Soroush Marouzi

Fashion Institute of Technology, State University of New York
  •  15
    When There Was Nothing to Discuss
    Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 15 (5). 2026.
    We offer a novel interpretation of Frank Ramsey’s talk, “On There Being No Discussable Subject,” delivered to the Cambridge Apostles Society in 1925. We suggest that Ramsey aimed to present a reductio ad absurdum argument. His argument was that if the prevailing philosophical outlook among the Apostles were true, then we would conclude that there is nothing to discuss in the Society. Ramsey believed that this conclusion is absurd. His point was to challenge the Apostles by telling them that thei…Read more
  •  160
    How to Leap Without Looking: The Role of Habits in Rational Life
    Dissertation, University of Toronto. 2024.
    "Look before you leap!" they say. I may not. This proverb captures the gist of the prevalent accounts of rationality. It suggests that one who wants to act in a rational way needs to deliberate about the relevant features of the context of action. I argue that there are cases in which people do not look before they leap, and yet they leap successfully because they possess certain capacities. I show that these capacities are rooted in one's habits and in what it takes to put those habits into wor…Read more
  •  44
    In Search of Lost Reason: Ramsey, Keynes, and the Intellectualism Debate
    History of Social Science 2 (1): 45-86. 2026.
    I argue that the outbreak of World War I facilitated a shift in the dominant view of human nature in the Cambridge-Bloomsbury intelligentsia, steering it away from an optimistic view toward a pessimistic one. The conceptualization of human reason and rationality in this group, however, remained intact through the war. Frank Ramsey and John Maynard Keynes produced some of their most notable works in this evolving intellectual context. They followed the interwar orthodoxy by adopting its descripti…Read more
  •  988
    Frank Ramsey's Anti-Intellectualism
    Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 12 (2): 1-32. 2024.
    Frank Ramsey’s philosophy, developed in the 1920s in Cambridge, was in conversation with the debates surrounding intellectualism in the early twentieth century. Ramsey made his mark on the anti-intellectualist tradition via his notion of habit. He posited that human judgments take shape through habitual processes, and he rejected the separation between the domain of reason, on one hand, and the domain of habit, on the other. Ramsey also provided the ground to explore the nature of knowledge empl…Read more
  •  160
    Frank Plumpton Ramsey and the Politics of Motherhood
    Journal of the History of Economic Thought 44 (4): 489-508. 2022.
    This paper is an attempt to historicize Frank Plumpton Ramsey’s Apostle talks delivered from 1923 to 1925 within the social and political context of the time. In his talks, Ramsey discusses socialism, psychoanalysis, and feminism. Ramsey’s views on these three intellectual movements were interconnected, and they all contributed to his take on the policy debates occurring then on the role of women in economy. Drawing on archival materials, biographical facts, and the historiographical literature …Read more