A single hand turning the page of a cloth-bound book, warm amber side-light catching the grain of the paper, a pencil-underlined passage barely visible in the shallow depth of field

"The unexamined life is not worth living."

— Socrates

Philosophy · Video Lessons

Which philosopher already thinks like you?

Three dilemmas. Sixty seconds. A learning path built around how you already see the world — not how philosophy textbooks assume you do.

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No account needed · Three dilemmas, not trivia

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Three dilemmas.
One school of thought.

Not a personality test. Not trivia. Three genuine philosophical dilemmas that reveal how you already think — before any philosopher told you what to believe.

Five Schools of Thought

Compare All Learning Paths

A stone bust of Marcus Aurelius in warm amber light

Stoic

Master what you can control

A solitary figure standing at the edge of a foggy landscape

Existentialist

Make meaning from scratch

Hands writing in a notebook on a wooden desk with morning light

Pragmatist

Ideas that actually work

A single boulder on a misty hillside at dawn

Absurdist

Laugh at the void. Keep going.

Light refracting through glass creating complex patterns on a surface

Phenomenologist

How experience shapes reality

24video lessons
28video lessons
18video lessons
16video lessons
20video lessons
Marcus AureliusEpictetusSeneca
Sartrede BeauvoirHeidegger
William JamesDeweyPeirce
CamusKierkegaardBeckett
HusserlMerleau-PontyLevinas
9 min
12 min
8 min
11 min
14 min
Accessible → Rigorous
Challenging → Transformative
Practical → Theoretical
Provocative → Liberating
Dense → Revelatory
The Curriculum

Five Schools. Real Philosophy.

Each track is a genuine intellectual encounter — not a summary, not a listicle. Narrated by philosophers who still teach, still argue, still care.

Stoicism

The Stoics didn't teach you to feel less. They taught you to stop confusing what happens to you with who you are. Marcus Aurelius ran an empire at war and wrote to himself each night about the smallness of ambition and the largeness of duty. Epictetus was a slave who became free — not through law, but through understanding that no one can take your judgment from you. These lessons don't offer comfort. They offer something harder and better: clarity.

Dr. Margaret Holloway, professor of ancient philosophy

Dr. Margaret Holloway

Professor of Ancient Philosophy, Oxford

Stone columns of an ancient Roman forum in warm afternoon light

"You have power over your mind, not outside events."

The Dichotomy of Control · 9 min

Existentialism

Sartre said existence precedes essence — which sounds like jargon until you realize it means no one handed you a purpose when you arrived. You are not fulfilling a role; you are inventing one, every day, with every choice. That's not liberating in a spa-retreat sense. It's terrifying and exhilarating in equal measure. Simone de Beauvoir showed us that this freedom isn't abstract — it's lived in the body, in the kitchen, in the office, in the streets. These lessons take the terror seriously, and don't flinch from what it asks of you.

Prof. James Okonkwo, continental philosophy professor

Prof. James Okonkwo

Continental Philosophy, University of Chicago

A solitary figure standing at the edge of a vast foggy landscape at dusk

"Existence precedes essence."

Sartre's Bad Faith · 12 min

Pragmatism

William James was a physician before he was a philosopher, and it shows. He had no patience for ideas that didn't land somewhere real. Truth, for James, isn't a property of statements — it's what happens to an idea when you run it through your life and it works. John Dewey took this further: democracy isn't just a political system, it's a way of thinking together. These lessons are for people who have always suspected that philosophy should be useful — and who want to find out how deep that usefulness can go.

Dr. Priya Nair, American philosophy scholar

Dr. Priya Nair

American Philosophy, Columbia University

Hands writing notes in a worn notebook on a wooden desk with warm morning light

"The truth is what works."

James's Theory of Truth · 8 min

Absurdism

Camus watched the world closely and noticed that human beings are creatures who demand meaning from a universe that offers none. He called this the Absurd — not a problem to solve, but a condition to inhabit honestly. You can pretend the silence doesn't exist (bad faith). You can opt out entirely (philosophical suicide). Or you can stay, fully aware, and live anyway — which Camus thought was the only honest and courageous response. These lessons don't promise resolution. They promise something rarer: company in the dark, from someone who looked.

Dr. Amara Diallo, French philosophy and literature professor

Dr. Amara Diallo

French Philosophy & Literature, NYU

A single large boulder on a misty mountain hillside at dawn

"One must imagine Sisyphus happy."

The Myth of Sisyphus · 11 min

Phenomenology

Husserl had a radical idea: before you argue about what's real, pay attention to what you actually experience. Not the world as physics describes it, but the world as it shows up — to you, in your body, with your history, in this moment. Merleau-Ponty showed that we don't just have bodies; we are bodies, and all our thinking happens through them. Levinas asked what it means to encounter another face — not a concept, but a face. These lessons are slow and demanding and will change how you walk through a room.

Prof. Elena Vasquez, European philosophy professor

Prof. Elena Vasquez

European Philosophy, Boston University

Light refracting through glass creating layered patterns of color and shadow

"Back to the things themselves."

The Structure of Consciousness · 14 min
Open book with warm amber light illuminating the pages
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A worn Stoicism book with a cloth cover and visible spine

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Epictetus on what you can and cannot control. Nine minutes. No quiz required.