Culture

Why do we buy things we do not need to impress people we do not like? Why does social media make us confess everything? Why does your moral compass reset every time you open an app? Culture is not background noise – it is the operating system. Intellectual Prestige uses philosophy, behavioral economics, and social theory to decode the cultural patterns driving consumerism, identity politics, digital addiction, and the slow death of private life. If you have ever wondered why everyone is performing, this is where you start.

Morality is a Muscle Memory- Why You Do Not Think Your Way to Being Good

Morality is a Muscle Memory: Why You Do Not Think Your Way to Being Good

You probably believe you are a good person because you have thought carefully about right and wrong. You have weighed your options. You have reasoned through dilemmas. You have arrived at conclusions about justice, fairness, and decency through the disciplined application of your rational mind. David Hume would like a word. The Scottish philosopher, writing […]

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Why Kant Would Tell You to Stop Finding Your Passion and Start Finding Your Duty

Why Kant Would Tell You to Stop “Finding Your Passion” and Start Finding Your Duty

There is a phrase that floats around self help culture like a benevolent ghost, showing up in graduation speeches, Instagram captions, and the bios of people who sell online courses. That phrase is “follow your passion.” It sounds noble. It sounds liberating. It sounds like the kind of advice that could never steer you wrong.

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The Holy War of Words- Is Political Correctness the New Inquisition?

The Holy War of Words: Is Political Correctness the New Inquisition?

Voltaire never actually said “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” That line was written by his biographer, Evelyn Beatrice Hall, summarizing his attitude. Which is fitting, really. We live in an age where misattributed quotes travel faster than verified ones, and where the

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Why Being a Perfectionist is Actually Irrational (According to a Nobel Prize Winner)

Why Being a “Perfectionist” is Actually Irrational (According to a Nobel Prize Winner)

There is a particular kind of pride people take in calling themselves perfectionists. They say it in job interviews. They whisper it like a confession that is actually a brag. “I just care too much about quality.” It sounds noble. It sounds like the mark of someone who refuses to settle. But Herbert Simon, a

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Stop Trying to Save the World- The Radical Ethics of Minding Your Own Business

Stop Trying to Save the World: The Radical Ethics of Minding Your Own Business

There is a particular kind of person who wakes up every morning burdened by the weight of problems that are not theirs. They scroll through the news, absorb the suffering of strangers in distant countries, and feel personally responsible for fixing all of it. They post about injustice. They sign petitions. They argue at dinner

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