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Welcome to the Toronto Philosophy Meetup! This is a community (online and in-person) for anyone interested in philosophy, including newcomers to the subject. We host discussions, talks, reading groups, pub nights, debates, and other events on an inclusive range of topics and perspectives in philosophy, drawing from an array of materials (e.g. philosophical writings, for the most part, but also movies, literature, history, science, art, podcasts, poetry, current events, ethnographies, and whatever else seems good.)

Anyone is welcomed to host philosophy-related events here. We also welcome speakers and collaborations with other groups.

Join us at an event soon for friendship, cooperative discourse, and mental exercise!

You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter or Bluesky and join our new Discord for extended discussion and to stay in touch with other members.

Feel free to propose meetup topics (you can do this on the Message Boards), and please contact us if you would like to be a speaker or host an event.

(NOTE: Most of our events are currently online because of the pandemic.)

"Philosophy is not a theory but an activity." 
— from "Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus", Wittgenstein

"Discourse cheers us to companionable
reflection. Such reflection neither 
parades polemical opinions nor does it 
tolerate complaisant agreement. The sail 
of thinking keeps trimmed hard to the 
wind of the matter."
— from "On the Experience of Thinking", Heidegger

See here for an extensive list of podcasts and resources on the internet about philosophy.

See here for the standards of conduct that our members are expected to abide by. Members should also familiarize themselves with Meetup's Terms of Service Agreement, especially the section on Usage and Content Policies.

See here for a list of other philosophy-related groups to check out in the Toronto area.

Please note that no advertising of external events, products, businesses, or organizations is allowed on this site without permission from the main organizer.

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Since 2016, the Toronto Philosophy Meetup has been holding regular events that are free, open to the public, and help to foster community and a culture of philosophy in Toronto and beyond. To help us continue to do so into the future, please consider supporting us with a donation! Any amount is most welcome.

You can make a donation here.

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Supporters will be listed on our donors page unless they wish to remain anonymous. We thank them for their generosity!

If you would like to help out or support us in other ways (such as with any skills or expertise you may have), please contact us.

Note: You can also use the donation link to tip individual hosts. Let us know who you want to tip in the notes section. You can also contact hosts directly for ways to tip them.

Reading Ulysses: A Philosophical Discussion Group
Online

Reading Ulysses: A Philosophical Discussion Group

Online

At this meeting we will begin reading at, The doorway was darkened by an entering form (line 386 in the Gabler edition), which is about halfway through the first chapter, and we may have time to begin the second chapter, and so everyone is encouraged to read ahead.
This is a group reading Joyce's Ulysses from a philosophical perspective; i.e., concentrating on the philosophical themes, whether latent or explicit, identifying the philosophical references and allusions, and discussing the significance and value of the philosophical content. This will be a live reading of the novel, and so, although everyone is encouraged to read the opening chapter or even the first two or three chapters, it is not necessary to be at all familiar with Joyce's work. Having had some experience of the best known philosophy in the Western tradition would be good, because we won't be reading texts other than Ulysses. In short, having a few philosophically minded Joyceans in the group would be great, but anyone with an interest is welcome. We'll discuss our approach to the novel in detail at the beginning of the meeting.

The edition we'll be using is available free online here: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4300/4300-h/4300-h.htm

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About the text:

James Joyce’s Ulysses (1922) is a groundbreaking modernist novel that follows a single day — June 16, 1904 — in the lives of three Dubliners: Leopold Bloom, Stephen Dedalus, and Molly Bloom. Loosely structured on Homer’s Odyssey, the book transforms the hero’s epic journey into the wanderings of an ordinary man through the modern city. Through its shifting styles, interior monologues, and linguistic experimentation, Ulysses explores identity, consciousness, and the texture of everyday life. At once comic, profound, and daringly innovative, it stands as one of the most influential works in twentieth-century literature. (Penguin)

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