Search
Utilitarianism
George Szpiro explores the philosophical ideas that explain why justice — not freedom or efficiency — may better anchor a fair society.
Philosophers once prophesied that evolution would lead to minds far greater — and stranger — than our own.
Want to study philosophy but skip some of its heavier tomes? These five novels are a great place to start. (Existential despair guaranteed.)
If happiness is an absolute good, would 1 billion slightly happy people be better than 1 million incredibly happy people?
"I think it's about time we stop allowing every male generation bang their frontal lobe through its most developmental stages."
Three of the greatest moral philosophers — Bentham, Kant and Aristotle — offer invaluable and practical lessons for leaders today.
"The movement is much bigger than Sam Bankman-Fried, or any one person, no matter how wealthy," philosopher Peter Singer told Big Think.
Dive into five philosophical schools that have faded into obscurity but still whisper through the ages.
Are people are more likely to act less emotionally and more rationally when speaking their second language?
Far from being a “dead” pursuit that focuses on old ideas, modern philosophy proposes and debates important, new concepts. All of us can learn from it.
The utilitarian “greatest happiness principle” has remained popular for two centuries — is it time for a rethink?
Most philosophers merely contemplate the world, but what about the ones who actually tried to change it?
From Aristotle's lazy cosmology to Immanuel Kant's "scientific" racism, great minds are not immune to very bad ideas.
Patients with amygdala damage rejected the widely accepted answer to the infamous "trolley problem," saying that it "hurts too much."
The attitude we take to Will Smith's slap will mirror our attitudes to violence, masculinity, and protecting others more generally.
Pokémon has people wandering the world to enslave wild and magical creatures so they can fight in painful blood sports. What's fun about that?