_The Philosophers  Magazine_ (http://philosophypress.co.uk/) 
 
Grassroots philosophy

 
Posted by _jerry_ (http://philosophypress.co.uk/?author=1)  on April 9,  
2013 
 
Jules Evans, co-organiser of the London philosophy club, charts the  
amazing rise of philosophy groups. This article appears in Issue 60 of The  
Philosophers’ Magazine. Please support TPM _by subscribing_ 
(http://www.philosophersnet.com/subscribe.php) . 
I first became involved with philosophy groups through my interest in  
Stoicism, as unlikely as that sounds. Stoic philosophy helped me through an  
emotional crisis in my early twenties, and I then looked around for other 
people  who had been helped by ancient Greek philosophy. That led me to an 
online 
 community of Stoics, called NewStoa.com. I helped organise a “gathering of 
the  Stoics” on Marcus Aurelius’ birthday (April 26) in San Diego in 2010. 
The  gathering brought together ordinary people interested in Stoicism from 
all over  the world. However, it turned out that modern Stoics were often 
quite  libertarian and prickly people, and building a “Stoic community” 
proved  difficult. I decided that if philosophy was going to appeal to a 
broader 
segment  of the population and become a genuine community, it would itself 
need to be  broader and more pluralistic.
 
In late 2010, I heard about the London Philosophy Club, a group of people 
who  met up to discuss philosophy once a month. I gave a talk at the club in 
November  2010, and became a co-organiser shortly afterwards. In the last 
two years, I’ve  watched in wonder as our membership broke through the 1,000 
mark, then the 2,000  mark – it’s now at 2,400, making us the second-biggest 
philosophy club in the  world (the biggest is in New York, but they mainly 
organise cocktail nights.  We’re not in any way competitive. Honestly.) We’
ve hosted speakers including  Maurice Glasman, Jonathan Ree and Robert 
Skidelsky – our Christmas speaker was  Angie Hobbs. We also have a popular 
reading group, philosophy meals and drinks,  and group discussions across 
London, 
including an idyllic picnic-debate in Hyde  Park last spring on the ethics 
of torture. 
Over the last two years, I’ve researched other grassroots philosophy groups 
 for a project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, called  “
Philosophical Communities”. The picture I’ve built up is surprising, even 
for  people within the scene. There are 850 groups on meetup.com that 
describe  themselves as “philosophy groups”, in 384 cities and 25 countries, 
with 
a  combined membership of 125,000. Some of those might stretch your 
definition of  “philosophy”, but it’s still a striking amount. There are 229 
ethics meetups,  528 Skeptic meetups, 126 feminist meetups, 60 Socrates Cafes, 
and 660 meetups  dedicated to “intellectual discussion”. And, as I’ve 
discovered, there are many  philosophy groups off the meetup map. There are 
around 
200 Skeptic, atheist and  Humanist groups around the United States. There 
are Cafe Philosophiques across France and Holland. There is the Philosophy in 
Pubs (PIPs) network,  which has 15 groups around Merseyside and a total of 
30 around the United  Kingdom. There is Philosophy For All, set up by Anja 
Steinbauer, which has been  organising philosophy talks, debates and walks in 
London since 1998. There are  philosophy groups for retired people, run 
through the University of the Third  Age or independently, like the venerable 
Pinner Philosophy Group in Harrow.  There are philosophy cafes and societies 
on many student campuses. And there are  radical ideas groups like Occupy 
London, who as I speak are recreating the  Putney Debates.
 
And then there are the commercial organisers of ideas events. TED is now  
almost twenty years old and Intelligence Squared is ten years old, but in the 
 last few years the “ideas event”market has become more crowded. In 2008, 
Alain  de Botton and friends launched the School of Life in London, in 
imitation of  Epicurus’ Garden. It’s since welcomed 50,000 people through its 
doors, and is  launching branches in Australia, Holland, Brazil and beyond. In 
2010, Tom  Hodgkinson opened the Idler Academy in west London. Both the 
School of Life and  the Idler organise philosophy workshops at festivals like 
Wilderness and Port  Eliot. There are also festivals dedicated to ideas and 
philosophy, like the  Battle of Ideas (launched in 2005), HowTheLightGetsIn 
(launched in 2008), the  Month of Philosophy in Amsterdam, the Modena 
philosophy festival in Italy, and  Recontres de Sophie in France. 
Evidently, philosophy is flourishing beyond the walls of academia. This is  
not a new phenomenon. In fact, philosophy has often flourished through 
informal  groups of friends. As the sociologist Randall Collins wrote, “the 
history of  philosophy is, to a considerable extent, the history of groups”. No 
sooner was  philosophy born than it challenged traditional forms of 
community and gave rise  to new forms, like the symposium of Socrates, the 
Garden of 
Epicurus or the cult  of Pythagoras. When philosophy broke free of the 
Church in the fourteenth  century, it spread through informal networks of 
friends, like the humanist  circles of Erasmus or Salutati or the Platonic 
Academy 
of Ficino. The  Enlightenment spread through the salons of Madame Necker 
and Madame Geoffrin,  the Junto of Benjamin Franklin and the Select Society of 
Smith and Hume. And  socialism likewise spread, through the Doctor’s Club 
of the Young Hegelians, the  Tchaikovsky circle of the Russian 
intelligentsia, or the Sunday booze-ups at  Engels’ house in Primrose Hill.
 
The question of who was welcome in these networks was always contentious. 
In  the Enlightenment, middle-class thinkers like Voltaire pushed their way 
into the  circle through the sheer brilliance of their intellect, but there 
was always the  risk they would be snubbed or even flogged by an elitist 
aristocrat. Women were  typically excluded from the London debating clubs of 
the 
18th century, so they  set up their own clubs, like the Female Congress and 
Carlisle House Debates for  Ladies Only. Working-class men and women weren’
t welcome in Enlightenment  coffeehouses, so they also set up their own 
groups in the pub, like the London  Corresponding Society, while middle-class 
philanthropists set up clubs for them  like the London Mechanics Institute or, 
in the US, the Lyceum and Chautauqua  networks. 
During the late 19th and early 20th century, however, philosophy became 
more  formal and professionalised. Self-run working class mutual improvement 
clubs  evolved into the Worker’s Education Association, which provided courses 
at  Oxford University’s Ruskin College. Mechanics Institutes and extension 
colleges  turned into universities (Birkbeck College grew out of the London 
Mechanics  Institute). Academic philosophy became more specialised, and 
impenetrable for  amateurs. Yet some clusters of non-academic philosophy 
stubbornly survived, like  Asterix’ indomitable village resisting the Roman 
Empire. 
There were still, in  the 1890s, figures like Tommy Davidson, the exuberant 
and stubbornly unacademic  Scots-American thinker, who travelled across the 
US and Europe, joining and  inspiring philosophy clubs wherever he went, 
including the Radical Club of  Bronson Alcott, the Metaphysical Club of 
William James, the Aristotelian  Society, and his own Fellowship of New Life.
 
It’s only in the last few years that philosophy groups have become a mass  
phenomenon. The reasons for their rise are complex. Melvyn Bragg, who I  
interviewed for my research project, suggests they are a consequence of the 
rise  of the “mass intelligentsia”. Bragg points to the huge expansion of 
higher  education since the 1960s, which he suggests has created a large 
minority with  the capacity and desire to discuss ideas that were once the 
province 
of a small  intellectual elite. As The Economist’s John Parker pointed out 
in a great  2008 article called “The age of mass intelligence”, the mass 
intelligentsia are  defined by their willingness to spend their leisure 
consuming or discussing  culture – hence the popularity of book clubs (a survey 
by 
Jenny Hartley  estimated their membership at 50,000 in the UK in 2001), 
literary festivals  (there are now roughly 300 literary festivals in the UK 
every year), museums and  galleries (attendance rose by 100% from 2000 to 2010, 
according to the UK  Statistics Agency), classical music (Classic FM is now 
the most popular  commercial station in the UK), intelligent mass TV 
(particularly HBO),  intelligent mass cinema (David Fincher, Christopher Nolan, 
Charlie Kaufmann) and  intelligent mass media, particularly online ideas 
podcasts and talks like TED,  Philosophy Bites, This American Life and In Our 
Times. 
The concept of the mass intelligentsia was, in fact, first put forward by  
Richard Flacks, a sociologist and member of the Students for a Democratic  
Society (SDS), to explain the mass campus uprisings that took place in  
universities in the 1960s. The concept was also used by the sociologist Daniel  
Bell, who suggested that the rise of the knowledge economy necessitated the  
expansion of universities and the creation of a “new intellectual class”, 
to  work in the sciences, media and professions in the new knowledge economy. 
This  new class, the mass intelligentsia, acquired on a mass scale many of 
the  attributes of the former elite intelligentsia – a desire for 
authenticity,  self-expression, sexual freedom and spiritual choice.
 
The rise of the mass intelligentsia has been a cause of deep concern for  
communitarians like Charles Taylor, who blames them for undermining 
traditional  community values (particularly traditional religion). And yet the 
mass  
intelligentsia is not, as a class, quite as individualistic or selfish as 
Taylor  supposes. They showed a desire, very early on, not just to destroy old 
forms of  community, but also to create new forms, new experiments in 
living together,  such as the commune, the happening, or the 
consciousness-raising circle. Sixties  student radicals would sit around for 
hours, sometimes 
for days, in earnest  ethical discussion about how to live well together. And 
they tried to extend the  ethical conversation into society, through the 
civil rights movement, the  feminist movement, the gay rights movement, the 
environmental movement. Tom  Hayden, the philosophy graduate and principal 
author of the SDS’ Port Huron  Statement, called for a new “participatory 
democracy”, in which the public were  informed, engaged, and talking to each 
other. It was a vision close to John  Dewey’s dream of a Great Society, where “
neighbours on the street corner” could  “converse freely with one another”. 
If the mass intelligentsia is the demographic driver behind the 
contemporary  emergence of philosophy groups, then the internet is the main 
technological  driver. In the late 1990s, philosophy groups had to post notices 
on 
library  boards and cafe windows to attract members. Now the London Philosophy 
Club posts  its meetings on meetup, and within a day 100 people have signed 
up (not that  they all necessarily turn up, but that’s another story). Sites 
like meetup.com  and Facebook allow people interested in ideas (still a 
minority, alas) to find  each other, get together, and form groups. The 
loneliness of the intellectual  can be overcome, outside of academia.
 
The internet has made philosophy far more social and interactive. It has  
bridged the divide between the intellectual and the masses. In the 1940s,  
intellectuals like Isaiah Berlin or A J Ayer opined on the Third Programme, 
and  the masses simply listened, their mouths agape. Now, through the 
internet, they  can share, comment and create their own ideas, and host 
speakers at 
their own  local clubs. Intellectual life has become ruddily democratic and 
boisterous. As  David Brooks wrote: “People in the 1950s used to earnestly 
debate the role of  the intellectual in modern politics. But the Lionel 
Trilling authority-figure  has been displaced by the mass class of blog-writing 
culture producers.” 
The Skeptic movement is a good example of the anarchism of grassroots  
philosophy. Modern Skepticism was launched in the late 1970s by Paul Kurtz, an  
academic philosopher and Humanist inspired by John Dewey’s vision of public  
philosophy. Kurtz feared America was sinking beneath a flood of irrational 
New  Age beliefs, and wanted to promote critical thinking in mass society. 
In 1976,  he founded an organisation of fellow Skeptics, called the Committee 
for  Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP). The 
members were  mainly white, male academics, along with the occasional magician. 
In the 1980s,  CSICOP started to establish some grassroots organisations 
around the US and  other countries. The grassroots Skeptic movement slowly 
grew, and then exploded  in the last few years, thanks to podcasts, blogs and 
social networking sites.  There are now 41 Skeptics in the Pubs groups in the 
UK – the newest, in Soho,  just opened yesterday. As Michael Shermer, 
editor of Skeptic magazine,  told me: “Skepticism is now a grassroots movement. 
No one is in control.” Not  even Paul Kurtz, who by the end of his life was 
perplexed by the aggressively  atheist direction the Skeptic movement had 
gone. 
The grassroots philosophy movement has sometimes locked horns with academic 
 philosophy. Alain de Botton, who has done a lot to promote the idea of  
philosophy beyond academia, often criticises academic philosophy for ignoring  
practical questions of how to live well. Many academics, by contrast, 
simply  have no idea of the grassroots movement, or if they do, they may 
consider 
it  unserious and amateur. Yet the mutual animosity is gradually 
dissipating, as  both sides recognise they need each other: academic philosophy 
without street  philosophy risks becoming irrelevant, while street philosophy 
without academic  philosophy risks becoming incoherent. Supporting grassroots 
philosophy groups  can be a way for universities to revive their traditions of 
extension and  liberal adult education, and to reaffirm their identity as 
places where life’s  big questions are discussed. 
Secondly, grassroots philosophy could be better supported with digital  
resources. Meetup.com, Facebook and Twitter are incredibly useful, but there’s 
a  surprising lack of material on the internet about grassroots philosophy, 
such as  videos or podcasts. As part of my project, I’ve launched a website 
called The  Philosophy Hub, which will have a global map for people to find 
or register  their local philosophy group, as well as other free resources 
for groups to use.  Universities could also be encouraged to put more of 
their talks and seminars  online, where groups can access them. Grassroots 
philosophy has already got onto  the radio (through Radio 4‘s The Philosophers 
Arms) but it would be great to see  it on TV too. 
Thirdly, we could develop better philosophy events. We’ve come a long way,  
with the launch of philosophy festivals like HowTheLightGetsIn. But we 
could  develop the “live philosophy” format further: events could be more 
entertaining,  taking a leaf from Skeptic events like The Night of 400 Billion 
Stars, which  combines science, music and comedy. They could be more 
multi-media and  immersive. And they could certainly be more interactive and 
participatory. It  would be great to have a national event that brought 
philosophy 
groups together,  and then to expand that into an international event. 
Finally, I would suggest that the mass intelligentsia – and philosophy 
groups  in particular – could re-find the sense of social purpose that they had 
in the  1960s, and that earlier incarnations of the intelligentsia 
possessed. Roman  Krznaric, one of the founding faculty members of the School 
of 
Life, says: “The  main task of philosophy clubs is to turn into collective 
movements of social  change, which are capable of tackling the great problems 
of 
our age. If we just  obsesses about our own lifestyles, I don’t think we’ll 
get very far.” Philosophy  clubs are wonderful places to meet up and talk, 
but can they also be vehicles  for social action? I hope so. 
Jules Evans is the author of Philosophy for Life and Other  Dangerous 
Situations and the founder of w_ww.thephilosophyhub.com_ 
(http://www.thephilosophyhub.com/) . He blogs at  _www.philosophyforlife.org_ 
(http://www.philosophyforlife.org/) .

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