Don’t just work in tech.

Master it.

Accelerate your career in technology through philosophical understanding. Courses are offered through the annual subscription to Millerman School.

The visionaries of our technological age don’t fear new tools that push the boundaries of man’s prowess.


To succeed and lead in tech requires understanding.

Learning the great philosophical ideas from past theorists of technology inspires us to enter the future with optimism.

The essence of technology is by no means anything technological.

—Martin Heidegger

A new technology does not merely add something; it changes everything.

—Neil Postman

Man, by virtue of this apparatus [of thinking machines], is enabled to destroy himself. No such possibility existed in former times. Individuals could destroy themselves, but some individuals could not destroy the whole human race.

—Leo Strauss

In this electronic age we see ourselves being translated more and more into the form of information, moving toward the technological extension of consciousness.

—Marshall McLuhan

The unexamined life is not worth living, and the unexamined tech is not worth using.

Corollary to Socrates’ Apology

At the Millerman School, we study ancient Greek and Roman philosophers, modern and postmodern theorists and critics and apply their ideas to the fast-paced tech industry.

Featuring Courses Like...

Leo Strauss’s On Tyranny

The first course ever released at the Millerman School is on this great work by Leo Strauss, which includes his debate with Alexander Kojeve about the relationship of wisdom to tyranny and time.

Introduction to Dugin’s Noomakhia

This course is an introduction to Dugin's magnum opus, his philosophical analysis of civilizational multipolarity called Noomakhia (Wars of Nous).

Heidegger’s Contributions to Philosophy

Heidegger’s “Second Masterpiece” goes beyond Being and Time to discuss "another beginning of philosophy." This is a crucially important work for understanding Heidegger.

Plato's Hipparchus

Learn how to make sense of this great Platonic dialogue that leads from the question of love of gain to the issues of philosophy and tyranny.

Plato's Alicibiades I: On the Soul

Plato shows us the most brilliant man and the most beautiful man in Athens discoursing about the nature of rule. This dialogue was once the standard starting point for anyone receiving an education in Plato's philosophy.

Access to all courses with an annual subscription.