Why Mind Viruses Are Real
Comparing other people’s beliefs to pathogens can be a cheap way of discrediting them, but the idea of “mind viruses” still has real merit.
A collection of 93 posts
Comparing other people’s beliefs to pathogens can be a cheap way of discrediting them, but the idea of “mind viruses” still has real merit.
An Oxford-based academic philosopher explains why he no longer uses a pseudonym when discussing plain truths about biological sex.
On the anniversary of 7 October, philosopher David Benatar discusses the ethical questions it raises and about his new book, “Very Practical Ethics.”
Stoicism is a workout that builds emotional strength, a caulking of the timbers to enable us to weather the coming storms—a preparation we make precisely because the ocean voyage is so rewarding.
The case against retweets, what’s wrong with the War on Terror, equality in light of difference, and more.
It’s the things and people that offer pushback that make personal achievement possible and meaningful. It’s the knots that drive us to comb.
The Guardian’s reporting on a gathering of heterodox thinkers is truly lamentable journalism.
Butler’s latest book is leftist political propaganda masquerading as the dispassionate work of an academic.
Thoughts on modernity’s monoculture mistake.
Metamodernism conveys the experience of living in a world in which we feel comfortable oscillating between different perspectives.
No one has an obligation to express, or refrain from expressing, a particular view, merely because they are part of a minority group.
Robert Pirsig’s insufferable cult novel about philosophy and bike maintenance turns 50.
Nietzsche warned us about the dangers of defining our values in opposition to something else.
Meritocratic reformers claimed that they wanted equality. But instead they sought to replace the aristocracy of birth with an aristocracy of ability.
A conversation with Quillette writer Oliver Traldi.