(Imaginative Philosophy Blog)
A cairn is a manmade pile of stones often used as a simple trail marker in open terrain. An inukshuk, for example, is a cairn.
This blog is the author’s own cairn-building: small pathmarks left along the way of thinking. Each post is an essay in the original sense — a loose, exploratory attempt to put thought into writing, with no greater aim than self-expression.

For Friedrich Nietzsche, Socrates represents a decisive turning point in Western history: the triumph of dialectic, rationalization, and moralization over the tragic wisdom of the Greeks. In Nietzsche’s…
4 min read
Nietzsche: Time is a storm of living forces, each crest a fleeting fiction of power that believes itself whole as it leaps. Leibniz: Every leap is a world…
4 min read
This essay proposes a reading of Nietzsche that begins not with his genealogies, his social histories of morality, or his psychological speculations about the subconscious, but rather with…
4 min read
A Precursor to Ontological Difference Often dismissed as the most disappointing episode in Kant’s philosophy, the doctrine of imagination is in fact the hinge of the entire Post-Kantian…
4 min read
This brief piece aims to isolate the central point of contention between Nietzsche and Heidegger, two thinkers unmistakably shaped by the Post-Kantian transformation of philosophy. Both seek to…
4 min read
Language is our first religion. Before temples, before priesthoods, before doctrine hardened into creed, human beings gathered around (and were gathered by) words. Language formed the earliest covenant…
4 min read
