Projects

The projects associated with Moshe Pitchon are not platforms for advocacy or movement-building. They function as contexts of application and publication, where philosophical reflection is tested against lived practice, institutional limits, and ethical responsibility.

These initiatives do not define the work; they emerge from it.

21st Century Judaism

21st Century Judaism is a think tank and publishing initiative founded by Moshe Pitchon to explore Jewish ethics, responsibility, and civilizational questions in contemporary society. It serves as a space for essays, lectures, and publications that examine how Jewish moral thought responds to historical rupture, political pressure, and technological change.

The project does not seek to represent a constituency or advance a program. Its purpose is to sustain serious inquiry into how tradition functions as a moral grammar rather than an identity marker or ideological system.

Third Jewish Commonwealth

Third Jewish Commonwealth is an independent publishing platform edited by Moshe Pitchon. It hosts long-form essays and reflections on Jewish political thought, sovereignty, responsibility, and the ethical challenges posed by power in modern Jewish history.

The platform is not a political manifesto or a proposal for institutional reform. It functions as a reflective space in which historical concepts are examined philosophically rather than operationalized programmatically. Its aim is clarification, not mobilization.

Tai Chi Health & Wellness USA (TCHWUSA)

Tai Chi Health & Wellness USA is a national organization dedicated to integrating Tai Chi into healthcare, senior living, and therapeutic contexts. Founded by Moshe Pitchon, the project reflects his broader interest in embodied responsibility—the relationship between bodily presence, dignity, and ethical care.

The initiative focuses on chronic illness, neurodegenerative conditions, and stability in aging populations. It treats movement not as performance or fitness, but as a form of regulation and attentiveness that supports agency and human presence under conditions of vulnerability.

Orientation

These projects are not parallel careers or independent identities. They are extensions of philosophical inquiry into domains where responsibility must be enacted rather than merely theorized.

They remain subordinate to the written work.