Nobel Prizes by Country, 1939, 1979, 2019
Also: As of 2019, twenty Canadians had won Nobel Prizes.
Nobel Prizes by Country, 1939, 1979, 2019 Read More »
Also: As of 2019, twenty Canadians had won Nobel Prizes.
Nobel Prizes by Country, 1939, 1979, 2019 Read More »
Last year, Ayn Rand Center Europe invited me and and Craig Biddle to Serbia to debate whether Objectivism is an open or closed philosophy. I argued for open and Mr. Biddle argued for closed. A recording of the debate follows. Also following the video frame (or in this PDF) is a transcription of my remarks
Open Objectivism or Closed? Video and transcript of Belgrade debate Read More »
This series letters written while in exile — on the sometimes-shocking English way of doing religion, politics, science, morals, and philosophy — were hugely influential upon a French audience still in the grip of l’ancien regime. Related: The full Philosophers, Explained series, including classics from Kant, Nietzsche, Rand, Camus, Aristotle, Plato, and other important thinkers.
Voltaire’s essential *Letters on England* brought the Enlightenment to France Read More »
The man has an ambivalent legacy—those who claim him for the Enlightenment and for the Counter-Enlightenment. I’m in the latter group. On the Counter-Enlightenment turn: Kant’s epistemology (Ch. 2), his connections to modernist and postmodernist art, his views on education for duty and obedience, his mix of liberal and illiberal politics. By contrast: here is
Kant’s 300th birthday, April 22, and some are celebrating while some are not Read More »
Last week two thinkers who matter to me died. Robert Hessen was an economic historian at Stanford and Hoover. I’ve used his works on capitalism and on corporate contractual rights in my Business Ethics course. Here is economist David Henderson’s fine summary and tribute: I also had the chance to meet Bob at his home
Daniel Dennett and Robert Hessen Read More »
A five-day seminar this summer; June 24-28 at the University of Illinois, Springfield, on the philosophy originated by Ayn Rand. Join professors William Kline (Business), Carrie-Ann Biondi (Philosophy), Richard Salsman (Politics and Economics), and me (Philosophy). We will give three talks each and participate in additional panels, debates, Socratic sessions, informal discussion, and social events
Week-long seminar on Ayn Rand & Objectivism, at University of Illinois, Springfield Read More »
In making her influential case for limiting the First Amendment and censoring porn, Catharine MacKinnon uses a combination of egalitarian and postmodern arguments. Here is my guided tour of her Only Words (Harvard U.P.) One can also follow Professor Hicks on X (@SRCHicks). Related: The full series of Philosophers, Explained episodes:
Catharine MacKinnon on censoring porn [Philosophers, Explained series] Read More »
I will be at the Academy’s impressive studio in Miami to record a new eight-lecture course on the philosophy of ethics. Here is the invitation to join the live studio audience. We will cover thinkers who made ethics modern (and highly diverse) — and those who resisted the modernizing trends — including John Locke, Jean-Jacques
Studio audience invitation for new Peterson Academy course: *Modern Ethics* Read More »