The Ordinary Miracle of Existing
Being alive at all is the most extraordinary stroke of good luck any of us will ever experience.
America Forever Bytes
Other
Being alive at all is the most extraordinary stroke of good luck any of us will ever experience.
Cave of Forgotten Dreams Who is he that hideth counsel without knowledge? therefore have I uttered that I understood not; things too wonderful for me, which I ...
When people ask what Fundamental Uncertainty is about, I usually say it’s a book about epistemology. If they want to know more, I say it’s a book arg…
Can philosophy teach us how to have a happy life?. Explore this storyboard about Ancient Philosophy by TheCollector on Flipboard.
> Nevertheless, I shall take advantage of your kindness in assuming we agree that a science cannot be conditioned upon empiricism. > > — Jacques Lac…
Cerebral contents pale in complexity and significance within the greater ecological universe. Why are worldviews so drastically different? Why is it that obvio...
Bayesians and Popperians disagree about induction, probability, and the status of scientific laws. That dispute is well-trodden. Less familiar is a t…
A discussion of our standards of morality which are deeper than our formal conscious reasoning; they may be reflected in our actions.
The kettle is doing its thing. Light is coming in sideways across the kichen table, the way it does early, catching the steam coming off the cup. Outside there?...
Simone de Beauvoir’s quote “One’s life has value so long as one attributes value to the life of others” is a timeless lesson on empathy, love, friendshi...
Whenever a discussion touches ethics, philosophy, or relates to guiding principles, hypotheticals become useful. We cannot investigate every idea wit…
A philosophical look at moral luck, arguing that luck can distort blame and praise, and that a be...
The world could be different if we were governed by a different breed of humans who understood that politics require morals and imagination.
It's wise to have boundaries. What's a personal boundary? It's a non-negotiable. It's what you refuse to permit or participate in, as a recognition that
In this review of Gordon Seidoh Worley's book, Fundamental Uncertainty, I would like to explain why its main thesis is only partially rational. …
To understand the architecture of joy, we must first travel back to the sun-drenched stone agoras of ancient Greece, where thinkers first began categorizing
A few years back I got into Stoicism, the way a lot of people do: a bit lost, looking for something that felt less like self-help and more like clear thinking. ...
> Yesterday the death was reclassified. In the morning, she signed the consent form to preserve her husband. > > The doctor signed a line "No return…
The transition from small hunter-gatherer societies into complex civilizations gave rise to the first Axial Age. Today, the planetary polycrisis of climate chao...
‘Neuronal representation’ is not a defective concept: Ambiguity as a sign of science in progress Lotem Elber-Dorozko and Devin Gouvêa The term “neural re...
An exploration of passion, self-actualization, and body intelligence in the digital age, examining dopamine culture, AI, and authentic human energy.
The loving entanglement that defies our culture’s idol of autonomy is available to men just as much as it is to women, though differently.
Explore Kabbalistic insights on the power of three and its influence on leadership, balance, and personal success.
Check out our next post in the joint symposium on representation: Today is Ken Aizawa on evidence for representation in neuroscience!
Here’s how humanism should respond to transhumanism, posthumanism, and AI successionism.
Is AI really ‘intelligent’? This philosopher says yes https://theconversation.com/is-ai-really-intelligent-this-philosopher-says-yes-271721
The question is not what arguments lead to belief in God. The question is what arguments do not lead to believe in God. Science proves God, because without a r...