METAPHYSICS & EPISTEMOLOGY — eight-lecture course syllabus

A course by Stephen R.C. Hicks, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy. Eight lectures on fundamental questions about reality, causality, space and time, knowledge, mind and body, and volition. We work through the big questions — and the debates over the best answers to them — guided by claims and insights from major philosophers including Plato, Aristotle, […]

METAPHYSICS & EPISTEMOLOGY — eight-lecture course syllabus Read More »

‘Lifeboat’ Ethics & ‘Dark’ Human Nature — Lecture 3 of BUSINESS LEADERSHIP ETHICS

Lecture 3. Morals & Human Nature Dr. Hicks examines how views of humans—as naturally destructive and conflictual (via the myth of Gyges and Freudian psychology) or cooperative and productive—shape ethics and business practices. “Lifeboat scenario” claims about resource scarcity influence moral decisions and highlight the tension between social Darwinism and altruistic sacrifice in zero-sum situations,

‘Lifeboat’ Ethics & ‘Dark’ Human Nature — Lecture 3 of BUSINESS LEADERSHIP ETHICS Read More »

Dugin’s “The Gnostic” essay and the dark Left Hand Path

In a short 1995 essay, “The Gnostic,” published when he was co-founder of Russia’s National Bolshevik Party, Russian philosopher Alexander Dugin urges young Russians to drink “The wine of socialist revolution, the joy of rebellion against the forces of fate, and the sacred, berserker passion for total destruction of all that was black”. To do

Dugin’s “The Gnostic” essay and the dark Left Hand Path Read More »

Ortega y Gasset on connecting Kant to the deconstructionists

The Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset (1883–1955) was of the generation before deconstruction, but I was stuck by these comments on post-Kantian German Idealism: “never before has a lack of truthfulness played such a large and important role in philosophy” And: “They did whatever they felt like doing with concepts. As if by magic

Ortega y Gasset on connecting Kant to the deconstructionists Read More »

Iran’s power broker Ali Larijani is a Kant scholar

According to The New York Times, Ali Larijani has effectively been running Iran since January 2026. He was in “charge of crushing, with lethal force, the recent protests demanding the end of Islamic rule.” [Source] He is now the key power broker in Iran’s transition. A colleague alerts me to the suprising-to-me fact that Larijani

Iran’s power broker Ali Larijani is a Kant scholar Read More »