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Top 60 Philip Kitcher Quotes (2025 Update)

Philip Kitcher Quote: “In my current work on global warming, I argue that the only apparent solution to the deep problem of climate change would require very large transfers of wealth from rich nations to poor nations, so that the entire world can make the transition to renewable forms of energy as fast as possible.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “It is hard to hide our genes completely. However devoted someone may be to the privacy of his genotype, others with enough curiosity and knowledge can draw conclusions from the phenotype he presents and from the traits of his relatives.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I’m quite pessimistic about climate change. This is an urgent problem, and much of the world is only now waking up to the easiest part of solving – the realization that anthropogenic global warming is real.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Mann’s Death in Venice actually contains a snippet of philosophy about the second question, when Aschenbach, collapsed in the plaza, engages in his quasi-Socratic, anti-Socratic, ruminations.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “In my view, we ought to replace the notion of analytic philosophy by that of synthetic philosophy.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Current education in science treats all students as if they were going to have scientific careers. They are required to solve problems and memorize lists. For many of them, this kills interest very quickly.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “If the research agenda reflects “market forces”, the problems of the poor are likely to be even more neglected than they already are.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “In my view, all students should be given an initial opportunity to pursue the science track as far as it goes. But for those who quickly decide that track isn’t for them, a different style of teaching is in order.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “In ethics, we don’t make progress by discovering pre-existent truths; we do so by solving problems.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I have enormous respect for Derek Parfit, although he seems to me bound within an unfortunate philosophical tradition – rather like the extraordinarily brilliant exponents of Ptolemaic astronomy in the Middle Ages.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “One goal of ethical inquiry might be to uncover strategies available for use when values conflict or when rules are incomplete.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “The classical allusions and the Platonic disquisitions on beauty are no longer a form of cover, but integral to Aschenbach’s complex sexuality. Moreover, the wandering around Venice in pursuit of Tadzio isn’t a prelude to some sexual contact for which Aschenbach is yearning.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Because the problems are objective features of the human situation – social animals without the capacities for making social life come easily – ethics is objectively constrained. It’s not the case that “anything goes”.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “My ideal of conversation that includes wide representation of perspectives, informed by the consensus view of current experts, pursued with an attempt to find a position with which all can live, brings the expert and the public dimensions together.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Look at Mann’s reading habits, his explicit comments on Nietzsche, and his copy of Birth of Tragedy, and it starts to seem doubtful that this work of Nietzsche’s played much role in the gestation of the novella.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “The balance between literature and philosophy in Schopenhauer and Nietzsche is different from that struck in the novella, but, as Mann clearly pointed out in his writings about both thinkers, both modes are present.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Those citizens are distracted by the toys technology has supplied, and fail to recognize the ways in which what they most deeply want is made vulnerable by the coming disruptions of human relations on an over-heated planet.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I’m very concerned about the increasing distortion of research by the intrusion of the market. Universities are beginning to see science as a means of attracting funds.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “It may be hyperbolic to declare that Shakespeare teaches us more about being human than all the natural scientists combined.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I argue against literal interpretation of religious doctrines. Religions make progress when they emancipate themselves from literalism, and take their doctrinal statements to be metaphors or allegories.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “After the success of Buddenbrooks, he married and fathered six children. Yet the surviving diaries tell us of recurrent sexual problems – and of Katia Mann’s extremely sympathetic response to them.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Was Mann himself fully aware of all the facets of his irony? Probably not – any more than Shakespeare was fully aware of all the riches subsequent critics have found in his plays.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Sometimes, however, the new synthetic complex proves stable, and even serves as the beginning of a much larger cluster of attitudes that displace some we’ve previously considered to be fixed parts of ourselves.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “For anyone who conceives literature in terms of plurality of perspectives, Finnegans Wake has to be the apogee. For, as we are told, every word in it has three score and ten “toptypsical” meanings – an exaggeration, of course, but an important reminder to readers who like their fiction definite.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I was occupied by a range of questions, often different from those fashionable in the professional philosophy of the past half century, that have sometimes troubled philosophers in the past. It’s taken me several decades to work out my own philosophical agenda, and it is wide.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I’m very suspicious of the idea of a “final theory” in natural science, and the thought of a complete system of ethical rules seems even more dubious.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “It’s a very bad idea for scientific conclusions to be accepted because they fit with the political values of a group of researchers.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “To my mind, Death in Venice represents an enormous advance in Mann’s literary development, not simply for the commonly appreciated reason that he crafted a superbly supple and elegant style, apparently well suited to the kind of prose Aschenbach is supposed to write.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “If the intuition-mongering were abandoned, would that be the end of philosophy? It would be the end of a certain style of philosophy – a style that has cut philosophy off, not only from the humanities but from every other branch of inquiry and culture.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I didn’t know that Mahler would come to play so large a role, nor that music and literature and philosophy can interinanimate one another in the way I’ve come to think they do in this case.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Philosophers ought to aspire to know lots of different things and to forge useful synthetic perspectives.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I rather stumbled into philosophy. When I began my undergraduate career at Cambridge, I studied mathematics.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “A different vision of ethics is that of a collection of resources people can use to act better. The resources might be firm rules that could always be relied on. Or they might be ideals that could often be followed without thinking but that sometimes conflicted with one another.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Science literacy consists in the ability and the desire to follow reports of new scientific advances, throughout your whole life.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “The point of philosophy, as I see it, is to change thinking, and thereby to change the conversation.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “The theory of evolution explains to us what our ancestry has been. It does not explain away our worth. Why should we be afraid to learn more about what we are?”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Most influential of all is the philosopher Stanley Cavell, and a younger generation of philosophers who have attempted to follow his pioneering work in thinking about literature philosophically.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Secular humanists should recognize those forms of religion as allies in the struggle for human advancement. They should also learn from them, as they try to build a fully secular world in which people can have the opportunity to live rich and fulfilling lives.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I think the tone of mockery Heller finds is a part of Mann’s irony, but only a part – a brilliant further touch consists in juxtaposing perspectives so that we’re led to wonder whether the mockery itself is the last word.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “When I try to outline the history of ethical life, it’s sometimes possible to find evidence for a hypothesis about how important transitions actually went. Often, however, that isn’t so. There are many facts about human life in the Paleolithic we’re never likely to know.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I suggest in my own discussion of this episode, Mann invites us to set the attempt to philosophize about his predicament in the context of Aschenbach’s life. The literary presentation thus adds to the naked philosophical skeleton.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I take the ethical truths to be the stable elements that emerge out of ethical progress and that are retained under further ethical progress.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “I read Aschenbach’s constant desire to go beyond the works he has already produced to be the counterpart of Mann’s deep wish to surpass his previous fiction; sometimes the diaries express this in terms of a dejected judgment that the summit has already been reached.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “The “little theme” from Vinteuil, heard by Swann as emblematic of his love for Odette, remains a point of reference for him, as the character of that love changes and as the love eventually fades.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “The expert is a midwife. The expert is not someone who has the authority to pronounce the last word on the subject.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Experiments work when, and only when, they call into action cognitive capacities that might reliably deliver the conclusions drawn.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “Ethical inquiry has always been motivated by the aim of improving human conduct. It doesn’t follow from that that the goal is to produce a complete rule book that would be applicable to all cases.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “It’s not at all a bad idea for scientific questions to be chosen because a democratic deliberation would identify them as important for people’s lives.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “So is fighting incompleteness the source of artistic neurosis? I doubt it. At most, this would apply to artists who deal with particular kinds of problems. I don’t think we should think of Haydn or Mozart or Dickens or George Eliot in these terms.”
Philip Kitcher Quote: “The amalgam of psychological attitudes we form is the synthetic complex. It may fall apart quite quickly as further reflection or further experience bears on it, and we may revert to our former judgments, feelings and tendencies.”
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