A Year of Praxis: What Philosophy Teaches Us About Politics, Rationality and the Pursuit of Happiness

Big Think Home
  • Search
    Popular Searches
    Critical thinkingPhilosophyEmotional IntelligenceFree Will
    Latest Videos
    Latest Articles
  • Topics

    Philosophy

    • Ethics
    • Religion
    • Flourishing
    • Knowledge
    • Philosophy of Science
    • Philosophy of Art
    • Language
    • Political Theory
    • Identity
    • Meaning & Purpose

    Science & Tech

    • Physics
    • Biology
    • Aerospace
    • Health
    • Geology
    • Computing
    • Engineering
    • Energy
    • Biotechnology

    Mind & Behavior

    • Psychology
    • Neuroscience
    • Decision-Making
    • Mental Health
    • Consciousness
    • Emotional Intelligence
    • Personality
    • Relationships
    • Parenting

    Business

    • Entrepreneurship
    • Leadership
    • Finance
    • Marketing
    • Innovation
    • Strategy
    • Management
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Startups
    • Economics

    History & Society

    • History
    • Literature
    • Art
    • Music
    • Film
    • Progress
    • Culture
    • Sociology
    • Policy
    • Geopolitics
  • Videos
    Latest Videos
    A beam of light shines through clouds in a painted sky, with the word "AWE" in large yellow letters centered in the image.
    Why Einstein called awe the fundamental emotion
    with Dacher Keltner
    A rat stands on a concrete floor, casting a shadow on the wall that resembles the shape of a sheep.
    How facing adversity can help you live a deeper, more meaningful life
    with Oliver Burkeman
    Six brain MRI scan images are arranged in two rows, showing various cross-sectional views of the human brain, with the bottom row featuring a blue and pink color overlay.
    Can you measure love? 3 experts discuss
    with Meghan Sullivan
    A person stands alone on calm water with the word "STILLNESS" in bold letters over the scene.
    How accepting impermanence can end the struggle to “fix” your life
    with Robert Waldinger
    A man sits on a stool in front of a backdrop displaying a declining graph with bar charts and red trend lines, suggesting a downward trend in data.
    How your cognitive biases lead to terrible investing behaviors
    with Barry Ritholtz
    Is free will a fallacy? Science and philosophy explain.
    with Daniel C. Dennett
    See All
  • Columns
    MINI PHILOSOPHY with Jonny Thomson" text on black background with icons of pathways, scales, and a bird.
    Mini Philosophy Mini Philosophy is a space to explore ideas. It’s where we pause the busyness of life to reflect on ourselves,...
    X-ray galactic center
    Starts With A Bang Understand how the universe works with Ethan Siegel.
    A black background with the symbols "B | T" in a box on the left and the word "BOOKS" on the right, with the first "O" replaced by an open book icon.
    Books Big Ideas. Thoughtful Conversations. One Book at a Time.
    Abstract image featuring a human silhouette filled with various medical and neural diagrams, with brain scan images in the background. A small figure is walking towards the center, symbolizing the long game.
    The Long Game A Big Think Business column written by investor Eric Markowitz, focused on the philosophy and practice of long-term thinking.
    Strange Maps
    The Well Exploring life's biggest questions, publication by the John Templeton Foundation and Big Think.
    13.8 A series exploring the beauty and power of science in culture by Adam Frank and Marcelo Gleiser.
  • Classes
    Featured Classes
    A middle-aged man with short gray hair and a receding hairline is smiling, wearing a dark t-shirt against a light blue background.
    Members
    8 videos
    Productivity for Mortals
    Oliver Burkeman
    Author, “Meditations for Mortals”
    A person with glasses and a bald head is looking slightly to the side, centered in a green-tinted square frame.
    Members
    6 videos
    AI and the Future of Civilization
    Yuval Noah Harari
    Historian and Philosopher, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Best-Selling Author
    Abstract geometric design featuring concentric circles, quartered background, and scattered solid and outlined dots in blue, green, and white hues.
    Members
    9 videos
    The 6 Disciplines of Strategic Thinking
    Michael Watkins
    Professor of Leadership and Organizational Change, IMD Business School, and Author, “The Six Disciplines of Strategic Thinking”
    A woman with long hair and glasses wearing a blazer, posed with her hand under her chin, looks at the camera. The photo is overlaid with a semi-transparent colored square.
    Members
    12 videos
    Radical Respect at Work
    Kim Scott
    Co-Founder, Radical Candor, and Author, Radical Respect: How to Work Together Better
    A middle-aged bald man with light skin and blue eyes, wearing a dark crewneck shirt, looks directly at the camera against a plain background.
    Members
    7 videos
    No-Nonsense Leadership
    Ben Horowitz
    Founding Partner, Andreessen Horowitz and Author, The Hard Thing About Hard Things
    An older man with short gray hair and glasses, wearing a blue striped shirt and a red sweater, is framed by an orange translucent square overlay.
    Members
    6 videos
    A Primatologist’s Guide to Human Behavior
    Frans de Waal
    C.H. Candler Professor Emeritus at EMORY University, Atlanta, GA
    Browse
  • Newsletters
  • More
    • About Big Think
    • Work with Us
    • Special Issues
    • Events
    • Careers
    • Our Mission
    • Get Big Think+ for Business
    • Freethink Media
    • View our Twitter (X) feed
      View our Youtube channel
      View our Instagram feed
      View our Substack feed
Sign In Membership
  • My account
    • My Classes
    • My Account
    • My List
    • BT+ for my Business
    • Sign Out
  • Get Big Think+
  • Topics
    Back

    Philosophy

    • Ethics
    • Religion
    • Flourishing
    • Knowledge
    • Philosophy of Science
    • Philosophy of Art
    • Language
    • Political Theory
    • Identity
    • Meaning & Purpose

    Science & Tech

    • Physics
    • Biology
    • Aerospace
    • Health
    • Geology
    • Computing
    • Engineering
    • Energy
    • Biotechnology

    Mind & Behavior

    • Psychology
    • Neuroscience
    • Decision-Making
    • Mental Health
    • Consciousness
    • Emotional Intelligence
    • Personality
    • Relationships
    • Parenting

    Business

    • Entrepreneurship
    • Leadership
    • Finance
    • Marketing
    • Innovation
    • Strategy
    • Management
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Startups
    • Economics

    History & Society

    • History
    • Literature
    • Art
    • Music
    • Film
    • Progress
    • Culture
    • Sociology
    • Policy
    • Geopolitics
  • Videos
    Back
    Latest Videos
    A beam of light shines through clouds in a painted sky, with the word "AWE" in large yellow letters centered in the image.
    Why Einstein called awe the fundamental emotion If you’ve gotten goosebumps when hearing a story about a stranger’s selfless heroism, or you’ve felt your chest swell at...
    A rat stands on a concrete floor, casting a shadow on the wall that resembles the shape of a sheep.
    How facing adversity can help you live a deeper, more meaningful life “There would be something very, very empty and meaningless about [a] sort of life with no problems.”
    Six brain MRI scan images are arranged in two rows, showing various cross-sectional views of the human brain, with the bottom row featuring a blue and pink color overlay.
    Can you measure love? 3 experts discuss From neuroscience to philosophy, experts reveal why compassion may be the most important human skill we have.
    A person stands alone on calm water with the word "STILLNESS" in bold letters over the scene.
    How accepting impermanence can end the struggle to “fix” your life “The idea is that we move from a place of wanting the world to conform to what we like [towards]...
    A man sits on a stool in front of a backdrop displaying a declining graph with bar charts and red trend lines, suggesting a downward trend in data.
    How your cognitive biases lead to terrible investing behaviors “Let me walk you through the biggest traps that you should be aware of that are a danger to your...
    Is free will a fallacy? Science and philosophy explain. Philosophy asks if free will is real. Neuroscience reveals why the answer is more complicated than we expected.
    A black background with white text and red lines.
    Why 2025 is the single most pivotal year in our lifetime "We're living in an extraordinary moment in history. We are at a moment here in 2025 where we have world...
    A detailed black and white illustration of a toad on a green background, with the word "Car" written below it.
    Even AI is self-censoring. Here’s why that matters. If the people controlling AI are biased, the output will also be. Free speech scholar Jacob Mchangama makes the case...
  • Columns
    Back
    Columns
    MINI PHILOSOPHY with Jonny Thomson" text on black background with icons of pathways, scales, and a bird.
    Mini Philosophy Mini Philosophy is a space to explore ideas. It’s where we pause the busyness of life to reflect on ourselves,...
    X-ray galactic center
    Starts With A Bang Understand how the universe works with Ethan Siegel.
    A black background with the symbols "B | T" in a box on the left and the word "BOOKS" on the right, with the first "O" replaced by an open book icon.
    Books Big Ideas. Thoughtful Conversations. One Book at a Time.
    Abstract image featuring a human silhouette filled with various medical and neural diagrams, with brain scan images in the background. A small figure is walking towards the center, symbolizing the long game.
    The Long Game A Big Think Business column written by investor Eric Markowitz, focused on the philosophy and practice of long-term thinking.
    Strange Maps
    The Well Exploring life's biggest questions, publication by the John Templeton Foundation and Big Think.
    13.8 A series exploring the beauty and power of science in culture by Adam Frank and Marcelo Gleiser.
  • Classes
    Back
    Featured Classes
    A middle-aged man with short gray hair and a receding hairline is smiling, wearing a dark t-shirt against a light blue background.
    Members
    8 videos
    Productivity for Mortals
    Oliver Burkeman
    Author, “Meditations for Mortals”
    A person with glasses and a bald head is looking slightly to the side, centered in a green-tinted square frame.
    Members
    6 videos
    AI and the Future of Civilization
    Yuval Noah Harari
    Historian and Philosopher, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Best-Selling Author
    Abstract geometric design featuring concentric circles, quartered background, and scattered solid and outlined dots in blue, green, and white hues.
    Members
    9 videos
    The 6 Disciplines of Strategic Thinking
    Michael Watkins
    Professor of Leadership and Organizational Change, IMD Business School, and Author, “The Six Disciplines of Strategic Thinking”
    A woman with long hair and glasses wearing a blazer, posed with her hand under her chin, looks at the camera. The photo is overlaid with a semi-transparent colored square.
    Members
    12 videos
    Radical Respect at Work
    Kim Scott
    Co-Founder, Radical Candor, and Author, Radical Respect: How to Work Together Better
    A middle-aged bald man with light skin and blue eyes, wearing a dark crewneck shirt, looks directly at the camera against a plain background.
    Members
    7 videos
    No-Nonsense Leadership
    Ben Horowitz
    Founding Partner, Andreessen Horowitz and Author, The Hard Thing About Hard Things
    An older man with short gray hair and glasses, wearing a blue striped shirt and a red sweater, is framed by an orange translucent square overlay.
    Members
    6 videos
    A Primatologist’s Guide to Human Behavior
    Frans de Waal
    C.H. Candler Professor Emeritus at EMORY University, Atlanta, GA
  • My Account
    Back
    • My Classes
    • My Account
    • My List
    • BT+ for my Business
    • Sign Out
  • More
    Back
    • About Big Think
    • Work with Us
    • Special Issues
    • Events
    • Careers
    • Our Mission
    • Get Big Think+ for Business
    • Freethink Media
    • View our Twitter (X) feed
      View our Youtube channel
      View our Instagram feed
      View our Substack feed
View our Twitter (X) feed
View our Youtube channel
View our Instagram feed
View our Substack feed
Search
Popular Searches
Critical thinkingPhilosophyEmotional IntelligenceFree Will
Latest Videos
Latest Articles

A Year of Praxis: What Philosophy Teaches Us About Politics, Rationality and the Pursuit of Happiness

Follow @stevenmazie

by
Steven Mazie
March 17, 2013

“The owl of Minerva,” Hegel wrote, “takes its flight only when the shades of night are gathering.” A year ago I launched Praxis as a forum for thinking reflectively about contemporary political challenges. The idea was to draw upon salient insights from moral and political philosophy to better understand and evaluate the world of politics: “political discourse for adults,” I called it. As Hegel implies, only when evening comes do we begin to make sense of the day gone by. So today, on the first anniversary of my blog, I pause a moment to take stock of the 107 posts I’ve published thus far in this electronic space.



Social Contract Theory



Glancing through the archive, the first thing I notice is how intimately my blogging holds discourse with my teaching. My posts looking at the Lockean argument for the Affordable Care Act and the Rousseauian overtones of participatory budgeting in New York City both came while I was teaching social contract theory last spring, as did two posts on J.S. Mill: an against-the-grain Milian case for Mayor Bloomberg’s large soda ban and an inquiry into whether it makes sense to engage in debate with genocidal lunatics.



Election 2012



Last fall, I covered the presidential election with posts asking whether Obama is an “imperial president,” rating the speeches at the GOP convention, assessing the impact of Obama’s terrible performance in the first debate, critiquing Romney’s education plan and his "binders full of women" quip but showing the element of truth in the GOP nominee’s “47 percent” gaffe, issuing warnings about computerized voting, and proposing a new format for presidential debates. In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, I averred that the tragedy could enhance Obama’s re-election prospects and on Election Day, I pulled some Twitter shenanigans and announced that Immanuel Kant had returned from the grave to endorse Barack Obama.



Reason and Rationality



The materials in my course “Reason and Politics” inspired a dozen or so posts, including a rationality quiz (the most popular Praxis link of the year), an explanation of why failing the quiz shouldn’t alarm you, an analysis of New Yorker writer Jonah Lehrer’s sad fall from grace, a reflection on the hazards of certainty and advice on how to be more reasonable, a look at how our rational faculties are compromised when we’re sad, a open letter to Speaker Boehner pleading for reasonableness, ways to battle irrationality in the voting booth, and, in the runup to the faux-apocalypse on 12/21/12, a cautionary tale on the epistemological quandary of using Google as a portal to knowledge.



Happiness, Identity and Sex



It seems happiness and personal identity have been on my mind over the past year. I drew on Derek Parfit to discuss the metaphysics of Memorial Day, critiqued Will Wilkinson on bungie jumping and the meaning of life, assessed research into whether liberals or conservatives tend to be happier, and took a Kantian approach against the pursuit of happiness. I also wrote a long, personal post on the upside of suffering and the mistake in Daniel Kahneman’s contention that our experiences matter more than how we store them in our memory. Or so I remember.



A few posts looked at love and sex. I weighed in on the debate over Los Angeles County’s mandatory condom rule for porn actors, asked whether having sex and drinking booze are the really the height of human existence, took issue with a New York Times piece counseling against overweening brotherly love, and hammed things up by imagining some dating websites for philosophy buffs on the model of a new site for Ayn Rand lovers.



Equality and Inequality



Back to more serious matters of the polity, and in line with my scholarship and teaching about inequality in American democracy, I wrote a few posts on income and wealth distribution. Last summer I looked at a study showing that Americans prefer the egalitarianism of Sweden to the wealth gap of the United States, challenged readers to come up with a more palatable term than the dreaded “redistribution,” picked a winner (“dehoarding”), examined American misperceptions of the wealth gap and wondered how they would know any better. I also wrote on how to address widespread de facto racial segregation in elite New York City public high schools.



Church and State



Religion and politics, the topic of my 2006 book, showed up in a few posts. I noted how craven Florida state legislators are about Israel and how awkwardly Democrats handle religion, reflected on a Jehovah’s Witness pamphlet on civic and religious duty, wondered why more wasn’t made of Mitt Romney’s Mormonism during the campaign, assessed the pope’s Twitter acumen, asked whether religion is really to blame for the Israel-Palestine divide and proposed a better way to discuss it, wormed my way into the debate over circumcision, and commented on the racy tangle between comedienne Sarah Silverman and an orthodox rabbi.



The Supreme Court



I focused on the Supreme Court in a number of blogs, asking why it is so unpopular among the American people, urging voters to consider future judicial appointments when choosing between Obama and Romney, pointing out inconsistencies in Justice Scalia’s jurisprudence, analyzing Justice Thomas’s brief respite from silence during oral argument and responding to a reader who took issue with some of my claims. I also penned an Isaiah Berlin-inspired open letter to Justice Kennedy on the Affordable Care Act, argued that the ACA would be defunct without the individual mandate and praised Chief Justice Roberts for casting the fifth and deciding vote to uphold Obama’s landmark healthcare law. I also critiqued what appears to be a conservative majority set to nullify part of the Voting Rights Act and set the stage for next month’s oral argument in the same-sex marriage cases and explained why the conservative case against marriage equality has all but evaporated.



I wrote three posts on one of the most contentious issues of the year: an analysis of the nightmarish movie-theater massacre in Aurora, an Ecclesiastes-inspired reflection on the senselessness of the slaughter of schoolchildren in Newtown, and a thought about what Jesus would do about gun control.



&c.



In the potpourri department, I looked into Karl Rove’s insane analysis on election night, asked whether presidential mandates are real, defended irony in the face of a withering critique at the Stone, wrote on the lead-up to the fiscal cliff and the tax deal that averted it, compared a blind Chinese dissident to Socrates (and wondered whether he's serious about wanting to return to China), warned of a sinister GOP strategy to take back the White House in 2016, asked why Americans claim to prefer cockroaches to Congress, explored the 100-year GOP allergy to income taxes, came out against the running of the NYC marathon in the wake of Sandy (and noted the role of public opinion in achieving the impossible: changing Mayor Bloomberg's mind), critiqued the drive to end National Science Foundation funding for political science research, and named John Rawls as President Obama’s philosophical muse.



The Point of Praxis: Education



Taking on Praxis has kept me on my toes and given me an exciting forum for thinking through some tough, important issues. It has been a refreshing change from the ponderous pace of academic publishing, with more immediate rewards and a wider, more diverse readership. But as much as I enjoy blogging, my day job and my main passion remain in my classroom at Bard High School Early College, a New York City public secondary school where the ideas in these posts are inspired, challenged and tossed about. In a recent post, I reported on the takeaways and lessons my students drew from our study of Plato, Augustine, Dante and others, and over the year have recruited three students to adapt their own excellent essays for Praxis. Last summer, Nika Sabasteanski exposed the anti-enlightenment strands of the Romney campaign; in the fall, Zane Friedkin channelled Kant to build a moral case against drone warfare (which I responded to in this post); and most recently, 16-year-old Priya Dieterich wrote the lead Big Think lesson of the day, “Misogyny and the Law: Confronting America’s Rape Culture.”



The vibe in my school is friendly, free and intellectually rich, in part because standardized tests play such a small part in the zeitgeist of the place. As parent to two elementary school age children, I am well aware this is not the case everywhere. I have examined the testing culture in the United States, discussed the powerlessness of teachers who lament this environment but cannot safely resist it, pointed out the role that humor and creativity can play in the classroom and wondered whether standards-based curricula do enough to develop children into citizens.



Thinking back over all these posts — and the articles I have been writing for the Democracy in America blog at the Economist, where I have been a contributor since last August — I am grateful to everyone who has read my work, shared links, responded to my writing and taken me to task in the comments and in private correspondence. I am also thankful to Dan Honan, the editor who gave me this opportunity at Big Think and has been so encouraging along the way. Stay tuned: more Praxis is on its way!



The Five Most Popular Praxis Posts (March 2012-March 2013)

1. How Rational Are You? Try This Quiz

2. Why Do Americans Have Less Vacation than Anyone Else?

3. Sex, Booze and the Meaning of Life

4. Vaginas Invade Tampa

5. Why Do Americans Tolerate Extreme Wealth Inequality?



Seven More of My Favorites

1. How to Be More Reasonable

2. Jonah Lehrer’s Downfall and the Hazards of Genius

3. The Unholy Circumcision Debate

4. The Shred of Truth in Romney’s “47 Percent” Gaffe

5. The Demise of the Case Against Same-Sex Marriage

6. The Upside of Suffering

7. Dating Websites for Love-Seeking Philosophy Buffs


Follow @stevenmazie


Follow @stevenmazie

Steven Mazie

Professor of Political Studies, BHSEC-Manhattan | Supreme Court Correspondent, The Economist

Full Profile
Special Issue
Leadership masterclass: Nike, Jordan, and James Baldwin
George Raveling — the iconic leader who brought Michael Jordan to Nike — shares with Big Think a lifetime of priceless wisdom learned at the crossroads of sports and business.
14 articles
Man in glasses and a brown jacket with a serious expression; the background features a blue overlay adorned with white sports strategy symbols and a cheering crowd. It's reminiscent of a Coach Raveling masterclass, where every move is meticulously planned.

Related Content

The Future

The China factor in the great progression of the next 25 years

A firsthand look at China’s material progress and clean-tech revolution -- and what could happen if we let an authoritarian state steer AI's future.

by Peter Leyden
Large white letters spelling "AGI" are displayed on a platform in front of steps, with additional bilingual signs reading "REASONERS" and "CHATBOTS" in English and Chinese.
Thinking

5 great thinkers who rejected their own ideas

Philosophers rarely change their minds. These thinkers did — often at social and professional cost.

by Shai Tubali
An orange arrow looping to the right is overlaid on a collage of black-and-white portraits of philosophers.
Big Think Books

5 stories that teach you philosophy (better than some philosophy books)

Want to study philosophy but skip some of its heavier tomes? These five novels are a great place to start. (Existential despair guaranteed.)

by Scotty Hendricks
A young armored man consults an elderly bearded man holding a key and a staff, both seated and looking at an open book, as if exploring how stories teach philosophy.
Big Think Books

The price of Christianity’s “broken bargain” with democracy

An atheist's case for why American democracy needs a more Christlike Christianity.

by Stephen Johnson
Silhouette of a person carrying a cross in front of the United States Capitol building, symbolizing cross purposes between faith and politics.
Learn from the world's biggest thinkers.
  • Videos
    • Latest
    • The Big Think Interview
  • Columns
    • Mini Philosophy
    • Starts with a Bang
    • Big Think Books
    • The Long Game
    • Strange Maps
    • 13.8
    • The Well
  • Sections
    • Philosophy
    • Mind & Behavior
    • Science & Tech
    • Business
    • History & Society
  • Classes
    • Class Library
  • Subscribe
    • Membership
    • Free Newsletters
  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Work with Us
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Sale
    • Accessibility
    • Careers
View our Twitter (X) feed
View our Youtube channel
View our Instagram feed
View our Substack feed
© Copyright 2007-2026 & BIG THINK, BIG THINK PLUS, SMARTER FASTER trademarks owned by Freethink Media, Inc. All rights reserved.