14 March 2025

Why Plato Still Matters in the Twenty-First Century

The temptation to dismiss ancient thinkers as products of their time is understandable but ultimately impoverishing. Plato's dialogues remain the most searching examination of justice, truth, and the good life ever committed to writing. This essay argues that returning to the Republic is not an exercise in antiquarianism but an act of philosophical renewal.

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28 January 2025

The Scholastic Achievement: Reason and Faith in Dialogue

Medieval philosophy is often overlooked in popular accounts of intellectual history. Yet the scholastic thinkers accomplished something remarkable: a systematic dialogue between reason and faith that produced insights still relevant to contemporary debates about the limits of knowledge and the nature of belief.

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12 November 2024

Kant's Copernican Revolution and Its Unfinished Legacy

When Kant proposed that objects conform to our knowledge rather than our knowledge to objects, he overturned centuries of philosophical assumption. This essay traces the consequences of that revolution through German idealism, phenomenology, and into present-day debates about the relationship between mind and world.

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5 September 2024

Nietzsche Beyond the Caricature

Few philosophers have been so persistently misrepresented as Nietzsche. Stripped of the distortions imposed by selective quotation and ideological appropriation, his work emerges as a profoundly serious engagement with the crisis of meaning in modern Western culture. This essay offers a corrective reading.

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19 July 2024

What Can Western Philosophy Learn from Ubuntu?

The African philosophical concept of Ubuntu, often summarised as "I am because we are," offers a powerful challenge to the individualism that pervades much Western ethical thought. This essay explores what a genuine philosophical encounter between these traditions might look like and what both sides stand to gain.

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3 May 2024

The Pragmatist Case for Philosophical Education

William James argued that the value of an idea lies in its practical consequences. What, then, are the practical consequences of studying philosophy? This essay draws on the pragmatist tradition to make the case that philosophical training cultivates habits of mind essential to civic life, professional judgement, and personal flourishing.

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