CONCEPT
Rooted Cosmopolitanism
Appiah's signature framework — the insistence that <em>particular attachments and universal moral obligations</em> coexist as irreducible features of ethical life, refusing both parochial loyalty and abstract universalism.
Rooted cosmopolitanism is Kwame Anthony Appiah's answer to two centuries of philosophical resistance to the idea that we have obligations to strangers. The cosmopolitan loves her own city without believing her own city is the only city worth loving. She honors her own traditions without mistaking them for the only traditions that contain truth. The rootedness is not a concession to parochialism but the condition of genuinely understanding what universality requires — because only someone who has experienced the pull of particular attachment can understand what it means to extend moral concern beyond it. The framework refuses the frictionless global citizen who belongs everywhere and therefore nowhere, insisting instead on the specific weight of specific lives lived in specific places.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The word cosmopolitan carries baggage. It conjures airport lounges and frequent-flyer programs, the frictionless global citizen who belongs everywhere and therefore nowhere. Appiah's cosmopolitanism is something different entirely. It is rooted. It begins in particular attachments — to a family in Kumasi, a
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