Philosophical Tattoos?
Plenty of philosophers have tattoos, but how many philosophers have philosophy tattoos? And what are they of?

Image from “30 Socrates Tattoo Designs for Men” (?)
A graduate student in philosophy is considering getting a “philosophy related tattoo” and expressed curiosity about their prevalence in the profession.
So, tattoo lovers, here’s your chance to show us your philosophy tattoos. You should be able to include a photo in the comments if you’d like, or you could just tell us about it.
Of possible interest: Roy Cook interviews philosophers about tattoos.
I have a tattoo of a Dennett Quote that’s translated into predicate logic around my left leg under my calf.
The quote was “what you can imagine depends on what you know”
Missed the chance to throw in a diamond
Just a warning … for any philosophical tattoo you get, remember to leave room on the left hand side of it, so that if you change your view you can add a tilde. (You should have seen Hilary Putnam’s arm)
Oh I have a few (but you can only post one photo)
I have many philosophical tattoos. A bust of Descartes, a line drawing of Plato from Raphael’s “School of Athens,” a half-sleeve of Hobbes’ Leviathan (the sovereign from the faceplate), a duck-rabbit, and Kepler’s model of the heliocentric universe!
When I submitted a paper to Mind, my wife said that she will get matching tattoos (somehow symbolizing the paper – we never chose a design) with me if the paper gets accepted. Alas, we still don’t have those tattoos. Maybe one day.
I have a black band around my forearm with “via negativa” written in negative space, done by the tattoo artist Lou Hammel in Pittsburgh, as well as a large backpiece rendition of a scene depicted in Diderot’s Les Éleuthéromanes, “his hands would braid the priest’s entrails, lacking a rope, to strangle kings” (based on a famous remark from Jean Meslier), done in a woodcut style by the tattoo artist Baylen Levore.
Many years ago in undergrad I got a tattoo of the subtitle of a philosophy paper that interested me so much that I ended up writing my writing sample on it and then went to philosophy grad school. It was Rawls’s “Political not Metaphysical.” After all these years I’m still unsure if I’ve come across any other tattoo-able line!
https://www.the-orb.org/post/the-man-with-the-rawlsian-tattoo
I don’t have any tattoos, never mind philosophical ones.
But I was in Frankfurt earlier this week working out of an office near the beautiful old opera building, and this has a slogan on the front ‘Dem Wahren, Schönen, Guten’… and coincidentally I thought to myself that’s a great sentiment for a tattoo (or perhaps a tombstone…)
I have a tattoo of Sisyphus pushing his rock up a hill, above Camus’ suggestion that “We must imagine Sisyphus happy.”
Fresh out of undergrad, I got the Ship of Theseus tattooed on my arm. But now it’s just a ship.
I have a simple phi on my left wrist! Small enough that I can cover it if ever needed, but in a spot that I like
probably a bit OTT but i got Kit fine’s truthmaker semantics on my leg
Kant’s Transcendental Deduction
Hegel’s Science of Logic
Right so I got in to the zetetic epistemology stuff as a masters student and (begrudgingly now!) got Friedman’s ZIP principle behind my ear. Nothing against the principle, it’s just that I now work at a nonprofit and only casually follow philosophy but I am committed to ZIP for life it seems (will cost me nearly a grand to get this removed properly).
Not exactly a philosophical quote, but I’ve got Joel Feinberg on my shoulder blade.
I don’t have a philosophy tattoo, but maybe I should. If I did, it’d likely be related to memento mori.
Some ideas: https://www.pinterest.com/buggle0032/momento-mori-tattoo/
In his Cambridge Elements book Christian Philosophy and the Problem of God, Charles Taliaferro reports that his nurse has a tattoo of Plato’s allegory of the cave. There’s a collection of papers on tattoos and philosophy called Tattoos – Philosophy for Everyone: I Ink, Therefore I Am, ed. Robert Arp (Wiley, 2012). Taliaferro and Mark Odden have a paper called “Tattoos and the Tattooing Arts in Perspective: An Overview and Some Preliminary Observations” in that volume.
As usual, I have far too much to say here. So, the long story short version is—I love tattoos and connecting them to philosophy. I tend to think of them as a form of visual resistance, akin to graffiti, that fights what Charles Mills called white ignorance.
I have a series of tattoos on my forearms and hands that are meant to express something about my philosophical development.
(1) I have a capital delta with a ‘+’ on my left forearm. Having gotten into philosophy through mathematics, I still sort of did philosophy in a bizarre quasi-mathematical language at first. So, in my mind, this expressed that philosophy was meant to change the world for the better. Starting to show my penchant for the revolutionary, it was important that the delta, representing change, came first. I was in complete disagreement with folks like Kripke (“the intention of philosophy was never to be relevant to life”), Soames (“philosophy done in the analytic tradition aims at truth and knowledge, as opposed to moral and spiritual improvement”) , and Wittgenstein (philosophy “leaves everything as it is”). For these reasons, Peter KJ Park’s work showing that these kinds of views came downstream from an 18th and 19th century white supremacist political project was life-changing (“Africa, Asia, and the History of Philosophy: Racism in the Formation of the Philosophical Canon, 1780–1830”). Charles Mills’ work showing that white ignorance, more generally, was a central part of white supremacist, settler colonial, patriarchal, capitalist systems is basically all my work is about these days.
(2) Surrounding that first tattoo is an Albert Camus quote (well, an English translation of it anyway) “live to the point of tears”. That philosophy was politically relevant was clear to me from jump. This existentialist quote was meant to signal my coming to see how philosophy was also personally relevant. I’d had mental and emotional health challenges my whole life with no guidance or support around them. Rather, I’d mostly just been told to stop having emotions. So, Camus stating that there ain’t no point if we aren’t willing to feel so much that we cry was, again, life-changing. As was Lewis Gordon’s work showing that these personal, existential concerns were connected to those social and political concerns of my first tattoo (“Existence in Black: An Anthology of Black Existential Philosophy” and “Existentia Africana: Understanding Africana Existential Thought”).
(3) On my right forearm is a peace sign with “eye and mind” above it. I switched arms for this one because it felt like it had much more content. The other two were more about the form I thought philosophy should take. The peace sign was meant to signal that I wanted to be a part of revolutionary peace movements. The “eye and mind” part was meant to connect to two things.
(4) My right hand has a LandBack tattoo on it. This is the most recent and significant of my philosophical commitments I’ve gotten tattooed. It takes a stand that the peace committed to in (3) can only be achieved through a decolonial, restorative justice frame that includes truth, reconciliation, reparation, and rematriation projects like those committed to in the LandBack manifesto. (As an aside, I’d love to teach a course on the LandBack and Vienna Circle manifestos. I greatly appreciated that Thomas Uebel’s review of my book called it a manifesto.) My mentor, Dr. Claudia Ford, and I developed these thoughts around the LandBack manifesto, especially in relation to Charles Mills’s work, in “Environmental Radicalism: Talking About a Revolution” and “Climate Justice and Global Development: Outlining a new Framework from the Work of Achille Mbembe and Charles Mills”. We have some new stuff coming out later this year too (“Liberatory Planetary Politics: The Zoetic Entanglement Framework for Transitioning from Governance to Praxis”). Dwight Lewis and I also have a paper coming out connected to all of this work that brings James Baldwin and Myisha Cherry into the conversation (“Racializing the Anthropocene: An Afro-Indigenous Centered Epistemology of Resistance”). Dwight and I are also planning a new season of our podcast where some of the episodes will be on location. I’m trying to convince him that we should record an episode while I’m getting a tattoo at Atomic Tattoo Lounge Minneapolis. We’ll see…
TLDR, if things worked out like you wanted then congratulations, and if not, then I’m very sorry to hear it.
I like Foor maybe a little too much
I got this Icarus’ Fall on my forearm just before grad school, which to this day I consider a great piece of self professional advice.
Unfortunately, I first got into philosophy as enthusiastic but pretentious teenager and I thought the most basic “philosophical questions” were stunningly brilliant. Hence this little tribute to my depth, after a few beers on the night of my 18th birthday. I’ve thought about having it changed or removed, but hey, it, reflects my “roots” (har har), and it’s on my thigh so my colleagues and students don’t know about it.
Good grief. This was certainly a choice.
At the very least the drawing is stunning!
Got my allegiance to Nietzsche immortalised. Has led to a few uncomfortable third date conversations, but it’s a very quick way to figure out if someone’s worldview is going to be compatible with my own.
EAAN
Liar (kind of)
I think tattoos are irrational and a waste of money. That said, I do know one philosopher who got the following tattoo which was pretty cool: “Pr(R/N&E) is low.” Additionally, I have a friend who got a lightning bolt tattooed on his butt. I’m not sure which is better.
Um, getting a tattoo is instrumentally rational if you want to get a tattoo.
That being said I agree that the tattoo posted above by Mike DeVito is irrational, so you are right that at least some are irrational.
You guys are probably right
I once saw a video explaining what a tattoo is and how it works. White blood cells try to break up the intrusive ink. However, the ink particles are too large to be broken down, so the white cells die and become trapped within the dermal tissue, minimizing the damage and keeping the ink in place rather than allowing it to spread in the body, which would be deadly. If you add that most people pay a fortune to get through this disgrace and that the results are often regretted within a couple of years, yeah, I am jumping on the waggon of those who think that tattoos are irrational…
How could you write that all out and not think the process sounds badass? I don’t have any tattoos, but now I want one…
same haha reading this was the first time i ever wanted a tattoo
A bit different than the ones here, but for my 5-year vegan anniversary I got a flying pig for Animal Liberation, which played a big part in my conversion. The permanence of the tattoo is meant to reinforce the permanence of my commitment to veganism.
It was either Marx and Mill or these two.
How about the ambigram of “philosophy” that reads “art&science” the other way round?
Being qua Being, in Greek, is the best philosophy tattoo!!
Rousseau. Kant.
I got this tattoo when i was a young new atheist. soon into grad school i was informed that you very often, in fact, can (e.g. there’s no largest prime number). Cest la vie
I got a cyberpunk version of Plato and Aristotle as per Raphael’s school of Athens painting