This philosophical epistle addresses a question that has accompanied philosophy since its beginnings: whether wisdom is something to be guarded by specialists or shared with all who seek it. Written from the perspective of an independent scholar, the letter reflects on the relationship between scholarship, accessibility, and intellectual authority in contemporary philosophy. While defending rigor and genuine complexity, it argues that philosophy risks losing contact with lived experience when specialized language becomes an end in itself. The epistle proposes a vision of philosophy as a common good—one that remains faithful to truth while speaking in a language accessible to ordinary human experience.
Oscar Gaitan (Mon,) studied this question.