We often ignore life's biggest questions to stay productive. Discover how Western philosophy built our modern logic and how to live a more examined life.

Philosophy isn't a museum of dead ideas; it’s a living tradition. Every time you pause to wonder about the nature of time, or every time you struggle to do the right thing when it’s hard, you are part of that tradition.
Plato believed that the physical world we experience is merely a shadow of a higher realm of perfect, eternal "Forms." For him, a physical object is just an imperfect imitation of its ideal concept. In contrast, his student Aristotle argued that the "Form" of an object exists within the object itself. He focused on observation and the "Four Causes," grounding reality in the physical world we can touch, measure, and categorize based on its internal structure and purpose.
Stoicism focuses on the distinction between what an individual can control—their thoughts and reactions—and what they cannot, such as external events or the opinions of others. Happiness is found by building an "internal fortress" and remaining indifferent to fortune. Epicureanism, often misunderstood as a pursuit of luxury, actually advocates for a simple life to achieve ataraxia, or freedom from mental turmoil. Their goal was the absence of pain and fear, particularly the fear of death, rather than the pursuit of indulgence.
Kant’s revolution shifted the focus from the mind passively reflecting the world to the mind actively shaping it. He argued that humans possess "built-in software"—categories like space, time, and causality—that filter all sensory input. Because of these mental filters, we can never perceive "raw reality" (the noumena), only the world as it appears to us (the phenomena). This compromise saved the validity of scientific laws while acknowledging the limits of human perception.
Coined by Jean-Paul Sartre, this principle suggests that human beings do not have a pre-defined purpose or "blueprint" created by a higher power or nature. Unlike an object like a letter opener, which is designed with a specific function in mind, a human first exists and then must define their own meaning through their choices and actions. This leaves individuals with "radical freedom," making them the sole authors of their own lives and values.
The "Veil of Ignorance" is a thought experiment by John Rawls used to determine the fairness of social structures. It asks individuals to design a society without knowing what their own position in that society will be—including their race, gender, wealth, or health. Rawls argued that from behind this veil, people would naturally choose a system that protects the most vulnerable and ensures fairness for everyone, simply because they might end up in those circumstances themselves.
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From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
