This blog post deeply examines the philosophical reasons and significance behind Kant’s thorough exclusion of human contingency—such as emotions, inclinations, and social conditions—in establishing universal morality. In modern Western ethics, Kant’s moral philosophy and Hegel’s ethical theory are represented by the concepts of morality and humanity, respectively, and...
Why is it difficult to explain the causes of financial crises with a single theory?
This blog post examines why financial crises are difficult to explain with a single cause. It analyzes how self-fulfilling expectations, risk-seeking behavior, bank runs, and excessive overheating become intricately intertwined to trigger crises. Despite extensive research on past financial crises, consensus on their causes often remains elusive. This stems partly from the complex...
Why does republicanism reject arbitrary rule and emphasize the common good?
This blog post examines why republicanism rejects arbitrary rule and makes the common good its core value. It also explores how civic virtue and constitutional order enable self-governance. Republicanism is an ideology that seeks to realize self-governance by excluding rule by arbitrary power in communal life, based on citizens’ political participation in pursuit of the common good...
Where do freedom of the press and fair criminal trials conflict?
This blog post examines how investigative reporting shapes preconceptions about trials and explores where freedom of expression and the defendant’s right to due process conflict, seeking ways to achieve harmony. Most media coverage of criminal cases relies on information obtained from investigative agencies and tends to focus on the investigative phase before indictment...
Can good exist objectively, independent of human desires?
This blog post examines various philosophical positions on the objectivity and subjectivity of good, deeply exploring whether good can be established independently of human desires. In ethics, various issues arise concerning goodness (善, good). What is goodness? Can goodness be equated with pleasure? How does goodness relate to moral rightness or justice? Among these, one of the long...
Why has the United States become the world’s most powerful shale gas producer?
This blog post examines the institutional, technological, geological, and investment environment characteristics that enabled the United States to secure overwhelming dominance in shale gas development, providing an in-depth analysis of how the global energy landscape is being reshaped. The Industrial Revolution, which began in Britain in the late 18th century, marked a decisive turning...
Why can Pareto optimality be less efficient when only some conditions are met?
This blog post examines, based on the theory of suboptimality, the structural distortions that occur when Pareto optimality conditions are only partially satisfied, and why a greater number of conditions does not always guarantee a more efficient outcome. To reach the most efficient resource allocation state—the Pareto optimal state—all optimal conditions must be satisfied simultaneously...
What standard allows us to say that killing without causing pain is ‘wrong’?
This blog post calmly examines the philosophical basis and meaning behind why even murder without any pain is morally problematic, focusing on classical utilitarianism, preference utilitarianism, and the autonomy principle. A person refers to a rational being with self-awareness, such as humans or primates. These beings possess the capacity for autonomous judgment and can recognize that...
Why does hedonism remain a central issue in ethics?
This blog post examines why hedonism, extending beyond mere sensory pleasure, remains a core debate in contemporary ethics, delving deeply into the differences between Bentham and Mill’s philosophies. Hedonism is an ethical theory asserting that all pleasure has value in itself and that actions producing the greatest pleasure—achieved by increasing pleasure and decreasing pain—are...
Why does Western-centricism continue to operate within the framework of modern historiography?
This blog post examines how modern historiography has reproduced Western-centricism through the concepts of linear progress and a historicist conception of time, while exploring the possibility of a new historical consciousness where diverse civilizations and heterogeneous temporalities coexist. Imperialism plundered not only the territories of colonies but also their cultures and minds...