What should philosophy do? Despite record numbers of practitioners, today the discipline is in crisis, awash in abstraction and increasingly isolated—even within the academy.
But there’s a way out, argues veteran philosopher Philip Kitcher. It starts with attending to the ordinary concerns of human life, then illuminating them with clear, rigorous thought.
On this episode, Kitcher speaks with Commonweal features editor Alex Stern about Kitcher’s most recent book, What’s the Use of Philosophy?
Plus, in anticipation of Commonweal’s centennial in 2024, we’re featuring a special segment by contributor Kate Lucky on author Marilynne Robinson’s understanding of “true community.”
For further reading:
- A collection of pieces by Gary Gutting
- Alex Stern on Walter Benjamin and democracy
- Marilynne Robinson on imagination & community
“We live on a little island of the articulable, which we tend to mistake for reality itself.”—Marilynne Robinson