Here’s a compact, no-nonsense field guide you can actually use. Skim the cheat-sheet first, then pick a reading track.
The map (what counts as “modern” vs “contemporary”)
- Modern philosophy: ~1600–1900. Birth of the scientific worldview, new theories of knowledge, mind, ethics, and the state.
- Contemporary philosophy: ~1900–today. Professionalized universities, specialization, global voices, and two loose styles: analytic (clarity, logic, argument) and continental (history, culture, experience, critique). Lots of cross-pollination now.
Big questions you’ll see (repeat across eras)
- Knowledge & science: What can we know? (skepticism, evidence, induction, realism vs anti-realism)
- Mind & language: What is consciousness? How do words mean? (intentionality, reference, qualia, AI)
- Metaphysics & logic: What exists and how? (time, causation, modality, identity, truth)
- Ethics: What should we do? (consequences, duties, character, care, virtue, moral psychology)
- Politics & society: What do we owe each other? (rights, contracts, power, recognition, equality, race, gender)
- Culture & interpretation: How do history, narrative, and symbols shape experience? (phenomenology, hermeneutics, genealogy)
- Applied: Tech/AI, bioethics, environment, global justice, decolonial thought.
Modern philosophy — key arcs & figures
- Rationalism: Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz (reason as primary; clear and distinct ideas; system-building).
- Empiricism: Locke, Berkeley, Hume (experience as primary; ideas, perception, skepticism about causation).
- Kant: Synthesizes the two; categories of the mind structure experience; autonomy in ethics.
- German Idealism: Fichte, Schelling, Hegel (self, freedom, and history; the social mind).
- Social contract & liberty: Hobbes (authority), Locke (rights), Rousseau (general will), Mill (harm principle).
- Utilitarianism: Bentham, Mill (maximize utility).
- Early critiques/existential roots: Kierkegaard (subjectivity, faith), Nietzsche (genealogy, will to power).
- Pragmatism (bridge to contemporary): Peirce, William James, Dewey (truth as what works in inquiry).
Contemporary philosophy — quick tour
Analytic traditions
- Logic & language: Frege, Russell, early Wittgenstein; later: ordinary-language (Austin), reference & modality (Kripke), truth/interpretation (Davidson), externalism (Putnam).
- Epistemology: The Gettier problem; reliabilism/virtue/Bayesian turns; social & formal epistemology.
- Mind: Behaviorism → identity theory → functionalism → consciousness debates (qualia, higher-order, panpsychism); philosophy of AI.
- Metaphysics: Time, causation, possible worlds (e.g., Lewis), grounding.
- Ethics: Consequentialism (e.g., Parfit), deontology (neo-Kantian), contractualism (Scanlon), virtue ethics revival (Anscombe, Foot, MacIntyre), care ethics.
- Politics: Rawls (justice as fairness), critiques & alternatives (Nozick; republicanism; capabilities: Sen, Nussbaum); race & gender (Mills, Haslanger), disability, animal ethics.
- Science: Popper (falsification), Kuhn (paradigms), Lakatos/Feyerabend; realism debates.
Continental traditions
- Phenomenology & existentialism: Husserl (structures of experience), Heidegger (being-in-the-world), Merleau-Ponty (embodiment), Sartre/Camus (freedom, absurd).
- Hermeneutics: Gadamer, Ricoeur (interpretation, tradition, narrative).
- Critical theory: Frankfurt School (Adorno, Horkheimer), Habermas (communicative reason), later critique of power/ideology.
- Structuralism & post-structuralism: Saussure, Lévi-Strauss; Foucault (power/knowledge), Derrida (deconstruction), Deleuze/Guattari (difference).
- Psychoanalytic theory: Freud, Lacan (subject, desire).
- Feminist & queer theory: de Beauvoir, Irigaray, Kristeva, Butler (gender performativity), intersectionality.
Global & decolonial currents (20th–21st c.)
- African & Afro-diasporic: Du Bois (double consciousness), Fanon (colonial subject), Wiredu, Hountondji, Achille Mbembe, Charles Mills.
- Latin American: Philosophy of liberation (Dussel), decoloniality (Quijano, Mignolo).
- South & East Asia: New Confucianism (Mou Zongsan), Kyoto School (Nishida, Nishitani), Radhakrishnan/Aurobindo; Amartya Sen.
- Islamic modernisms: Iqbal, Abduh, Arkoun.
- Indigenous philosophies: Relational ontologies, land/sovereignty, knowledge as stewardship.
Concepts you should be able to define in a sentence
- A priori / a posteriori, analytic / synthetic, foundationalism / coherentism, internalism / externalism, supervenience, realism / anti-realism, compatibilism, deontology / consequentialism / virtue ethics / care ethics, social contract, phenomenology, hermeneutics, deconstruction, speech act, reference & rigid designator, the Gettier problem, paradigm shift.
How philosophers argue (methods at a glance)
- Conceptual analysis & thought experiments: define terms, test with counterexamples (Gettier, trolley).
- Formal tools: logic, probability, decision/game theory.
- Phenomenological description: careful first-person analysis of lived experience.
- Genealogy & ideology critique: unearth historical/power conditions (Nietzsche, Foucault).
- Hermeneutics: interpret texts/contexts; fusion of horizons.
- Comparative & decolonial method: bring non-Western frameworks into equal footing.
Starter reading paths (12–15 crisp steps each)
Track A — Analytic-leaning
- Descartes, Meditations (II, VI)
- Hume, Enquiry (IV–V, VII)
- Kant, Groundwork (Section I)
- Mill, On Liberty (Ch. 2)
- Frege, “On Sense and Reference”
- Russell, “On Denoting”
- Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations (§§1–88)
- Gettier, “Is Justified True Belief Knowledge?”
- Kripke, Naming and Necessity (Lecture I)
- Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Sec. 1–4) & Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia (Ch. 7, skim)
- Parfit, Reasons and Persons (Part I or IV)
- Nussbaum, “Capabilities” (a survey piece)
Track B — Continental-leaning
- Nietzsche, Genealogy of Morality (Preface & Essay I)
- Kierkegaard, Fear and Trembling (Problema I)
- Husserl, Ideas I (Intro & §27–33) or a good primer
- Heidegger, Being and Time (Div. I, §§9–13, 29)
- Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception (intro)
- Sartre, Existentialism Is a Humanism
- Gadamer, Truth and Method (intro themes)
- Foucault, Discipline and Punish (Panopticon chapter)
- Derrida, “Signature Event Context”
- de Beauvoir, The Second Sex (Intro)
- Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks (Ch. 5)
- Butler, Gender Trouble (Ch. 1)
Global & critical perspectives (mix-ins)
- Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk (ch. 1)
- Dussel, “The Underside of Modernity” (essay)
- Mbembe, “Necropolitics”
- Sen, “Equality of What?”
- A short Indigenous philosophy reader (e.g., Kyle Whyte on climate & kinship).
Fast-track “exam” answers (how to tackle common prompts)
- Gettier: Show JTB fails; add a fourth condition (no-defeaters, reliability) and note costs.
- Free will: Lay out hard determinism, libertarianism, compatibilism; give Frankfurt cases.
- Utilitarianism vs deontology: Conflict cases (organ transplant, trolley), talk about demandingness, side-constraints, and rule-vs-act.
- Reference: Describe descriptivism vs causal-historical; use “Gödel/Schmidt” and rigid designation.
- Kuhn vs Popper: Paradigms & incommensurability vs falsification; then note Lakatos as a mediator.
- Foucault’s power: Not just top-down; diffuse, productive; institutions produce subjects.
How to study efficiently
- Read slowly but outline arguments (premises → conclusion).
- Keep a concept notebook (1–2 sentence definitions + a canonical example).
- Pair each text with a secondary source (intro chapter or SEP article) to check your grasp.
- Use comparative questions (“What would Hume say to Kant here?”).
- Write short 1-page memos after each reading: claim, argument, objection, reply.
One-screen cheat sheet (copy this into your notes)
- Modern: Rationalism ↔ Empiricism → Kant → Idealism; liberalism/utilitarianism; early critique (Kierkegaard/Nietzsche).
- Contemporary (analytic): logic/language → Gettier → mind & modality → Rawls/Parfit → formal methods.
- Contemporary (continental): phenomenology → hermeneutics → critical theory → Foucault/Derrida → feminism/queer/postcolonial.
- Core tools: analysis, logic, phenomenology, genealogy, hermeneutics, formal methods.
- Must-know terms: a priori/a posteriori; analytic/synthetic; supervenience; rigid designation; compatibilism; deconstruction; paradigm.
- Ethics triad: outcomes (util), rules (deon), character (virtue) + care.
- Politics trio: Rawlsian justice, rights/contract, power/recognition (critical & decolonial).
- Applied frontiers: AI ethics, bioethics, climate justice, social epistemology.
If you want, I can turn this into a 6-week reading plan with page ranges and 2–3 short prompts per week.