, you might agree with this self-reflective response: "I am responsible for, and I've got the power over what I think, do, say, learn, and choose" (Purje, 2014).
Philosophy
fromFast Company
4 days ago

Our brains are wired to ignore information. Here are neuroscience-backed tips for communicating memorably

The human brain is engineered to ignore most of what it sees and hears, according to the neuroscientists I interviewed for the audio original Viral Voices. If that's the case, how are you supposed to make a memorable impression? The empowering news is that if you understand how the brain works, what it discards, and what it pays attention to, you'll be far more persuasive than you've ever imagined. Persuasive people have influence in their personal and professional lives.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
4 days ago

Your life, scored: How metrics warp your sense of meaning

An unfortunate side effect of reading philosopher C. Thi Nguyen's latest book, The Score, is noticing how much sway metrics hold over you. I say "unfortunate" not because the realization is unwelcome, quite the opposite, but because you'll find yourself taking account of the numerical scrum in your life. And that exercise gets unnerving fast. KPIs, BMIs, OKRs, credit scores, savings rates, social media likes, screen time, steps walked, hours worked, hours slept,
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Who Deserves Your Pearls?

Use discernment to protect your most sacred offerings—time, energy, truths, and memories—by not sharing them with people who will devalue or harm them.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

Why Michelangelo's 'Last Judgment' endures

Michelangelo's The Last Judgment in the Sistine Chapel is undergoing a three-month restoration beginning February 1, 2026.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Can Science Account for Consciousness?

The intrinsic nature argument for panpsychism claims consciousness depends on intrinsic properties that physical science's structural explanations allegedly cannot capture.
Philosophy
fromRatfactor
5 days ago

A programmer's loss of identity

A person can lose the social identity of "computer programmer" despite still programming, because social identity depends on community belonging.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Time travel' and embracing emotions: five expert tips for making tough decisions

Emotions and personal values are essential information when choosing between meaningful options that are different in kind but similar in overall value.
Philosophy
fromwww.mediaite.com
5 days ago

We Were Saved on a Cross': Former Senator Ben Sasse Breaks Down in Tears While Discussing His Faith and Bleak Cancer Diagnosis

Ben Sasse, diagnosed with stage-four pancreatic cancer, tearfully affirmed belief in Christ's atoning work, justification, sanctification, and ultimate salvation.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Year of the fire horse - explained: the Chinese zodiac sign that's all about intensity

The fire horse combines the horse's energetic independence with the fire element's intensity, producing a rare, fast-moving, high-energy zodiac year occurring once every 60 years.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
6 days ago

Book available: Qiu and Bunin eds., Collected Papers of Four Conferences on Democracy, Rule of Law, Human Rights, Good Governance

Collected Papers of Four Conferences on Democracy, Rule of Law, Human Rights, Good Governance (Beijing, 2025) available free as PDF for students, colleagues, and institutions
Philosophy
fromApaonline
6 days ago

When Gender Policing Backfires

Women's restroom lines are substantially longer due to anatomy, fewer toilets per female-designated facilities, inefficient restroom flow, and care-related companion needs.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
6 days ago

Combating "Opinion": Gilles Deleuze Meets Timothy "Speed" Levitch

Common sense and popular opinion can exclude critical thought; teaching must distinguish opinion from philosophical thinking to cultivate scrutiny and argumentative rigor.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
6 days ago

3 ways to think and talk like a philosopher

Using philosophers' precise vocabulary, hedging, and epistemic openness changes how one thinks and encourages philosophical thought.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
6 days ago

Why organisms are more than machines

Organisms exhibit self-directed, purposive activity that distinguishes life from inert matter, implying intelligence is rooted in living processes beyond mere computation.
fromBig Think
6 days ago

Why organisms are more than machines

There are basic technical grounds to be skeptical of that claim, but beyond that, a much deeper issue lies at the boundary between science and philosophy: What makes life different from non-life? Why is a rock inert and insensate, while even the simplest cell manifests open-ended activity in the relentless pursuit of staying alive? Since the only systems that indisputably display intelligence are alive, if we can't understand life, we're probably missing something essential about intelligence.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Silicon Valley's Favorite Doomsaying Philosopher

An accelerationist movement advocates hastening digital superintelligence, treating an AI takeover as desirable and inevitable.
fromTruthout
6 days ago

A New Era of Scholarship Is Shining a Light on the Black Philosophical Tradition

Given the field of philosophy's paucity of Black or African American philosophers, it is still something of an oxymoron to be a Black or African American philosopher. It is still possible to get second looks when saying, "Oh, I'm a philosopher." Being a Black or African American philosopher doesn't compute within a culture, and within academic settings, where images and discussions of Socrates and Plato or René Descartes and Jean-Paul Sartre dominate what philosophy looks and sounds like.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Don't Blame Yourself: Your Willpower Problem May Be Physical

Self-control depends on metabolic and inflammatory brain states as much as psychological factors, with insulin resistance and chronic inflammation impairing effort allocation and willpower.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The Progress Trap

Cultural grand narratives shape personal self-stories and define measures of progress, influencing desires, morality, and feelings of success or failure.
Philosophy
fromiRunFar
6 days ago

An Invitation to the Pain of Running

I choose not to embrace the added challenge of running in harsh Midwest winter despite recognizing that discomfort can be transformative.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

A Commonsense Critique of A Priori Metaphysics

Claims that metaphysics, rather than science, is the necessary foundation for scientific knowledge are false and revive pre-Enlightenment mystic scholasticism.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

2022 Eastern Division Dewey Lecture: "Thinking in Good Company"

Moral thinking is inherently social: practical reasons and moral identity develop through deliberation with and recognition by morally good company.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Revisiting the story of Clementine Barnabet, a Black woman blamed for serial murders in the Jim Crow South

From November 1909 until August 1912, an unknown assailant - or assailants - zigzagged across southwestern Louisiana and southeastern Texas. Many Black families were slaughtered in their homes under the cover of darkness. An ax - the telltale weapon - was almost always found in the bloody aftermath. All but one of the scenes were located within a mile of the Southern Pacific Railroad's Sunset Route. In each case, a mother and child were always among the victims.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromemptywheel
1 week ago

Liberalism Has Failed - emptywheel

Liberalism replaced hereditary elites with a hereditary elite, eroded virtue, and produced elites who despise ordinary people, prompting a return to ordered, virtuous social structures.
Philosophy
fromMedium
1 week ago

Why code is not the source of truth

Design specifications and blueprints, not implementation code, are the authoritative source of truth; implementation is derived from and judged against originating design authority.
Philosophy
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Quote of the day by Bruce Springsteen: "You can't be afraid of getting old. Old is good, if you're gathering in life." - Silicon Canals

Aging reveals accumulated experiences, relationships, and lessons that become meaningful assets and sources of purpose rather than loss.
fromDefector
1 week ago

How Do I Be Nice To A Jesus Freak? | Defector

I grew up fervently anti-religion, like Don up there. "The opiate of the masses," and all that other shit. To me, every public Christian was either a shitbag televangelist or, even worse, a politician. My favorite comedian was Sam Kinison, a former preacher who turned on his church. I didn't simply disagree with religious people, I looked down on them, like a Ricky Gervais-type would. I thought this made me more rock-and-roll or whatever.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

CFP: ISCP at 2027 APA-Eastern Division

ISCP invites paper submissions on Chinese philosophy for two APA Eastern 2027 sessions; submit a single-document abstract by May 31, 2026; in-person only.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

A father and son's search for the line where the snow starts | Aeon Videos

A father and son annually climb Vancouver's Twin Sisters to trace the retreating snow line, forming an intimate meditation on fatherhood, nature and climate change.
fromAeon
1 week ago

How the harsh, icy world of Snowball Earth shaped life today | Aeon Essays

Such an event, if it transpired on Earth today, would see kilometres-thick ice sheets gouging their way from the Arctic to the Bahamas. Once-diverse ecosystems and climate zones would merge into a single, uniform condition, seemingly destined to be barren. Scientists once argued that such a 'snowball' state could never have existed on Earth since global glaciation could not be reversed. Moreover, on such a world, all life, including our own ancestors, would surely have been extinguished.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

'Totalitarian' Technologies and the Transformation of the Political World: A Radical Cold War Critique

Modern Cold War technology was viewed by many political theorists as inherently totalitarian, shaping society's structures, enabling propaganda, control, and genocide, not merely neutral tools.
Philosophy
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

Elon Musk says Anthropic's philosopher has no stake in the future because she doesn't have kids. Here's her response.

Amanda Askell shapes Anthropic's Claude with moral guardrails; Elon Musk questioned her qualification for lacking children, and Askell defended caring for humanity's future.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Choosing Simplicity Over Artificiality

Simplicity, defined as freedom from artificiality, fosters genuine self-worth and preserves dignity against seductive glamour, admiration, and excessive acquisition.
fromYogaRenew
1 week ago

The Yoga of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

For it is in examining the people like Dr. King, that we can see how yoga can not just make us feel calmer and more peaceful, but can really affect change in a world that is in deep need of healing. By his words, and more importantly his actions, Martin Luther King Jr. showed many of the principles that are central to and deeply embedded in yoga philosophy.
Philosophy
#logic-puzzle
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
1 week ago

A Genealogy for the End of the World

The Anthropocene frames humanity as a collective geological force reshaping Earth’s climate and biosphere, redefining history through shared catastrophe and human-driven planetary change.
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Words Without Consequence

For the first time, speech has been decoupled from consequence. We now live alongside AI systems that converse knowledgeably and persuasively-deploying claims about the world, explanations, advice, encouragement, apologies, and promises-while bearing no vulnerability for what they say. Millions of people already rely on chatbots powered by large language models, and have integrated these synthetic interlocutors into their personal and professional lives. An LLM's words shape our beliefs, decisions, and actions, yet no speaker stands behind them.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

A Better Grammar for Political Debates

I am using the word pragmatism in a specific sense. I am not speaking about being pragmatic as a political tactic; deciding what issues should be given priority and what battles to choose, or a willingness to compromise, or a recognition that there are limits to what can be accomplished at any time. I am writing now about pragmatism in a meaning closer to its philosophical origin in the writings of William James-that truth is not found in abstract principles or beliefs,
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Crucial Elements of Meaning and Purpose

True happiness emerges as a byproduct of meaning and purpose, sustained by staying true to core values and exercising personal power for long-term interests.
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Losing Faith in Atheism

A life‑threatening family crisis and an answered prayer precipitated a decline in Catholic faith and a search for a secular worldview that failed to replace belief's value.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The time of monsters': everyone is quoting Gramsci but what did he actually say?

At a time when geopolitical certainties of old are crumbling away, it has become the go-to quote to make sense of the current moment in all its seeming senselessness. The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters is a line attributed to the former Italian Communist party leader Antonio Gramsci. Over the last two months alone, it has been quoted and often mangled by a rightwing Belgian prime minister, a leftwing British political leader, an Irish central banker and in the title of the most recent BBC Reith lecture, given by the author Rutger Bregman.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

What's Love Got to Do With It: Chatbot Wives and Lonely Hearts

AI chatbots forming romantic ties with humans reveal widespread loneliness, social isolation, and the limits of machine-mediated intimacy.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

APA Member Interview, Emanuele Costa

Emanuele Costa integrates early modern metaphysics and Spinoza scholarship with a strong commitment to teaching and projects on political dimensions of seventeenth-century epistemology.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

'A lingering in stillness': philosopher Byung-Chul Han on the radical power of gardening

Cicero, the Roman Stoic, once wrote to his friend Varro, pending a visit to his home: "If you have a garden in your library, we shall have all we want." This same desire for good books and natural beauty is at the heart of Byung-Chul Han's In Praise of the Earth, in which he reflects on gardening as a form of philosophical meditation.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

Institutions are how we scale up cooperation among millions | Aeon Essays

Institutions enforce cooperation but must also prevent guardians from abusing power, effectively shifting the cooperation problem upward rather than eliminating it.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

If Justice Doesn't Exist, Then Numbers Don't Either

A drawn circle is at least something physical. You can see it, touch it, erase it. The skeptic can still say, "Circles are grounded in physical reality. Justice is different; it's just an idea in your head." So let's talk about the number two. Point to it. Not two apples, not two fingers, not a numeral on a page-that's just a symbol.
Philosophy
fromMindful
1 week ago

Can Compassion Save the Planet?

When British author Karen Armstrong won the TED prize in 2008, she used the money to convene a group of religious thinkers from a wide range of faiths to craft an updated version of the Golden Rule for the 21st century. What emerged was the Charter for Compassion, which calls on people around the world "to work tirelessly to alleviate the suffering of our fellow creatures, to dethrone ourselves from the center of our world and put another there, and to honor the inviolable sanctity of every single human being, treating everybody, without exception, with absolute justice, equity and respect."
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Mary Kenny: Kudos to female firefighters, but it's often in the public interest to discriminate based on age and physical ability

Men and women hold equal value but can legitimately be treated either identically or differently, while some traditions claim female moral superiority.
Philosophy
fromArchDaily
1 week ago

When Do Buildings Begin to Matter? Rethinking Heritage in Local Time

Global heritage systems prioritize longevity and material authenticity rooted in European slow-growth models, disadvantaging rapidly changing cities where cultural time operates unevenly.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

More than a feeling - thinking about love as a virtue can change how we respond to hate

Love functions as a virtue—a settled disposition promoting others' flourishing—while hate responds to threats against what one loves, not as its simple opposite.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Why We Should Stop "Networking": On the Intrinsic Value of Connection

Networking framed by productivity, efficiency, and profit undermines meaningful relationships and is ethically problematic when pursued solely for concealed personal gain.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

How business students learn to make ethical decisions by studying a soup kitchen in one of America's toughest neighborhoods

Kensington, for those not from Philly, has long had a reputation for potent but affordable street drugs. Interstate 95 and the Market-Frankford elevated commuter train line provide easy access to the neighborhood for buyers and sellers, and abandoned buildings offer havens for drug use and other illicit activity. St. Francis Inn Ministries, which was founded by two Franciscan friars in 1979, serves sit-down breakfast and dinner for thousands of people each year, many of whom suffer from poverty, homelessness and substance use disorder.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

An existentialist philosopher on why we should not let fear dictate love

Love can operate as a comforting illusion promising wholeness, while existentialism locates human incompleteness in thrownness and the responsibility to create meaning.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Artificial Intelligence and the Passivity Problem

AI reduces cognitive friction, shifting humans from constructing ideas to evaluating them, risking emergent passivity rather than machine thought.
fromBig Think
1 week ago

The man who transposed human thought into algebra

Walking through a field one day, a 17-year-old schoolteacher named George Boole had a vision. His head was full of abstract mathematics - ideas about how to use algebra to solve complex calculus problems. Suddenly, he was struck with a flash of insight: that thought itself might be expressed in algebraic form. Boole was born on November 2, 1815, at four o'clock in the afternoon, in Lincoln, England.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

I'm finding it difficult to live up to my morals. How do I know when it's OK to compromise?

I'm finding it difficult living up to my morals where is the line between compromising a little, versus becoming complicit in what I don't agree with? I'm one of those people who believes we can each take a role in solving big problems, and that we should try to make things better where we can. For this reason, I've ended up working in public service and try to reduce how much meat I eat. I'm vegetarian 60% of the time, which is not perfect, but I believe doing something is better than doing nothing.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromAxios
1 week ago

Untranslatable words for love from around the world

Many languages have multiple distinct words for kinds and intensities of love and attachment, reflecting cultural nuances in how deep feelings are expressed.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Democratizing the Economy through Community Wealth Building: Recent Lessons from the UK and Poland

Economic democracy requires expanding democratic control over economic decisions beyond workplace democracy to include community-focused strategies like community wealth building.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Why Aristotle would hate Valentine's Day - and his five steps to love

True love is a steady, everyday commitment to help a partner grow into their best self, not a one-day display of grand gestures.
Philosophy
fromAeon
1 week ago

A musical ode to Indian wool and life on the Deccan Plateau | Aeon Videos

Traditional Deccani sheep wool sustains livelihoods and culture but faces decline as economic shifts, land-use change, and imported wool cause waste and threaten pastoral life.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

What is and isn't new about US bishops' criticism of Trump's foreign policy

Senior U.S. Catholic leaders condemned recent U.S. foreign policy, urging a genuinely moral approach and questioning force used in Venezuela and threats against Greenland.
fromBig Think
1 week ago

How to spot a stupid person with Carlo Cipolla's "golden law of stupidity"

We don't often call people stupid. Unlike its sibling concepts of dumbness and idiocy, stupidity isn't really a personality trait. Of course, you might think someone is stupid, but when we use the word, we tend to limit it to moments of stupidity. We say "Well, that was a stupid thing to do" or "You're being stupid." Stupidity is a blip.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How Do I Become the Real Me?

The singularly most important question we will ever ask is, "Who am I?" Generally speaking, we are not taught how to answer that question. We don't commonly even ask it. That is, until we reach a place where we are screaming into the abyss, waiting for the sound of an echo. And then, we want to know. But do we have to get to the edge of the abyss before we can even think of asking that question?
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

Of different faiths, but connected by belief - Harvard Gazette

Harvard's Interfaith Initiative hosted 'Across This Table,' bringing nearly 200 community members together for intimate conversations about diverse religious identities, faith, and lived spiritual experience.
fromDefector
1 week ago

Ilia Malinin Brings Figure Skating To The Crossroads | Defector

Even in sports that do not literally hand out points for style, the matter of aesthetic value is of discursive import. The most dominant athlete or team in the world can be taken down a peg or two on the moral underpinnings of play style. There are hoops (ethical) and hoops (unethical). You can win, but what is it worth if you do not win beautifully? You can lose, but at least you suffered beautifully when it counted.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

In solarpunk cities of the future, tech follows nature's lead | Aeon Essays

In Indra's Net of pearls and jewels, every gem reflects every other, a shimmering image of interdependence. This ancient Vedic metaphor for connection across the cosmos also illuminates what the environmental philosopher Glenn Albrecht first proposed in 2014as 'theSymbiocene': the era after the Anthropocene, in which human technologies take their cues from living systems and work in partnership rather than through dominance.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

Job Opening: Political or intercultural philosophy, Loyola Univ., Spain

Loyola University Andalucía seeks an open-rank professor of philosophy (political or intercultural focus) for an 18-month fixed-term post starting September 2026, teaching in Spanish.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

The Best Available Parent

Parental legal authority should be justified by the child's best interests and held by those who would benefit the child most through caregiving.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

Jin Reviews Li, Confucian Comparative Political Philosophy

Confucian comparative political philosophy can combine bold innovation with intellectual humility, rigorous analysis, and accessibility, effectively linking Confucian tradition and practices to normative political theory.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Why Christian clergy see risk as part of their moral calling

Some Christian clergy embrace arrest and bodily risk as a moral obligation to protect immigrants, while others decline due to family and congregational responsibilities.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

Philosophizing in a Globalized World (GloPhi) at Hildesheim University

Philosophizing in a Globalized World (GloPhi) pluralizes the philosophical canon by combining cross-cultural philosophy and decolonial theory.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

The Hidden Cost of Being 'Rational' All the Time

Reason should regulate and partner with emotion rather than suppress it; using rationality to avoid emotional responsibility damages judgment and relationships.
fromBig Think
2 weeks ago

Carl Sagan's 9 timeless lessons for detecting baloney

Making good decisions doesn't merely rely on how much information we take in; it also depends on the quality of that information. If what we've instead ingested and accepted is misinformation or disinformation - incorrect information that doesn't align with factual reality - then we not only become susceptible to grift and fraud ourselves, but we risk having our minds captured by charismatic charlatans. When that occurs, we can lose everything: money, trust, relationships, and even our mental independence.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

What We Get Wrong About Human Dignity

Dignity is inherent and unconditional; making dignity conditional, earned, or reduced to niceness or status destroys true human worth and respect.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

How Ancient Philosophy Lost Its Mind-Twice

The shift from Classical Attic to Koine Greek correlated with a philosophical simplification from Plato's multipart psyche to the Stoics' unitary rational mind.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Americans are asking too much of their dogs

Many Americans increasingly turn to dogs to compensate for eroding social life and dissatisfaction with society, finding pets often offer more satisfying relationships than people.
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Fifteen years after Egypt's uprising, how faith and politics reshaped a generation

Fifteen years ago, Egyptians from all walks of life took to the street to demand "bread, freedom, social justice." They were protesting the oppressive 30-year rule of Hosni Mubarak. Egypt had been under martial law for 31 years. This meant that political opposition was silenced, and opponents were often imprisoned and tortured. Police brutality was the norm. Egypt's economy was also weak and relied heavily on foreign aid and loans from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

Time is real - if you view it through the lens of heat | Aeon Videos

The way most people think about time is wrong. The notion that we share a 'common time' moving in a single direction is a useful illusion but, as physicists have understood since the discoveries of Albert Einstein, it doesn't comport with our understanding of the Universe. However, as the Italian theoretical physicist and writer Carlo Rovelli argues in this short documentary from Quanta Magazine, this doesn't mean we should abandon the concept of time altogether.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

"Philosophical Projects: Bringing Everyday Life into Intro to Philosophy," Mateo Duque

I have been teaching Introduction to Philosophy at least once a year since 2012, beginning in my second year of graduate school at the CUNY Graduate Center. Teaching in New York City shaped me in countless ways, and each new iteration of "Intro" has pushed me to refine the course-even if only incrementally. The class I teach now at Binghamton University looks very different from the one I first taught as a graduate student using a borrowed syllabus.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

Confucian Web Top 10 Books of 2025

当代儒学发展开始突破传统哲学和思想史范式解读,更注重从宗教属性、文明维度挖掘儒学价值,且强调儒学与公共生活、历史实践的结合,影响日益全面且深入,彰显了儒学强大而持久的生命力。
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 weeks ago

Orcas haven't changed, but our view of the killer whale has | Aeon Essays

'Orcas are psychos,' quipped a close friend recently. He wasn't joking, nor was he ill-informed. In fact, he is probably the world's leading historian of whales and people. He had just watched a BBC Earth clip, narrated by David Attenborough, in which three killer whales separate a male humpback calf from his mother in the waters of Western Australia. The video's closing footage, with two of the orcas escorting the naive youngster to his imminent death, resembles nothing so much as a kidnapping:
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What May We Hope for After Thirty Years of Failed Climate Summits?

Global commerce and industrialization produced wealth but caused climate change, now threatening the international order trade once seemed to secure.
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Belonging Matters. But Mattering Matters, Too

In The Mattering Instinct: How Our Deepest Longing Drives Us and Divides Us, Harvard philosopher Rebecca Newberger Goldstein argues that human flourishing rests on two distinct 'cornerstones of our humanness': connectedness and the longing to matter. Connectedness—what we often call belonging—is 'the feeling that there are particular others who are prepared to pay us special attention, whether we deserve it or not.' It is unconditional, relational, and necessary. But it is not sufficient.
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