Men and women enter undergraduate a philosophy at about the same rates, but women leave faster. One reason is that thereha been a tendency in anlic philosophy to treat the question of how people perform early in the subject as an indication of whether have this thing, this it that can make for good, good philosophy. But i think they because so there sumes some psychological evidence about this. Men, boys and young men are more likely to resist a little bit and to insist on trying again. We spend a lot of our time making sure that we don't do the things that alienate them. Another whole category of people can be alienated by college where they don't have parents who went to
Born to a Ghanaian father and British mother, Kwame Anthony Appiah grew up splitting time between both countries — and lecturing in many more — before eventually settling in America, where he now teaches philosophy at New York University. This, along with a family scattered across half-a-dozen countries, establishes him as a true cosmopolitan, a label Appiah readily accepts. Yet he insists it is nonetheless possible to be a cosmopolitan patriot, rooted in a place, while having obligations and interests that transcend one’s national identity.
He joins Tyler to discuss this worldly perspective and more, including whether Africa will secularize, Ghanian fallibilism, teaching Jodie Foster, whether museums should repatriate collections, Karl Popper, Lee Kuan Yew, which country has the best jollof rice, the value of writing an ethical advice column, E.T. Mensah, Paul Simon, the experience of reading 173 novels to judge the Man Booker prize, and what he’s learned farming sheep in New Jersey.
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Recorded June 12th, 2019 Other ways to connect