
About us
We're a community fostering friendship and insights by engaging in thoughtful discussions on significant concepts discovered from reading books and intellectual consumption.
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32

Of Grammatology (week 3)
Art Cafe, 884 Pacific Street, Brooklyn, NY, USJoin us for weekly discussions of Jacques Derrida's 1967 deconstruction of the speech/writing binary in western philosophy, Of Grammatology.
Required reading for this meeting: The Hinge [La Brisure] (pg. 71) through the end of Part One (pg. 101)
Most of us are reading the 2016 edition of the book. We plan to meet weekly and work our way through the whole book about 30–40 pages at a time.
We'll be meeting at Art Cafe + Bar in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn.
This event is free but we're all still socially obligated to purchase something, and Art Cafe is a cool place that we should support! They have a bar and they serve coffee and tea among other non-alcoholic drinks, as well as food.
4 attendees
Reading Schopenhauer: The World as Will and Representation
·OnlineOnlineNote:
This group is currently underway. I have closed it for RSVP for now. I may open it in the future if we need more attendees. I am managing the RSVP's off meetup for this event so the attendees here are not an accurate reflection of what we have, we currently have about 15 people, if there are dropouts or changes I can reopen for new people.------
Hi Folks,Please join us for a slow and close reading of Arthur Schopenhauer’s magnum opus, The World as Will and Representation.
Schopenhauer is incredibly important as:
- One of the first major Western philosophers to deeply integrate Eastern ideas (after studying the Upanishads and Buddhist thought)
- One of the earliest Western philosophers to build a comprehensive atheistic worldview
- A major critic of Kantian philosophy, reshaping Kant’s “thing-in-itself” into his own concept of the Will
- An outspoken opponent of Hegel, his contemporary and rival professor at the University of Berlin
- The primary philosophical influence on Nietzsche, who regarded Schopenhauer as his great educator
Schopenhauer introduces the Will as the thing-in-itself — the inner reality underlying all appearances. His metaphysics explores how human desire drives suffering, and how we can transcend it through compassion, selflessness, and creative expression, especially through art.
### 📖 Apply to Join
This text is challenging but rewarding. To get the most out of it, you’ll need:
- Some background in Kantian philosophy (especially the principle of sufficient reason, the phenomenal / noumenal divide and Kant's "architectonic"); familiarity with Eastern thought is a plus
- The ability to closely read and interpret complex philosophical arguments
- The communication and social skills to express ideas clearly in discussion
You can apply to join by first RSVP'ing to this event, then filling out the Google Form survey linked on this event's location page — I’ll review responses personally.
### 📚 Reading & Participation
We’ll read this text slowly and carefully, around 20 pages per week for about six months — over the colder months, as Schopenhauer would have wanted! It's not a live reading, so you'll need to spend the hour or so reading in advance of attending, this is a must.
We’ll be reading Volume 1 of his work. I’ll be using the Cambridge edition, and you can find a tentative schedule linked here.
We will also decide a lot of things, also if people can join mid way through, by voting with the existing group.### 💬 Discussion Format
Our FAQ outlines how we generally run these sessions. Depending on group size, we may adjust — for example, adding breakout groups or rotating discussion leaders. If you’re interested in co-hosting, please reach out — that would be wonderful. Importantly I am not teaching this material, we are co-travelers exploring it together.
### 📬 Contact Us
Have questions or feedback? Reach out via our Meetup message to me.
I’m genuinely excited to read this with you. I’ve read some Schopenhauer before and listened to this work on audiobook, but I believe a real, close read together will be transformative.
Kind Regards,
Ryan2 attendees
Hermetica Series: Asclepius
·OnlineOnlineThe Corpus Hermeticum series is a deep dive into major hermetic texts.
Our aim is to seriously consider religious and philosophical ideas of Hermetica to help us find the North Star in an ever changing landscape of 21st century.
We will search for truths we can apply to our lives to help us dig ourselves out of the depressive, materialistic worm hole.
Let's see what we discover.
Our bounce board will be Brian Copenhaver's "Hermetica" which is the most recent and complete translation. You can purchase it here or I was able to download it for free here
Alternatively, there is Walter Scott translation (early 20th century) here and free download is available hereComing up:
Discourse on 8th and 9th for Nag Hammadi Library (will probably include of the less known gospels in here (gospel of Mary, or some other fascinating section) free download hereWe will meet every Thursday evening at 7 pm on Zoom.
Expectations are that you will do the reading assigned for that session and participate respectfully.4 attendees
Conjectures and Refutations by Karl Popper Week 1
Pier 57, 25 11th Avenue, New York, NY, USKarl Popper (1902-1994) was an Austrian born philosopher known for his contributions to the philosophy of science and his political philosophy. In Conjectures and Refutations, Popper collects a sequence of lectures and articles which expound his idea that science, and knowledge in general, progresses by a sequence of conjectures, guesses which do their best to explain the body of evidence at the time, and refutations, critical tests which aim to reveal the inadequacies of our current models. Responding to the Logical Positivists who thought that scientific facts could be verified as true by successive experimentation, Popper argues that conjectures can never be established as true. Despite this view, Popper gives a passionate defense of rationality and a reminder of the need to be constantly open to correcting our mistakes. We will read the entirety of Conjectures and Refutations (Skipping some of the more technical appendices and footnotes) over the course of six weeks.
Participants should read the entire reading before attending this in person meeting. For the first week we will read p. 3-78 including the chapters Intro. On the Sources of Knowledge and of Ignorance 1. Science: Conjectures and Refutations. I will be reading from this version here and a free copy can be found here.
For questions please send me a message or post to meetup.
Best,
Brian
18 attendees
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