NYU Center for Law and Philosophy
About
NYU Center for Law and Philosophy sits at the edge of Washington Square, where legal theory meets philosophical inquiry. Research institutes in New York often cluster around campus edges, and this one occupies a quiet storefront among the neighborhood’s academic pulse. The Center’s work spans constitutional interpretation, moral philosophy, and jurisprudence, threading arguments across disciplines without fanfare.
Find it at 40 Washington Square S New York, NY 10012, a stretch of the Village where the air carries café chatter and the occasional horn blast from the Square itself. The building blends into the block’s rhythm more than it announces itself, which suits visitors who come for a quiet afternoon with dense texts rather than foot traffic. Calls route here to confirm access or drop off papers, a steady trickle of footfalls blending with the hum of the subway below.
Navigate with this map: https://www.google.com/maps/place?ftid=0x89c259680cae6bf3:0xaca0f5f780d9a6f6. Around it, the Square’s fountain arcs change color at dusk, casting a soft glow over the stoops of nearby brownstones—an unassuming backdrop for a site where ideas take shape.