Philosophy is not only an academic subject. It is present whenever we question what is true, what matters, and how we should act. In complex situations, it helps us examine our assumptions, think with others, and take responsibility for how meaning is made in conversation.
What is philosophy?
Philosophy
is defined as the study of fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, truth, reason, and how we should live. It deals with questions that sit beneath all other fields of inquiry, questions that cannot be settled simply by gathering more data or applying a method.
What is real, what can we know, what is a good life, what counts as a valid argument, these are the kinds of questions philosophy has explored for over two thousand years. The word itself comes from the Greek philosophia, often translated as “love of wisdom.” Early thinkers such as Socrates
, Plato
, and Aristotle
treated philosophy not as a specialized discipline but as a broad inquiry into how to understand the world and live within it.
Over time, philosophy developed into distinct branches. Metaphysics
explores the nature of reality, epistemology
examines knowledge and belief, ethics
considers questions of right and wrong, and logic studies reasoning and argument. These distinctions are useful, but they can also make philosophy feel distant, as if it belongs mainly in academic settings rather than in everyday life.
Philosophy in everyday life
The questions philosophy deals with are not confined to books or study. They show up in everyday situations, often without being recognized as philosophical.
When we disagree about what is true, we are already in the territory of epistemology. When we argue about what is fair or right, we are dealing with ethics. When we try to make sense of a complex situation, we are relying on assumptions about reality, causality, and meaning.
Philosophy, in this sense, is not something we apply only occasionally. It is already present in how we interpret situations and respond to them. The issue is not whether we are doing philosophy, but whether we are aware of the assumptions we are bringing into play.
This is where philosophy becomes practical. Not as a set of tools to improve thinking, but as a way of making visible the patterns of interpretation we are already part of. It invites us to question what we take for granted, not in isolation, but in the situations and conversations we are engaged in.
Philosophy as relational practice
Seen in this light, philosophy is less an individual activity and more a relational practice. Thinking does not happen only in the head. It is shaped, challenged, and re-formed in interaction with others and with the context we are in.
Meaning is not simply derived from information. It emerges through interpretation, conversation, and the constraints and relationships that shape what can be said and heard.
This shifts the emphasis. The question is not only how we think, but how we think together, and how the situations we are part of influence what becomes thinkable in the first place.
In complex contexts, this matters. More information rarely resolves ambiguity. What matters is how different perspectives are brought into relationship, how interpretations are explored, and how provisional understanding emerges through interaction.
Existential philosophy and responsibility
Among the many strands of philosophy, existential philosophy
brings the question of how we live into sharp focus. Thinkers such as Jean-Paul Sartre
and Albert Camus
start from a simple but demanding position. Human beings are not born with a fixed essence or predetermined purpose. We find ourselves in a world not of our choosing, but what we become is shaped by how we respond within it.
Sartre captured this in the phrase “existence precedes essence.” We exist first, and then, through our actions, we define who we are. This places freedom and human agency at the centre of human life, not as abstract ideas, but as lived conditions. We are always in the position of having to choose, even when the options are unclear, uncomfortable, or constrained.
He also expressed the consequence of this in a stark and often quoted line:
Man is condemned to be free.
Condemned, because he did not create himself, in other respect is free; because, once thrown into the world, he is responsible for everything he does.
The Existentialist does not believe in the power of passion.
He will never agree that a sweeping passion is a ravaging torrent which fatally leads a man to certain acts and is therefore an excuse.
He thinks that man is responsible for his passion.
The word “condemned” reflects that we cannot step outside choice. We do not get to opt out of freedom. Even in constrained situations, we are still interpreting, deciding, and responding. That does not mean we are free to do anything, but it does mean that our response is not entirely determined for us.
This is where the question of free will
and human agency
becomes more concrete. Existential philosophy does not claim unlimited freedom. It recognizes that our choices are shaped by context, history, relationships, and power. Yet within those constraints, there remains a degree of agency in how we interpret what is happening and how we act.
From this follows a more uncomfortable idea. We cannot entirely avoid responsibility by appealing to circumstances. At the same time, this is not a simple call to individual agency. Constraints, roles, expectations, and power relations shape what is possible, and in some situations, the space for action is narrow.
Sartre described the denial of this tension as “bad faith,” acting as if we have no choice at all, or, conversely, as if we are unconstrained. Both positions simplify a more complex reality. The challenge is to recognize both freedom and constraint simultaneously, and to understand that agency is always exercised within a situation, never outside it.
Existential philosophy also raises questions of authenticity and meaning. To live authentically is not to follow a fixed script, but to recognize the situation we are in and take responsibility for how we engage with it. Meaning is not given in advance, nor is it purely individual. It emerges through what we do and through our relationships with others.
Albert Camus adds another layer by highlighting the tension between our search for meaning and a world that offers no clear answers. His response is not resolution, but continued engagement, acting without certainty and without guarantees.
These ideas do not resolve into a neat formula. They point instead to a tension we live with. We are shaped by context and constraint, yet still implicated in how situations unfold. In that sense, we remain both limited and responsible, exercising agency within the conditions we find ourselves in.
From existential philosophy to conversational leadership
This is where the thread connects to Conversational Leadership.
Conversational Leadership is often framed as a way of improving conversations, but that is overly neat. Conversations are not neutral spaces. They are shaped by context, power, history, and expectation. Not all voices carry equal weight, and not all contributions are equally possible.Within this, the idea of responsibility becomes more complex. It is not simply about choosing to behave differently. It is about recognizing the part we play in the patterns of interaction we are part of, while also acknowledging the constraints we operate under.
If we are, as Sartre suggests, “condemned to be free,” then we are implicated in what unfolds, whether through action, inaction, or interpretation. At the same time, what we can do is shaped by the situation, by organizational dynamics, and by relationships of power.
This is close to what Peter Block points to in his work. He invites us to confront our freedom, not as an abstract idea, but as a practical question of accountability. Accountability is usually seen as something assigned, but it can also be chosen. Yet even this choice is made within a context that enables some actions and constrains others.
Viktor Frankl
expressed a similar idea in a more grounded way. Even in extreme conditions, there can be a space between what happens and how we respond. That space is not always large or easy to act within, but it is not entirely absent.
Stephen Covey brought this into everyday language, describing the gap between stimulus and response as the place where we exercise choice. This is often presented as a simple idea, but in practice, it is shaped by habit, emotion, culture, and context.
In the space between stimulus (what happens) and how we respond, lies our freedom to choose.
Ultimately, this power to choose is what defines us as human beings.
We may have limited choices, but we can always choose.
We can choose our thoughts, emotions, moods, our words, our actions; we can choose our values and live by principles.
It is the choice of acting or being acted upon.
In conversational terms, this raises more questions than answers. To what extent can we influence the quality of a conversation? When does speaking up open possibilities, and when does it close them down? When is silence a form of avoidance, and when is it a response to constraint?
Conversational Leadership, seen in this light, is not a method for improving conversations. It is an ongoing practice of engaging with these questions in real situations, recognizing that we are part of the system we are trying to understand.
Making sense in context
In a world overflowing with information, the challenge is not simply access to that information, but how meaning is made from what is available. It is tempting to assume that better information will lead to better decisions, but in complex contexts this rarely holds.
What matters is how situations are interpreted, how different perspectives interact, and how judgement is exercised in context. This is not something that can be reduced to a process or a tool.
For many, this kind of work can feel too soft. It lacks clear steps, defined methods, and measurable outputs. It does not offer the certainty that structured approaches promise.
But that may be precisely why it matters. The patterns of interaction we are part of shape what becomes possible, often in ways that are not immediately visible. Changing those patterns is not straightforward, and it does not guarantee better outcomes, but ignoring them limits what can emerge.
This is also where the role of AI needs to be understood carefully. AI can process and recombine information at scale, but it does not participate in meaning-making in the same way. Interpretation, judgement, and responsibility remain situated in human interaction, even as AI becomes part of the conversational landscape.
Philosophy, understood as a way of questioning assumptions and engaging with uncertainty, becomes relevant here, not as a solution, but as a way of staying with the complexity of the situations we face.
We often look for clearer answers, better tools, or more reliable methods. Yet much of what shapes outcomes lies in how situations are interpreted and how people engage with one another. That is harder to see and harder to change. What happens if we pay more attention to those patterns, even when they resist easy answers?
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In-person, 7–11 September 2026
Warbrook House, Hampshire, UK
We are living and working in conditions of uncertainty, complexity, and rapid change. This week-long workshop offers a space to practise Conversational Leadership as a shared, lived experience.