Discussion Recaps
Every week we explore big questions together. Here are the summaries from our sessions — ideas, arguments, and the questions that stayed with us.
May 30, 2026
Are True Friendships on the Decline in the Digital Age?
Introduction: More Connected Than Ever, Yet Lonelier Than Before? Never in human history have we been so connected. Within seconds, we can message someone across the world, join communities built around our most obscure interests, and maintain relationships that would have been impossible just a generation ago. Yet despite this unprecedented connectivity, a growing number of people report feeling lonely, isolated, and disconnected. Surveys suggest that people have fewer close friends than they…
May 16, 2026
Are we freer before making a choice, or after?
A Deep Dive into Freedom, Possibility, and the Human Condition Every meaningful philosophical question eventually reveals itself to be about something larger than it first appears. At first glance, the question “Are we freer before making a choice, or after?” seems simple. It sounds like a thought experiment about decision-making: one of those paradoxical puzzles that invite abstract reasoning. But as our recent discussion unfolded, it became clear that this question touches some …
May 2, 2026
How Well Does Cartesian Dualism Explain Consciousness?
Reflections from a Philosophy Discussion Consciousness remains one of the deepest unsolved mysteries in philosophy, neuroscience, and cognitive science. Despite centuries of inquiry, no single framework has successfully answered the central question: what exactly is consciousness, and how does it arise? In a recent philosophy discussion, we explored whether Cartesian dualism, one of the oldest and most influential theories of mind, still offers a compelling explanation for conscious experience…
Apr 18, 2026
Who Decides What Is Equal?
Rethinking Global Equality in a Unified World The idea of global equality is seductive. A world where everyone operates under the same rights, uses the same currency, and lives within a unified system sounds, at first glance, like the ultimate solution to injustice. But beneath this ideal lies a far more complicated question: who decides what “equal” actually means? This discussion explored that question from multiple angles—philosophical, economic, cultural, and psychologica…
Apr 4, 2026
Is It Better to Have a Flawed but Consistent Philosophy, or No Philosophy at All?
Introduction: The Invisible Framework We All Live By Most people don’t walk around consciously thinking about their “philosophy of life.” And yet, every decision we make—how we treat others, what we prioritize, what we believe matters—is shaped by some underlying framework. This raises a deceptively simple but deeply important question: Is it better to have a flawed but consistent philosophy, or no philosophy at all? At first glance, the choice seems clear. But …
Mar 21, 2026
Could Two People Ever Experience the Same Reality?
Introduction What does it mean to experience reality? At first glance, the question seems simple. Two people sit in the same room, watch the same event, hear the same words—surely they are experiencing the same reality. But when we begin to examine this assumption more closely, it starts to unravel. In a recent philosophy discussion, we explored this question in depth: Could two people ever truly experience the same reality, even in identical situations? What followed was not just a t…
Mar 17, 2026
Human Nature and Economic Systems
I. Opening Frame: The Core Question The discussion began with a foundational philosophical inquiry: What is human nature? Is it universal or individual? How does one’s nature influence behaviour in economic systems? The discussion was intentionally framed to move from: Inner nature → outward systems II. Human Nature: Core Themes 1. Dual-Layered Nature: Instinct vs Reflection A key idea emerged early: Humans operate on two levels: Instinctive (reactive) → …
Mar 7, 2026
Civilizations fail when citizens begin treating each other as competitors rather than members of the same community.
1. Introduction & Framing of the Question The discussion explored the delicate balance between social cohesion (community) and individualism/competition. Civilizations rely on trust, cooperation, and collective coordination through institutions such as laws, taxes, and economic systems. Historical examples such as the Roman Empire and Mayan civilization were presented as cases where collapse was contributed to by: Internal divisions Elite power struggles Resource control …
Mar 3, 2026
Plato’s Ladder of Love (Part 6)
Opening Context The session began as part of an ongoing series exploring Plato’s Ladder of Love from the Symposium. The host introduced the first question: If Eros is neither divine nor human, where exactly does it belong — in the soul, in relationships, or in the structure of reality itself? However, the group initially struggled to engage with the philosophical material because several participants had not read the background text. This led the host to give a long explanatory in…