Ortega y Gasset on connecting Kant to the deconstructionists

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 they changed anything […]

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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

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Egoism, Altruism, Predation — Lecture 2 of BUSINESS LEADERSHIP ETHICS

Lecture 2. Egoism, Altruism, Predation In lecture two, we study three distinct moral frameworks—egoism, altruism, and predation. We examine how each type manifests across various domains of life, including business, sports, sexuality, and gift-giving, analyzing each approach through the dimensions of intent, action, and consequences. Dr. Hicks concludes by highlighting how entrepreneurial traits align with

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“The Birth of the Modern” (free sample lecture)

introducing my eight-lecture Modern Philosophy course. What makes modern philosophy revolutionary? How does Francis Bacon propose a forward-looking philosophy of discovery? Other philosophers covered in the course include Descartes, Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Hume, Kant, Hegel, Marx, Mill, and Nietzsche. The full course can be accessed here, along with my other courses, Postmodern Philosophy, The Philosophy

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Modern man’s terrible predicament? Cheap shots and straw men

Perhaps you’ve seen this silly quotation: “Modern man is in a terrible predicament. He is helplessly enamored with the beauty of what the old world built, yet despises the beliefs that inspired them to build it.” It’s usually acribed to author Jeremy Tate and paired with an image of a wonderful old building. Here are

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Frederick Douglass and Adam Smith

Frederick Douglass’s connection to the British Enlightenment. Via David Henderson and David Beito, here is an excerpt from a letter Douglass wrote on November 17, 1864: “The old doctrine that the slavery of the black, is essential to the freedom of the white race, can maintain itself only in the presence of slavery, where interest

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