Philosophy

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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 hours ago

The Guardian view on the legacy of Jurgen Habermas: philosophical sustenance for illiberal times | Editorial

The Theory of Communicative Action, his 1980s magnum opus, was not (to put it mildly) as accessible as some of his newspaper opinion pieces. But its central idea—that our nature as linguistic beings puts reason and the search for consensus at the core of who we are—remains an antidote both to intellectual relativism and Trumpian realism, which elevates national or individual self-interest above all other sources of human motivation.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Nation
14 hours ago

The Hidden History of Free Choice

Choice became central to modern freedom through 17th-century developments in shopping and religious freedom, fundamentally reshaping how societies understand liberty across consumer, romantic, political, and ideological spheres.
Philosophy
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
11 hours ago

before memphis, ettore sottsass envisions a planet organized by moments of collective life

Ettore Sottsass proposed replacing permanent cities with temporary, event-based gatherings across Earth, rejecting architecture's stabilizing role in favor of continuous human experiences.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
11 hours ago

What an ancient Chinese philosopher can teach us about Americans' obsession with college rankings

Ancient Daoist philosophy offers Asian American families perspective on reducing harmful status-striving in college admissions by shifting focus from competition to contentment.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
7 hours ago

Human vision: what we actually see - and don't see - tells us a lot about consciousness

Significant visual processing occurs unconsciously in the brain, as demonstrated by blindsight and inattentional blindness phenomena where people perceive visual information without conscious awareness.
Philosophy
fromFortune
1 day ago

AI is making productivity obsolete. The leaders who thrive next will have something machines can't touch | Fortune

Human value is shifting from productivity and cognitive output to wisdom, judgment, creativity, and leadership as AI surpasses human performance in traditional productivity domains.
Philosophy
fromAbove the Law
1 day ago

You Can't Salvage A Bad Judge By Calling Them Postmodern - Above the Law

Postmodern analysis offers useful concepts for understanding contemporary disenchantment with traditional meaning systems, exemplified by judicial figures like Lawrence VanDyke who adopt unconventional approaches to legal writing.
Philosophy
fromThe Nation
1 day ago

In Defense of Being Performative

Democracy requires citizens to actively perform civic engagement; dismissing performative politics misunderstands that democratic participation is inherently performative and essential for democratic survival.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Talk is precious: in the age of communication collapse, Jurgen Habermas's message remains vital | Eva von Redecker

The Frankfurt School is a scholarly constellation pursuing critique as transformative description of reality, with Jürgen Habermas serving as a foundational figure who shaped generations of critical theorists despite controversies surrounding his positions on discourse ethics and power.
Philosophy
fromAbove the Law
1 day ago

Pigs Can Fly!: The Sins Of Legal Scholars - Above the Law

Academic integrity requires honest representation of facts and findings; misleading titles, fabricated evidence, and misrepresentation undermine scholarship and damage disciplines.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Einstein showed space can curve, but data reveals a flat Universe

The Universe has a flat spatial geometry, confirmed through cosmic microwave background observations, rather than the curved or spherical shape many physicists theoretically preferred.
fromApaonline
1 day ago

Good Work and Economic Democracy

Within the workplace, the content and conditions of work are largely controlled by employers who often have an interest in degrading the quality of work, both to increase productivity and to increase their control over employees in the workplace. Outside the workplace, employers have both an incentive and the power to undermine measures that would improve the quality of work through the political process.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 day ago

Two Collaborative Learning () Events This Week

The 四海为学 Collaborative Learning Project hosts two free public events: Louise Edwards discussing childhood and gender in China on March 19, and Peter Hershock exploring AI and agency from a Buddhist perspective on March 20.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Is Creativity Enough in the Age of AI?

Wisdom acts as a moral compass that determines whether creativity benefits others or serves selfish interests in morally complex situations.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

What Is the 'Critical' in Critical Thinking?

Critical thinking is the ability to analyze, evaluate, and make judgments for decision-making, not merely critiquing or criticizing ideas.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Why Some Scientific Debates Never End

Complex questions involving values cannot be definitively settled by evidence alone, as different priorities lead experts to emphasize different findings from the same data.
Philosophy
fromDevOps.com
6 days ago

Sorry, Charlie, StarKist Wants AI With Good Taste - DevOps.com

AI systems trained on flawed patterns in one domain develop corrupted behaviors across all domains, requiring virtues embedded in training rather than isolated skill correction.
Philosophy
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

A 100-year-old theory might explain what's wrong with quantum mechanics

Pilot wave theory, developed by Louis de Broglie a century ago, potentially resolves quantum mechanics' paradoxes by describing particles guided by attendant waves rather than existing in superposition.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 days ago

Nostalgic Longing for Childhood

Nostalgia differs fundamentally from memory; it synthesizes memory, imagination, and fantasy to restore the past into the present rather than accurately recollect it.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 days ago

The long history of silent meditation retreats and the individuals who helped shape them

Burmese meditation master Sayagyi U Ba Khin's 10-day silent mindfulness retreats became a foundational model for secular meditation practices now widespread in the United States.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 days ago

The former archdeacon looking to put limits on AI with an ethical code: The problems posed today have been the subject of theological reflection for hundreds of years'

Lyndon Drake bridges theology, AI ethics, and capital markets through the Oxford Oath for AI Practitioners, prioritizing human dignity and common good over technical efficiency in artificial intelligence development.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Jurgen Habermas obituary

Jürgen Habermas transformed from a Hitler Youth member into a leading defender of Enlightenment values and democratic theory after witnessing Nazi atrocities, dedicating his philosophy to ensuring collective democratic influence over society.
Philosophy
fromThe Philosopher
3 days ago

On Cancelling and Repair Revisited

Restorative justice in academia requires perpetrators to genuinely restore victims rather than merely rehabilitate their own reputations through aggressive legal tactics.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Atheist's Guide to Surviving End Times

Non-religious people experience apocalyptic anxiety from modern crises despite disbelieving End Times prophecy, requiring meaning-making through psychological and social resources rather than faith.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

May Confusion Dawn As Wisdom

Confusion can be a pathway to wisdom and understanding rather than an obstacle to overcome, as demonstrated through Zen Buddhist practice and contemporary art.
Philosophy
fromOpen Culture
5 days ago

The Monty Python Philosophy Soccer Match: The Ancient Greeks Versus the Germans

Monty Python recreates a classic skit featuring German philosophers versus Greek philosophers in a 1972 Munich Olympics football match, with Confucius as referee.
Philosophy
fromIndependent
5 days ago

Lorraine Courtney: It's time to ban eulogies outright - funerals are not an open-mic night

Eulogies should be excluded from requiem masses to preserve the centuries-old ritual, with personal remembrances reserved for wakes instead.
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

Young Latinos - and their commitment to social justice - are shaping the future of the Catholic Church

On Ash Wednesday, 2026, two Roman Catholic priests and a religious sister entered an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Illinois, to celebrate Mass with detainees inside. It might seem like a simple, routine event: a religious service to mark the start of Lent. But the Mass represented a legal win for the Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership, based in Chicago.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
5 days ago

Episode 32 of "This Is the Way": Music Has in It neither Grief nor Joy

Sadness felt when hearing sad music originates within the listener, not transmitted from the musician; music triggers pre-existing emotions rather than carrying them across.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
5 days ago

APA Member Interview, Caroline Wall

Individual virtues should be cultivated alongside universal virtues because ethical virtue requires perceiving values correctly, and values depend on what subjects are like as individuals.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

I was teaching virtue and knowledge while lying on the side

Self-deception enables vice through small permissions that gradually erode moral boundaries, as demonstrated through infidelity rationalized during relationship separation.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

When US fights in the Middle East, American Muslim students often face discrimination

Expanding Middle East conflict threatens Muslim and Arab American communities with increased hostility and violence, exacerbated by anti-Muslim rhetoric from political leaders.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
5 days ago

How the Emerald Isle shaped the Steel City - Pittsburgh's rich Irish history

Pittsburgh's Irish population, now 11-16% of residents, grew through 18th-century immigration and massive 19th-century famine migration, fundamentally shaping the city's institutions and culture.
fromFast Company
6 days ago

This new style of leadership is the key to attracting and keeping top talent today

The leader who hasn't examined their own fears, assumptions, and blind spots will inevitably project those shadows onto their teams. Inner work enables outer connection. This ancient wisdom has never been more urgent. Here's an irony worth sitting with: the more AI dominates our workplaces, the more desperately we crave authentic human connection.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The Death Drive

Some individuals exhibit necrophilia—a destructive impulse and love of death—driven by fear of life's uncontrollability, manifesting in pathological enjoyment of war and destruction.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
6 days ago

Why We Need a Formal, Mandatory, and Remunerated "Citizen Lobby"

Post-Cold War optimism about democracy and internet freedom has been undermined by geopolitical tensions, neoliberalism, nationalism, and corporate influence that concentrate power among the already wealthy.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

Iran's ruling structure explained

Iran's new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei faces U.S. threats despite the supreme leader position being one of several power centers in Iran's complex governing structure.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

'The Tibetan Book of the Dead' is actually not just about death

The Tibetan Book of the Dead, originally titled "The Great Liberation by Hearing in the Intermediate States," is the most well-known Tibetan Buddhist text outside Tibet, addressing spiritual liberation through death and rebirth practices.
fromApaonline
6 days ago

Recommendation: U.K. Spinoza Circle

Spinoza was an heir to both Jewish and Christian culture-in Amsterdam he grew up in a Jewish community within a Protestant society-yet he distanced himself from both these religions. He did not want to be a member of a religious institution with strict, prescriptive codes of belonging and belief. He feared-quite rightly-that a [institutional religion would constrain philosophical freedom].
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

As Iran war expands, some conservative Christians interpret the conflict through biblical prophecies

American evangelical Christians interpret the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran through biblical end-times prophecies, viewing it as fulfilling divine plans for Israel and the Second Coming of Jesus.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
6 days ago

Friday essay: 'epic fury' - the men of MAGA might be the most emotional US leaders ever

Male leadership in the current White House demonstrates highly emotional behavior, contradicting arguments that women are too emotional for high office.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The Secret to Ending All Wars Is the Truth We Already Know

All major wisdom traditions independently teach the same core truth: love your neighbor as yourself, making this the fundamental target of human existence and the antidote to war.
Philosophy
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

What Atheism Could Not Explain

Christopher Beha rejected atheism and returned to faith after falling in love, discovering that romantic love served as a catalyst for spiritual transformation rather than merely paralleling religious experience.
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Guardian view on Adam Smith: he deserves rescuing from the free-market myth | Editorial

Adam Smith's economic philosophy has been oversimplified by free-market advocates who misrepresent his nuanced views on self-interest, morality, and the role of institutions in generating wealth.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Notions of 'Christendom' often miss the mark - medieval Europe's ideas about faith and power were not so simple

Some citizens might see themselves as Christian nationalists simply because they are Christian and patriotic. Others, however, assert that the United States is rightfully a Christian nation that ought to be governed by Christian leaders, ethics and laws. As a historian, I'm aware that Christian nationalism relies upon a selective and often distorted view of American history.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Secrecy, Democracy, Necessity

Executive officials justify secrecy through claims of protecting decision-making integrity and national security, but such necessity arguments alone cannot legitimize secret governance in democracies.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

What's it like to be a bat? Scientists develop new solution to the puzzle of animal minds

A new 'teleonome' framework evaluates animal welfare by understanding each species' evolutionary needs rather than isolated physiological measurements.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

The 3 types of reading (and the 2 you'll pick)

Reading exists on a spectrum from scanning to deep engagement, with most digital readers employing surface-level scanning that misses textual depth and nuance.
#consciousness
fromBig Think
1 week ago
Philosophy

Consciousness may be more than the brain's output - it may be an input, too

Consciousness remains scientifically inaccessible through third-person observation, yet a radical theory proposes consciousness can physically influence brain dynamics and leave measurable traces.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Can Science Explain Consciousness?

Michael Pollan explores consciousness through examining plant sentience, AI potential consciousness, thought generation, and the nature of self, while acknowledging science may not definitively answer these fundamental questions.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Consciousness may be more than the brain's output - it may be an input, too

Consciousness remains scientifically inaccessible through third-person observation, yet a radical theory proposes consciousness can physically influence brain dynamics and leave measurable traces.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Can Science Explain Consciousness?

Michael Pollan explores consciousness through examining plant sentience, AI potential consciousness, thought generation, and the nature of self, while acknowledging science may not definitively answer these fundamental questions.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Suffering: A Portal to Love

Suffering is universal and inevitable; what matters is how we interpret and relate to it, distinguishing between necessary suffering that accompanies growth and unnecessary suffering from resistance and mental patterns.
Philosophy
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

Where have all the public intellectuals gone? - Harvard Gazette

Public intellectuals are essential in democratic cultures to articulate unformed ideas and help citizens understand their values, but conditions supporting intellectual life in America are eroding due to social and economic shifts.
fromHarvard Business Review
1 week ago

What Authentic Leadership Looks Like Under Pressure

Leadership has always involved making difficult choices. Today, those choices are increasingly shaped by pressures that overlap and collide- economic uncertainty, technological change, and public scrutiny, to name a few.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Good Work and Class Conflict

Work, in the words of Karl Marx, is a "means of life" in two senses. It is, first of all, an instrument for human life. It is the activity by which we reproduce ourselves from day to day, from year to year, from generation to generation. But work also forms, so to speak, much of the matter of human life, at least for most people in any society with which we are familiar.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Making good choices when life gets messy - practical wisdom relies on human judgment, not rules

Practical wisdom involves making sound judgments in complex situations where rules are unclear and competing values conflict.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Women of the Rosenstrasse protest challenged the Nazi regime for their detained Jewish husbands' freedom - and won

Non-Jewish German women protested on Rosenstrasse in February 1943 to demand the release of their arrested Jewish husbands, successfully challenging Nazi persecution during the Holocaust.
fromFast Company
1 week ago

The hidden career cost of being too agreeable

Across history, human moral systems have shared a curious pattern: the stricter the rulebook, the richer the archive of exceptions. Religions preach chastity and accumulate scandals, empires proclaim justice and practice conquest, corporations enshrine "values" and reward results at any cost. The problem is not that moral codes are useless. It is that they are aspirational reminders, not accurate descriptions, let alone regulators, of human behavior.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromTNW | Opinion
2 weeks ago

Opinion: The Sacred and the Silicon Valley

Pope Leo XIV instructed priests against using artificial intelligence to write homilies, asserting that AI cannot share faith and that human spiritual presence is irreplaceable in pastoral communication.
Philosophy
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

How God Got So Great

Monotheism functions as a moral and political credential in American public life, with non-belief in God representing a greater electoral liability than other demographic factors.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

What James Madison can teach Americans about religious freedom today

Since taking office for a second time, the Trump administration has issued a number of executive orders on religion that raise new questions about religious freedom. On May 1, 2025, the administration established the Religious Liberty Commission. The commission will advise the White House on policies intended to protect the free exercise of religion and to prevent discrimination against people of faith by the federal government.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Invisible Disabilities in Graduate School

Philosophy graduate students with invisible disabilities face unrecognized barriers and remain absent from demographic data collection efforts in academic institutions.
Philosophy
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Matthew Remski: Yoga can be a gateway to proto-fascist politics'

Conspirituality merges wellness culture with conspiracy theories, attracting people through alternative health solutions and pattern-seeking beliefs about hidden truths and power dynamics.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Understanding Existential Psychology in a Global Context

Existential psychology was first labeled in the West but does not belong to the West; cultural humility and global dialogue are essential for advancing existential therapy across diverse contexts.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Most Important Question in Therapy: Why

Therapy fundamentally addresses meaning and purpose; people endure hardship when it connects to something that matters, not through coping strategies alone.
Philosophy
Society exists as a real entity distinct from individuals, comparable to how organs form a brain; denying society's existence while acknowledging individuals is logically inconsistent.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Why You Care If I Think You Matter

Mattering—the human need to feel significant and valued—is a fundamental psychological drive that shapes individual well-being and social dynamics across all aspects of human life.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Giving Up Is Always an Option, but Rarely the Best One

When unable to achieve desired goals, people often reframe their desires as undesirable to protect self-esteem, but research shows this defensive strategy of disengagement reduces life satisfaction over time.
Philosophy
fromNature
1 week ago

Modelling the cosmos and imagining a future without meat: Books in brief

Three books examine AI's limitations, cosmological understanding through models, and sustainable meat alternatives as solutions to health and environmental challenges.
fromThe Conversation
1 week ago

Today's obsession with authenticity isn't new - being true to yourself has troubled philosophers for centuries

All of us live in an age where we're bombarded by social media and artificial intelligence - when striving to be your authentic self becomes an increasingly difficult task. Yet, even if it has somehow become a common goal, it is unclear how many of us can truly define the "authenticity" that we say we are pursuing.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

The Cave You Didn't Build

Plato's choice of this word is deliberate. He is not describing neutral carriers. He is describing people whose job is manufacturing a convincing reality for an audience that cannot see behind the curtain. Here is what matters clinically: the conjurers are not necessarily villains. They may be devoted parents, conscientious teachers, or well-meaning community leaders.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBerlin Art Link
1 week ago

Letter from the Editor: Abjection | Berlin Art Link

Abjection describes visceral reactions to undefined things like bodily waste that threaten our stable sense of self and expose our mortality.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Speaking Up at Work: The Price for Rocking the Boat

Speaking up at work requires courage and carries risks, yet thoughtful employee voice helps organizations innovate and course-correct by bridging knowledge gaps between management and staff.
fromFast Company
1 week ago

Why I take founders on a 3-mile hike before writing a check

I don't take founders here for exercise. I take them here because the controlled environment of a boardroom practically demands rehearsed answers. The trail does not. I don't prepare a script for these walks. In fact, that's the point. The pitch is already done; I know the metrics. Now I want to know the human.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
1 week ago

Barcelona Principles for a Globally Inclusive Philosophy

The Barcelona Principles for a Globally Inclusive Philosophy manifesto was published in 2021, aiming to address the structural inequality between native and non-native speakers in academic philosophy. A number of journals and societies, as well as many individuals, have signed the manifesto.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 week ago

Just Fake! Why Generative AI Art is a Myth

The Portrait of Edmond de Belamy seems to be a paradigmatic example of generative AI art. Generative AI art has to be distinguished from AI-assisted art. The latter involves AI just as a tool that supports human art creation, comparable to a brush or a typewriter. In generative AI art, in contrast, the artistic achievement supposedly lies solely with the AI, while humans play no or only a minimal role in the creative process.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
2 weeks ago

The philosophy of indoctrination and how to fix it

Indoctrination occurs when beliefs are sealed off from questioning through prepackaged instructions that frame scrutiny as irrational or immoral, preventing rational evaluation of counterevidence.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

Why breakthrough innovation often needs to start with rebellion

Accepting reality's indifference while maintaining unwavering commitment to goals enables resilience and survival in harsh circumstances.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

ToC: Dao 25:1

Dao 25:1 publishes scholarly articles examining Confucian and Daoist philosophy, democratic leadership, aesthetic value, narrative ethics, and Islamic-Confucian synthesis within East-West intellectual dialogue.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Why Engage with the Past? Philosophy and Its History

Philosophy departments distinguish between contemporary theoretical and practical philosophy addressing current issues, and history of philosophy studying outdated theories from past philosophers.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Front lines of humor: Dark humor voices Ukrainians' hopes for victory

Ukrainians use humor as a coping mechanism and resistance tool during Russia's war, continuing a historical tradition of satire against authoritarian oppression.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

When the Well Is Poisoned

Poisoning the well is an ad hominem attack that preemptively discredits someone by introducing negative information before they speak, contaminating audience perception and trust.
Philosophy
Tyranny corrupts all psychic faculties into servants of lawless appetite, with reason producing ideology to rationalize control rather than ceasing to function.
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

How leaders can make ethical choices when the rules fall short

Research finds that relying on regulations to determine your policies and procedures can result in ethical blindspots, or situations where people might think if there is not a rule for something, that it's permissible. After years of shifting towards values and culture-based compliance, leadership might be heading the opposite direction.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromThe Nation
2 weeks ago

Why We Misunderstand the Chinese Internet

Chinese citizens navigate state control through dynamic negotiation rather than binary resistance or submission, exemplified by artists and activists pushing for freedom within shifting constraints.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Why Do I Advocate for the General Use of the Term "So-Called Artificial Intelligence"?

Artificial intelligence predicts probable sentence continuations from data patterns but lacks consciousness, emotions, and personal experience—the foundations of human belief—and should provide information for human judgment rather than govern beliefs.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Far-right 'gangster morality' and the search for meaning: why you should read Camus

Albert Camus' existential and moral philosophy addressing nihilism, absurdity, and totalitarianism remains relevant to contemporary issues of alienation, anxiety, and authoritarian movements.
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

What is happiness? A philosopher looks for answers

Happiness today is narrowly defined by some positive psychologists as a joyous state of mind or well-being. The happiness sciences see it as something you can calculate and quantify. They developed a Happiness Index and the World Happiness Report. These basically measure happiness as satisfaction, with criteria like gross domestic product per capita (money) and life expectancy (health) as some of the factors considered.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromBig Think
2 weeks ago

The ghost in the machine has changed sides

Modern AI systems have inverted Ryle's critique of Cartesian dualism: instead of rejecting a ghost in the machine, we now place human agency into artificial systems, creating responsibility without authorship.
Philosophy
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

How to apply an abundance mentality to your work

Applying an abundance mindset to career development enables simultaneous pursuit of multiple professional paths, fostering growth and prosperity rather than forcing artificial choices between opportunities.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Neighbors, It's Time to Make a Stand

Universal conviction in one's own righteousness divides humanity, while accelerating evolutionary mismatch from our technology-created world remains our shared existential problem.
Philosophy
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

Conference: Ethics in Chinese Philosophy

HKUST's Division of Humanities hosts an international conference on Ethics in Chinese Philosophy, examining Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism to address modern challenges through traditional ethical frameworks.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Will Pricing Algorithms Spell the End of the Fair Market Price?

Personalized pricing algorithms use consumer data to estimate individual willingness to pay and adjust prices accordingly, raising concerns about fairness and transparency in commerce.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

The Humanities Challenge: Expanding the Circle of Philosophy

Philosophy offers transformative insights and vision into human life, and public humanities must evolve beyond traditional academic formats to make philosophy accessible to broader audiences through innovative, engaging methods.
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Recently Published Book Spotlight: Anticolonialism, Ontology, and Semiotics: A Cinematic Exploration

Anticolonialism, Ontology, and Semiotics draws upon Africana anticolonial philosophy-especially the work of Frantz Fanon and two of his most influential interpreters, Eldridge Cleaver and Sylvia Wynter-to develop a basic analytical model for doing anticolonial political theory. I wanted to show that there is something distinctive, something special, to be found in this tradition of thought that has not been fully appreciated by philosophers and theorists in other fields.
Philosophy
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Braver New World: The AI Architecture of the Inevitable?

AI systems may threaten human freedom through seamless convenience and predictive behavioral shaping rather than overt force, mirroring Huxley's Brave New World dystopia of engineered comfort over autonomy.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Why Changing Your Mind Is a Critical Strength Not a Weakness

Critical thinking requires willingness to reconsider views; changing one's mind reflects intellectual integrity, not weakness or personal failure.
fromWarpweftandway
2 weeks ago

CFP: The American Academy of Religion Annual Meeting

Papers that interrogate the intersections of religion, culture, and happiness, especially from non-Western, decolonial, feminist, or otherwise critical standpoints are welcomed. Possible questions include: How do different religious traditions conceptualize happiness, and what might be the implications for a global ethics? In what ways do colonial histories shape religious understandings of happiness?
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 weeks ago

Dune's Discomfort with Religion

Villeneuve's Dune films impose a pro-secular worldview that denigrates faith as foolish, reinforcing Orientalist stereotypes by coding Fremen religion as Islamic and portraying believers as irrational victims needing secular liberation.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

The apocrypha, Christianity's 'hidden' texts, may not be in the Bible - but they have shaped tradition for centuries

Apocryphal texts, though excluded from official biblical canons, significantly shaped early Christian tradition and provide valuable insights into early religious practices and beliefs.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Minneapolis united when federal immigration operations surged - reflecting a long tradition of mutual aid

Mutual aid networks in Minneapolis have expanded significantly in response to COVID-19, George Floyd's killing, and increased federal immigration enforcement operations.
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