Author name: Editor

Friday essay: in an age of catastrophe is there still a place for utopian dreams? Or might our shared vulnerability be the key?

As utopian oases dry up, a desert of banality, and bewilderment spreads … – Jürgen Habermas (1986) The last few years have been truly catastrophic. One might easily argue that, during “The COVID Years”, we have witnessed more dramatic social and political change than at any time since 1939-1945. In terms of its scale and […]

Friday essay: in an age of catastrophe is there still a place for utopian dreams? Or might our shared vulnerability be the key? Read More »

What is essentialism? And how does it shape attitudes to transgender people and sexual diversity?

Recent debates around transgender people and sexual diversity have been marked by essentialism, a profoundly conservative mindset with deep links to religious and metaphysical dogmatism. It is a stance through which conservative thinkers seek certainty in a world of change and fluidity. Essentialism comprises three key ideas. First, there is the idea that nature is

What is essentialism? And how does it shape attitudes to transgender people and sexual diversity? Read More »

Fictional Truths

Tony Milligan tells a story about the idea of implied truths in fiction. “I knew it wouldn’t work.” “Teething troubles my friend. A few adjustments here and there, and all shall be well.” “Where are we anyway?” “Little Dorrit.” “Let me get this straight. Instead of travelling back into the heady atmosphere of 19th century

Fictional Truths Read More »

What is an Author?

What’s in a name? Marnie Binder asks if it matters who’s writing, and other questions of authorship. “By certain manners of the spirit even great spirits betray that they come from the mob or semi-mob; it is above all the gait and stride of their thoughts that betray them; they cannot walk. There is something

What is an Author? Read More »

Why Emerson is Much Too Smart to be a Philosopher

Nancy Bunge considers Emerson as a philosopher, to show that he is a poet. Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) not only made influential arguments for a distinctively American literature, his early admirers and students include Walt Whitman, generally considered America’s best poet, and Henry David Thoreau, who established American environmental literature with Walden. As a result,

Why Emerson is Much Too Smart to be a Philosopher Read More »

The Liar Lied

Neil Lefebvre and Melissa Schehlein give an intuitive solution to the famous Liar Paradox. This Subtitle is False This article is about a well-known paradox that dates back to ancient times, known as the Liar Paradox, or sometimes, Epimenides’ Paradox. It can take many forms, but one of the most common is the following sentence:

The Liar Lied Read More »

How To Be Much Cleverer Than All Your Friends (so they really hate you)

Part I: Design for a Superbeing. By Mike Alder. Long, long ago, before Philosophy Now was even a gleam in its editor’s eye, there were bright and lively-minded people around, just like you. People who liked new ideas, liked a bit of intellectual stimulation, enjoyed debate and discussion, people who liked to use their brains.

How To Be Much Cleverer Than All Your Friends (so they really hate you) Read More »