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Philosophy Talk

Philosophy Talk

"The program that questions everything—except your intelligence." Philosophy Talk began as a weekly one-hour radio series and has been on the air for more than two decades. 

The host-professors bring clarity, depth, and humor to everyday topics that are lofty (Truth, Beauty, Justice), arresting (Terrorism, Intelligent Design, Suicide), and engaging (Baseball, Love, Happiness). This is not a lecture or a college course; it's philosophy in action! 

From timeless philosophical questions about the ultimate nature of things to contemporary social and political issues, as well as our most fundamental beliefs about science, morality, and the human condition, Philosophy Talk invites you to challenge your assumptions and think about things in new ways.

© 2025 Philosophy Talk

"The program that questions everything—except your intelligence." Philosophy Talk began as a weekly one-hour radio series and has been on the air for more than two decades. 

The host-professors bring clarity, depth, and humor to everyday topics that are lofty (Truth, Beauty, Justice), arresting (Terrorism, Intelligent Design, Suicide), and engaging (Baseball, Love, Happiness). This is not a lecture or a college course; it's philosophy in action! 

From timeless philosophical questions about the ultimate nature of things to contemporary social and political issues, as well as our most fundamental beliefs about science, morality, and the human condition, Philosophy Talk invites you to challenge your assumptions and think about things in new ways.

© 2025 Philosophy Talk
535hr 4min
Thumbnail for "Wise Woman: Mary Wollstonecraft".
Thumbnail for "Schopenhauer: Living Your Worst Life".
Thumbnail for "Can Money Buy Well-being?".
Thumbnail for "Logic For Everyone".
Thumbnail for "Wise Woman: Anna Julia Cooper".
Thumbnail for "Diogenes and the Honest Life".
Thumbnail for "Civil Disobedience".
Thumbnail for "William James".
Thumbnail for "Why Is the World So Weird?".
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2025".
Thumbnail for "Mind Sharing".
Thumbnail for "Shakespeare's Outsiders".
Thumbnail for "Wise Woman: Im Yunjidang".
Thumbnail for "Gilbert Ryle and the Map of the Mind".
Gilbert Ryle (1900-1976) was a British philosopher of mind and language best known for his book The Concept of Mind. He developed a novel argument against Cartesian dualism, which he called “the doctrine of the ghost in the machine”—the idea that our minds and bodies are separate substances. Ryle introduced a new term for the problem with this argument: Descartes was making a “category mistake.” But what exactly is a category mistake, and how bad is it to make one? If Cartesian dualism is false, what is the relationship between our minds and our bodies? And what does it have to do with the distinction between “knowing-how” and “knowing-that”? Josh and Ray turn their minds to Michael Kremer from the University of Chicago, author of “The Development of Gilbert Ryle’s Concept of Knowledge.”
Thumbnail for "Narrative and the Meaning of Life".
Humans are uniquely storytelling creatures who can narrate the events of their own lives. Some argue that our lives derive meaning from our ability to see them as an ongoing story. So is telling our own life story the key to a meaningful life? Is it the events that matter, or how we describe them? Does it matter if we’re unreliable narrators who fudge the facts to make ourselves look good? Josh and Ray tell tales with Helena de Bres from Wellesley College, author of Philosophy in the First Person (forthcoming).
Thumbnail for "Robert Musil and Life as Experiment".
Robert Musil (1880-1942) was an Austrian novelist, famous for The Man Without Qualities. Set in Austria just before the start of World War I, it features a character who tries to live without fixed principles. But is it a good idea to conduct your life i
Thumbnail for "Henri Bergson and the Flow of Time".
Many people think of time as a series of events, like successive frames in a movie. But French philosopher Henri Bergson (1859-1941) argued that this widespread picture was wrong: everything is in constant motion, and can’t be captured by a series of sta
Thumbnail for "Making and Breaking Habits".
We often hear that “you can’t teach an old dog new tricks.” The idea seems to be that long-standing habits are too entrenched to change. But are habits always so rigid and inflexible? Why does it seem that it’s hard to break bad habits and form virtuous ones? And do habits help or hinder our creative impulses? Josh and Ray habituate themselves with Shaun Gallagher from the University of Memphis, author of Action and Interaction.
Thumbnail for "The Value of Music".
From classical concerts to commercial jingles, music fills our lives every day. But philosophers disagree about what exactly music is and why it’s valuable. Among the world’s diverse musical cultures and styles, are there any universals? If you play Bach
Thumbnail for "Schopenhauer: Living Your Worst Life".
Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860) is considered one of the great European philosophers of the nineteenth century. His most famous work, The World as Will and Representation, presents a pessimistic view of a world filled with endless strife and suffering, w
Thumbnail for "Private Lives".
Cultural attitudes towards privacy seem to be in conflict. On the one hand, we are concerned about corporations getting their hands on or selling our personal data. On the other, many people like to broadcast every little bit of their daily lives. But wh
Thumbnail for "Philippa Foot".
Philippa Foot invented the thought experiment that famously became known as the Trolley Problem. Despite the vast industry of “trolleyology” it inspired, Foot’s goal to illuminate debates on abortion and euthanasia often gets lost in the mix. So, how did
Thumbnail for "Wise Woman: Mary Midgley".
Mary Midgley became one of the best known public intellectuals in the UK, and was one of the first philosophers to talk about climate change. Though she didn’t publish her first book, Beast and Man, until she was 59, she wrote many influential works on s
Thumbnail for "Are Rules Meant to Be Broken?".
Rules exist for a reason: they tell us what to expect, they help us coordinate our actions, and they stop us from exploiting one another. But isn’t it possible to be too much of a rule follower? Aren’t some rules arbitrary, unjust, or just pl
Thumbnail for "Wise Woman: Iris Murdoch".
Iris Murdoch may be best known for her works of fiction, but her philosophical contributions were equally significant. A moral realist influenced by Plato and Simone Weil, she developed theories in virtue ethics and care ethics. So what is the relationsh
Thumbnail for "Wise Woman: Judith Jarvis Thomson".
Judith Jarvis Thomson is best known for arguing that abortion is morally permissible, even granting the fetus the status of person. Her colorful thought experiments illustrate that a right to life does not mean the right to use another person’s bod
Thumbnail for "The 2025 Dionysus Awards".
What movies of the past year challenged your assumptions and made you think about things in new ways? Josh and guest co-host Jeremy Sabol present our annual Dionysus Awards for the most thought-provoking movies of the last twelve months, including:Best
Thumbnail for "The Philosophical Worlds of Borges".
Argentinian writer Jorge Luís Borges wrote some of the world’s most brilliant, mind-bending, and philosophical stories. Drawing on sources from Europe, India, China, and Persia, these stories tackled topics like time, reality, selfhood, and art. Yet Borg
Thumbnail for "Alan Turing and the Limits of Computation".
Alan Turing was a 20th-Century English mathematician and cryptologist who is widely considered to be the father of theoretical computer science. In 1950, he published a definition of a computer that is both universal, general enough to apply to any speci
Thumbnail for "How to Create Virtuous Leaders".
Ancient philosophers like Socrates and Plato believed that an education focused on developing good character could create virtuous leaders who work for the people, not their own benefit. Nowadays, though, it seems too many politicians are power hungry, c
Thumbnail for "Elizabeth Anscombe".
Elizabeth Anscombe made hugely influential contributions to contemporary action theory, moral theory, and philosophy of mind. She also famously protested Truman’s decision to drop the atomic bomb when he was awarded an honorary degree at Oxford. Josh and
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2024".
What happened over the past year that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Josh and Ray talk to philosophers and more about the events and ideas that shaped the last twelve months: The Year in Philosophy with Justin Wei
Thumbnail for "Crisis and Creativity in Mayan Mythology".
The Popol Vuh, written in 1702, was based on a Mayan oral tradition encompassing creation myths, history, and cosmology. These stories were written in a time of crisis: European colonialism had decimated the Mayan population and destroyed much of their c
Thumbnail for "What’s So Special About Humans?".
Human beings share the planet with many different organisms with vastly diverse ways of life. We like to think we’re a higher form of intelligence. But are we really that unique? How different are we as a species when it comes to language, thought,
Thumbnail for "Wise Woman: Emma Goldman".
Activist and anarchist philosopher Emma Goldman fought for human liberation in every realm of life. While she opposed the women’s suffrage movement, she was a staunch advocate for women’s rights. So why did she think the right to vote was so unimpo
Thumbnail for "Simone Weil".
French philosopher and mystic Simone Weil was also an activist whose goal was to elevate the lower classes.  But she was opposed to the kind of revolution where the oppressed overthrow their oppressors. So, how did she think we could achieve peace and ju
Thumbnail for "Anna Julia Cooper".
Born into slavery in the nineteenth century, Anna Julia Cooper received a classical education, attended the Sorbonne, and became the fourth African American in history to be awarded a PhD. Her first book, A Voice from the South, offered one of the first
Thumbnail for "Marx and Morality".
Karl Marx famously attempted to explain our social, political, and economic systems in terms of class conflict. While he never explicitly states that capitalism is unjust, some scholars suggest that there is an implicit moral critique of it in his work.
Thumbnail for "How to Do Things With Your Mind".
We all engage in mental actions of various kinds, whether it’s planning the coming week, trying to remember the lyrics of a song, or imagining what we’d look like with a different haircut. These thought processes have significance for us and help us dire
Thumbnail for "Hildegard von Bingen".
Hildegard von Bingen was a 12th century mystic, polymath, and composer whose work spanned visionary theology, philosophy, cosmology, medicine, botany, and music. Her extraordinary intellectual accomplishments belie her humble claim to be “just a woman”.
Thumbnail for "Who Speaks For You?".
People often speak on behalf of others, like the concerned citizen who stands up for their neighbors at a city council meeting, or the activist who defends the rights of an oppressed group. Some of these spokespeople are elected, and some volunteer, but
Thumbnail for "Nísia Floresta".
Nísia Floresta was a 19th-century writer and translator known as “the Brazilian Mary Wollstonecraft.” She published the first book on women’s rights in South America, when Brazil was gaining independence from Portugal and a new post-colonial nation was b
Thumbnail for "Daniel Dennett Retrospective".
In April 2024, we lost one of the greatest American philosophers of our time—Daniel Dennett. Known for his brilliant mind and controversial views, his contributions to philosophy include topics like consciousness, AI, evolution, atheism, intentions, free
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2024".
Looking for some deep dives into pop culture this summer? Josh and Ray talk to Sandra Laugier from the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, author of TV-Philosophy in Action: The Ethics and Politics of TV Series, and Nathaniel Goldberg from Washingto
Thumbnail for "(Late) Summer Reading List 2024".
Looking for some deep dives into pop culture this summer? Josh and Ray talk to Sandra Laugier from the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, author of TV-Philosophy in Action: The Ethics and Politics of TV Series, and Nathaniel Goldberg from Washingto
Thumbnail for "Logic For Everyone".
Logic may seem like a dry, abstract discipline that only the nerdiest of philosophers study. After all, logic textbooks are full of weird symbols and proofs about abstruse entities, like “the set of all sets.” On the other hand, don’t we all
Thumbnail for "Mary Wollstonecraft".
Mary Wollstonecraft is often labeled as a “liberal feminist” because of her concern for women’s rights and conceptions of freedom. But that label narrows her work, which was broadly critical of all social inequalities that distort human relations. So why
Thumbnail for "Why Is the World So Weird?".
Quantum mechanics, mathematics, human consciousness…. whichever way you slice it, the universe is weird. How can our conscious minds be made from unconscious atoms? What should we make of quantum entanglement, or the fact that light can be both a p
Thumbnail for "Shakespeare’s Outsiders".
Over 400 years after his death, Shakespeare is still widely regarded as the greatest dramatist of all time. His many plays tackle questions about power, influence, identity, and moral and social status. His characters—be they villains or heroes—are often
Thumbnail for "Mind Sharing".
Mind reading might sound like the stuff of science fiction. But in philosophy and psychology, mind reading is something that human beings do whenever we try to guess what another person is thinking. Could it be that people are also natural born mind shar
Thumbnail for "Margaret Cavendish".
Margaret Cavendish was a writer of poetry, philosophy, polemics, histories, plays, and utopian fiction. She employed many different genres as a way to overcome access barriers for women and build an audience for her subversive philosophical ideas. So, wh
Thumbnail for "The 2024 Dionysus Awards".
What movies of the past year challenged your assumptions and made you think about things in new ways? Josh and guest co-host Jeremy Sabol present our annual Dionysus Awards for the most thought-provoking movies of 2023, including: Best Film about Social
Thumbnail for "Im Yunjidang".
18th-century Korean philosopher Im Yunjidang was the first Confucian to argue for women’s equality in matters of morality and to claim that women, just like men, can be sages. She also argued that it isn’t just what you do that matters morally—it
Thumbnail for "Can A.I. Help Us Understand Babies?".
Artificial intelligence is everywhere in our day-to-day lives and our interactions with the world. And it’s made impressive progress at a variety of visual, linguistic, and reasoning tasks. Does this improved performance indicate that computers are
Thumbnail for "20th Anniversary Quiz Night".
Philosophy Talk made its radio debut on August 20, 2003 with a live pilot on KALW San Francisco and weekly broadcasts beginning in January 2004. To celebrate two decades on the air, in November 2023 we held our first-ever Quiz Night. Longtime listeners a
Thumbnail for "American Futures (Ken Taylor Memorial Episode)".
When Ken Taylor passed away, he was working on a manuscript titled Farewell to the Republic We Once Dreamed of. Was Ken right to think the American experiment is on the verge of collapse? Are we heading for authoritarian rule, a national divorce, or even
Thumbnail for "Impossible Worlds".
Philosophers often speculate about possible worlds: ways that things could be. Some of them also believe in impossible worlds: ways that things couldn’t be. Are impossible worlds places where strange things happen, or descriptions, or abstract obje
Thumbnail for "In Awe of Wonder".
Descartes said that the purpose of wonderment is “to enable us to learn and retain in our memory things of which we were formerly unaware.” He also said that those who are not inclined to wonder are “ordinarily very ignorant.” So what exactly is wonder,
Thumbnail for "Mary Astell".
Mary Astell (1666–1731) was an English philosopher and writer who advocated for equal rights for women. While she described marriage as a type of “slavery,” she was also a staunch conservative who claimed that women who did marry should accept subordinat
Thumbnail for "Zhuangzi: Being One with Ten Thousand Things".
Zhuangzi, the 4th-century BCE Chinese philosopher, was arguably the most important figure in Taoism. He believed that a person’s ideal relationship to the world was to “be one with ten thousand things.” So how is someone supposed to achieve t
Thumbnail for "Elisabeth of Bohemia".
Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia is best known for her correspondence with René Descartes. In her letters, she articulated a devastating critique of his dualist theory of mind, in particular on the impossibility of mind-body interaction. So what was Elisabe
Thumbnail for "Can Architecture Be Political?".
It’s common to judge a piece of architecture based on its functional and aesthetic values, and how the two might complement or compete with one other. It’s less common to judge architecture based on its political values. But can’t a building’s design als
Thumbnail for "Are We Living in a Simulation?".
With rapid advances in Virtual Reality technology and the like, it’s now possible for us to become absorbed in completely made-up worlds. We might wonder how soon it will be till we reach a point where VR is so good, we can’t tell it apart from the real
Thumbnail for "Weird Wants".
Philosophers from Aquinas to Anscombe have claimed that wanting something means seeing the good in it. Even if what you want is bad overall, like procrastinating on important work, you can still desire it for its positive qualities. But don’t we so
Thumbnail for "Making a Better World".
Some philosophers think that morality boils down to one idea: we should make the world better for everyone. But who counts in “everyone”—babies, animals, future people? How can we tell what makes the world better for others? And in an uncerta
Thumbnail for "Hypatia of Alexandria".
Hypatia of Alexandria, late antiquity public figure and scholar, made significant contributions to mathematics, philosophy, and astronomy. Her embrace of Neoplatonism was seen as such a threat to the political elite in Alexandria that she was murdered by
Thumbnail for "Mexican Philosophy".
From early feminist Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz to existentialist Emilio Uranga, from Indigenous thought to theorists of aesthetic utopia, Mexican philosophy is full of fascinating figures with brilliant insights. What can we learn from them today about be
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2023".
What books should thoughtful people read this summer? Josh and Ray talk to the authors and editors of new and recent books as they compile their annual Summer Reading List: Michael Schur, creator of TV’s The Good Place and author of How to Be Perf
Thumbnail for "What Is Gender?".
Gender is a controversial topic these days, but people can’t seem to agree about what gender is. Is it an inner identity, a biological fact, or an oppressive system? Should we respect it or resist it? Should it even be a thing? Josh and guest-host
Thumbnail for "Can Art Save Us?".
The world is facing an unprecedented environmental crisis, and we urgently need good ways to address it. Courageous politicians would help, of course, as might scientific innovations. But how much of the problem is a failure of imagination? Could the art
Thumbnail for "True Contradictions".
If you want to tell the truth, you shouldn’t contradict yourself—that’s just common sense. A suspect who was home on the night of the crime can’t have been elsewhere, and whatever the weapon, we can rule out the hypothesis that it was both a candlestick
Thumbnail for "The Power of Prediction".
You’re standing at the top of a mountain, surveying the vast landscape below. The information your senses take in flows to your brain, which processes it to create a representation of the scene. Or does it? What if instead of directly perceiving the worl
Thumbnail for "Derek Parfit and Your Future Self".
The works of Derek Parfit (1942-2017) have had a profound influence on how philosophers understand rational decision-making, ethics, and personal identity. At the heart of Parfit’s thinking are questions about how you should relate to your future s
Thumbnail for "The Philosophy of Smell".
When philosophers think about human perception, they tend to focus on vision and turn their noses up at olfaction, the sense of smell. So what insights can we gain about perception, thought, and language by focusing on olfaction? How culturally variable
Thumbnail for "The 2023 Dionysus Awards".
What movies of the past year challenged your assumptions and made you think about things in new ways? Josh and guest co-host Jeremy Sabol present our annual Dionysus Awards for the most thought-provoking movies of 2022, including: Meatiest Meditation on
Thumbnail for "Cancel Culture".
Revoking support or a platform from someone who is perceived to have behaved badly has recently been dubbed “cancel culture.” Many complain that this pervasive practice promotes mob mentality and stifles free speech. But is “cancel culture” a
Thumbnail for "Why Trust Science?".
According to a recent survey conducted by the Pew Research Center, the number of Americans who trust in science is steadily declining. While politicization is partly to blame, another reason may be that the “truths” of science seem to shift endlessly. So
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2022".
What happened over the last twelve months that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? The Year in Developed Nations at War with Tamsin Shaw from NYU, author of Nietzsche’s Political Skepticism The Year in Supreme Co
Thumbnail for "Thinking Like a Conspiracy Theorist".
The moon landing was faked! JFK Jr. is still alive! Finland doesn’t exist! Conspiracy theories of all sorts have been gaining traction, thanks partly to the ease with which they spread online. But what makes someone more inclined to believe in vast consp
Thumbnail for "In Search of Proust’s Philosophy".
In Search of Proust’s Philosophy
Thumbnail for "Liberty and Justice for Who?".
Many democracies are founded on the ideals of 18th- and 19th-Century British Liberalism: the idea that human beings deserve the right to self-government because we are born free, equal, and capable of rationality. Yet Liberalism was used to justify colon
Thumbnail for "Climate Change and Collective Action".
Catastrophic storms, floods, droughts, and fires are increasing in frequency all over the globe, and the polar ice caps are melting twice as fast as initially predicted. Despite this, we struggle to take meaningful action that could avert—or at least mit
Thumbnail for "Who Owns Culture?".
Fashion designers, musicians, and Halloween costume wearers have been accused of engaging in cultural appropriation. In some cases, the alleged appropriator is quick to apologize; in others, they defend their actions as a way of appreciating a different
Thumbnail for "Effective Altruism".
Most people agree that it’s good to help others, but philosophers disagree about how much good we need to do, and for whom. Effective altruists claim that you have a moral obligation to do the most good you can—even when that means setting aside th
Thumbnail for "What Is Political Inequality?".
We all know our society is economically unequal: some people have more money and resources than others. But equality isn’t just a matter of who has which things. Political equality involves respect and participation in the political process—but tho
Thumbnail for "Is Optimism Rational?".
When the odds are against you, believing in yourself can be a source of strength—but it seems to require a cavalier disregard for the evidence. So is optimism a rational way to improve your life, or an irrational kind of wishful thinking? Will hope now j
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List: Banned Books Edition".
The American Library Association reports that last year 1,597 books were challenged or removed from libraries, schools, and universities, a record high number (compared to 273 books in 2020). Most of the challenged or removed books deal with themes relat
Thumbnail for "The Changing Face of Antisemitism".
Antisemitism is an old problem with roots that reach back to medieval Europe. While earlier forms focused more on religious bigotry, antisemitism in the modern period became increasingly racialized and politicized. So what is the connection between older
Thumbnail for "The Scandalous Truth about Memoir".
A memoir is a personal narrative written about a pivotal time in the author’s life. While the story is told from a particular perspective, the events recounted are supposed to be fact, not fiction. But what exactly counts as truth in memoir? Is the disti
Thumbnail for "What Is Ideology?".
Political polarization seems to be deepening, both in the U.S. and around the globe. Some believe that the rise of ideology is to blame for growing polarization. But can increased polarization really be attributed to ideology? What is exactly is ideology
Thumbnail for "What Would Kant Do?".
German idealist and moral philosopher Immanuel Kant is probably best known for his “Categorical Imperative,” which says that you should act following moral rules you could rationally support as universal law. In other words, do only what you
Thumbnail for "Why Poetry Matters".
Some people say they find poetry impenetrable. Yet readership is increasing: in a 2017 survey, the National Endowment for the Arts found that nearly 12% of adults in the US had read poetry in the last year. So what explains the enduring appeal of poetry
Thumbnail for "The 2022 Dionysus Awards".
What recent movies artfully explored philosophical ideas and questions, or complicated political or ethical issues that previously seemed straightforward? Josh and guest co-host Jeremy Sabol present our annual Dionysus Awards for the most thought-provoki
Thumbnail for "#MeToo: Retribution, Accountability, and Justice".
The #MeToo movement exposed how pervasive sexual harassment and abuse are, and how rare it is for perpetrators to be held accountable. Although some recent high profile cases have resulted in convictions, more often punishment is meted out by public sham
Thumbnail for "Righteous Rage".
Stoic philosopher Seneca wrote that anger is a form of madness. Other philosophers share this suspicion, viewing anger as a destructive emotion that leads to cruel and vengeful acts. But don’t certain kinds of injustice, like the murders of Black a
Thumbnail for "Marcus Aurelius".
Marcus Aurelius was a 2nd century Roman emperor and Stoic philosopher. He is most famous for his Meditations, which was written as a private guide to himself on how to live a life where virtue is the only good and vice the only evil. So how do we figure
Thumbnail for "Could Robots Be Persons?".
As we approach the advent of autonomous robots, we must decide how we will determine culpability for their actions. Some propose creating a new legal category of “electronic personhood” for any sufficiently advanced robot that can learn and make decision
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2021".
What happened over the past 12 months that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? The Year in Political Insurrection with former co-host and current Stanford Dean Debra Satz The Year in Space Tourism with Brian Green from
Thumbnail for "What Can Virtual Reality (Actually) Do?".
VR transports users into all kinds of different realities, some modeled on the real world, others completely invented. Though still in its infancy, the technology has become so sophisticated, it can trick the brain into treating the virtual experience as
Thumbnail for "Should All Ages Be Equal?".
Age determines a lot about your position in society—what activities you can do, what benefits you can access, and what rights and responsibilities you have. While it seems appropriate to treat people at different stages of life differently, we also consi
Thumbnail for "The Social Lives of Robots".
Machines might surpass humans in terms of computational intelligence, but when it comes to social intelligence, they’re not very sophisticated. They have difficulty reading subtle cues—like body language, eye gaze, or facial expression—that we pick up on
Thumbnail for "Frege and the Language of Reason".
At the end of the 19th Century, the German philosopher Gottlob Frege invented a new language, based on mathematics, designed to help people reason more logically. His ideas have had a lasting impact on philosophy, math, computer science, and the study of
Thumbnail for "Akan Philosophy and Personhood".
The Akan people of West Africa have developed a system of metaphysics, epistemology, and moral philosophy with a special focus on personhood. For the Akan, their conception of a person is not just a matter of theoretical interest—it has far reaching prac
Thumbnail for "The Mysterious Timelessness of Math".
Math is a really useful subject—at least, that’s what your parents and teachers told you. But math also leads to scenarios, like Zeno’s paradoxes, that seem to inspire skepticism. So why do we believe in math and rely on it to build bridges a
Thumbnail for "The Ethics of Awesomeness".
The word “awesome” once meant inspiring extreme fear or dread. Nowadays it’s mostly used as a general purpose exclamation of approval. So when we describe a person as awesome, are we saying that they exemplify some general form of excellence? Or are awes
Thumbnail for "Microaggressions".
Microaggressions are small comments or questions that may be insulting or hurtful to another person because of their race, gender, sexuality, and so on. Some people consider microaggressions to be a phantom symptom of political correctness and a further
Thumbnail for "Referring to the World: Ken’s Final Work".
On December 2, 2019, Ken Taylor announced that he finally had “an almost complete draft” of a book he had been writing for years. “I think I’ll pour a glass of wine to mark the occasion, before plunging back into the work that is still to be done,”
Thumbnail for "Your Brain on Literature".
Cognitive science has revolutionized our understanding of the brain and how it functions. Researchers have even used fMRI to detect differences in the way people engage with literature. But can contemporary science really teach us anything about how nove
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2021".
As some parts of our lives return to a kind of normal, Josh and Ray ask authors and philosophers about what’s been on their summer reading lists. Cory Doctorow on “Making Hay,” his short story in Make Shift: Dispatches from the Post-Pa
Thumbnail for "Nonduality and the Oneness of Being".
Some branches of Hindu philosophy propose that reality is nondual in nature. Such schools of thought—called advaita schools, from a Sanskrit word meaning “not two”—see the material world either as an aspect of ultimate reality (“Brahman”) or as a mere il
Thumbnail for "The Lives and Ideas of the Vienna Circle".
The Vienna Circle was a group of early twentieth-century philosophers, mathematicians, logicians, and scientists, best known for developing the theory of scientific knowledge called logical positivism. Although positivism as a project has been largely ab
Thumbnail for "Disinformation and the Future of Democracy".
The 2020 election and startling events that followed show that the US is as polarized as ever. Not only is there fundamental disagreement over values and goals, but people can’t seem to agree on the most basic, easily verifiable facts, like who actually
Thumbnail for "Montaigne and the Art of the Essay".
French thinker Michel de Montaigne invented a whole new genre in which to do philosophy: the essay. But in his use of that form, Montaigne repeatedly digresses and contradicts himself. So why did he think the essay was a good medium for philosophy? What
Thumbnail for "The 2021 Dionysus Awards".
After a year in which “entertainment” took on a whole new meaning, what were the movies that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Josh and guest co-host Jeremy Sabol talk to philosophers and listeners as they
Thumbnail for "What Is Masculinity?".
Strong, in control, and stoic—these are traits of the ideal masculine man. Men who fail to conform to this ideal are often penalized, particularly if they are men of color, queer men, working-class men, or men with disabilities. So how do we create diffe
Thumbnail for "What Has Replaced Freud?".
Although the concept that we can have thoughts and desires hidden from consciousness can be traced back to antiquity, it was Freud who truly popularized it in the twentieth century. Now Freud’s theory of the unconscious mind has mostly been abandoned for
Thumbnail for "The Rhetoric of Big Tech".
Big tech is known for its “disruption” of established industries and changing fundamental aspects of our lives from shopping and delivery to communication and transit. While many welcome these changes, there are also worries about privacy, fa
Thumbnail for "Democracy By Numbers".
The United States prides itself on being “the world’s greatest democracy,” which adheres to the principle, “one person, one vote.” Despite this, its elections are often highly contentious—presidents can be elected after losing the popular vote, there is
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2020".
The Year in Pandemic Ethics with Karen Stohr from Georgetown University, Senior Research Scholar at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics and author of a coronavirus ethics column for The Washingtonian magazine. The Year in Misinformation and Conspiracy Theori
Thumbnail for "Minds and Matter".
Everything that seems to have a mind also has a body made of flesh and blood. But if we look at the diversity of animals found in the world, we find a huge variety of species that perceive and interact with the world in very different ways. Is there some
Thumbnail for "The Arts For All?".
When we think of “real” art, we often think of expensive, highbrow pieces that are displayed in museums and galleries, and critiqued by the elite. In fact, people commonly lament that they don’t know enough about art to truly understand or appreciate the
Thumbnail for "Are We All to Blame?".
It’s easy to identify the pressing issues facing our world today, but it’s much more difficult to assign responsibility for them. Often the blame is placed on collectives — on entire governments, nations, and societies. But does the responsibility truly
Thumbnail for "What’s In a Game?".
Games have been an integral part of human society since the earliest civilizations. They are played around the world by people at every rank and station, at every stage of life, from childhood to old age. Why do we love games so much? Are they just a ple
Thumbnail for "Why We Hate".
The Southern Poverty Law Center reports that the number of hate groups operating in the U.S. has risen to a record high. There has also been a corresponding increase in hate crime violence. So where does all this hate come from? Do we hate others because
Thumbnail for "Science and Skepticism".
In recent decades, we’ve witnessed intense cultural wars waged on scientifically established phenomena, such as climate change and the benefit of vaccines. Of course, we might agree that some degree of skepticism about the world around us is good—it woul
Thumbnail for "Citizenship and Justice".
Securing citizenship to a developed country could guarantee people enormous privileges and opportunities. Some condemn those who try illegally to reap the benefits that come with such citizenship. But are our ways of determining who gets to enter borders
Thumbnail for "The Merits of Meritocracy".
For centuries, the promise of the “American Dream” has been that as long as someone buckles down and works hard, she can achieve her goals. In other words, we’ve perpetuated the meritocratic notion that the more effort one puts in and the more ability on
Thumbnail for "Can Streets Discriminate?".
City streets play an important role in our everyday lives. We commute to work, walk our dogs, meet our friends, and stage protests on city streets. In theory, streets are open for anyone to physically access. But do streets, by their design, actually dis
Thumbnail for "The Ethical Jerk".
Ethics philosophers are more ethical than the average person — right? Well, maybe not. Studies show that philosophy professors are just as biased as the rest of us, and no more generous in their charitable giving. So does that mean they’re not any more e
Thumbnail for "Walter Benjamin and the Re-Enchanted World".
Walter Benjamin was a German Jewish critical theorist, essayist, and philosopher who died tragically during the Second World War. His thoughts about modernity, history, art, disenchantment, and re-enchantment are still discussed today. So who was Benjami
Thumbnail for "Pet Ethics".
Many of us, even the staunchest animal activists, usually take it for granted that keeping a pet is morally acceptable. But regardless of how well we treat our animal “companions,” by keeping pets we are declaring ownership and paternal authority over ot
Thumbnail for "Time for Summer Reading".
When John and Ken began shopping around their idea for a philosophy-on-the-radio show nearly 20 years ago, many believed it would never work, let alone stay on the air. Nearly two decades later, the program that questions everything (except your intellig
Thumbnail for "Covid Conundrums and Moral Dilemmas".
In just months the world changed radically, and we have all had to adjust our lifestyles to stop the spread of Covid-19. Those working on the frontlines are taking on great personal risk while the rest of us are required to socially distance. But even if
Thumbnail for "Comforting Conversations, pt.2".
In troubling, uncertain times, the arts and humanities are more important than ever. Engaging with works of literature can provide both much needed insight into our current struggles and a sense of perspective in a crisis. In what ways do novels or plays
Thumbnail for "Comforting Conversations, pt.1".
In troubling, uncertain times, the arts and humanities are more important than ever. Engaging with works of literature can provide both much needed insight into our current struggles and a sense of perspective in a crisis. In what ways do novels or plays
Thumbnail for "(Why) Money Matters".
Money, they say, does not buy happiness; but having none can make life extraordinarily hard. Whether we have a little or a lot, we are all familiar with how much money matters in our daily lives. But what exactly is money? Is it a commodity that evolved
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and the Superhero".
Philosophy is replete with thought experiments featuring characters like Descartes’ “Evil Genius” and Davidson’s “Swampman.” Some of the scenarios philosophers conjure up seem like they could’ve been plucked from a superhero comic. Or is it the other way
Thumbnail for "The 2020 Dionysus Awards".
What movies of the past year challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Josh and guest co-host Jeremy Sabol talk to philosophers and listeners as they present their seventh (mostly) annual Dionysus Awards for the most thoughtf
Thumbnail for "Is the Self an Illusion?".
Most of us think it’s obvious that we have a self, but famously, both Buddhism and British philosopher David Hume are skeptical that such a thing exists. What in the world could it mean to deny that the self exists? Could ‘the self’ just refer to a serie
Thumbnail for "Death of the Sentence".
A child’s first sentence is a pivotal moment in her development when she is recognized as now capable of communicating complete thoughts. But in the 21st century, thoughts have become increasingly mediated by technology, and language more careless and in
Thumbnail for "Comedy and the Culture Wars".
Comedy can often give offense, especially when it concerns such sensitive topics as race, gender, and sexuality. Should comedy like that be shunned, boycotted, even banned? Can it be enjoyed without danger? Or could it even, at its best, be the road to a
Thumbnail for "Ken Taylor Tribute".
The Philosophy Talk team is deeply saddened by Ken Taylor’s untimely passing this month. Ken was the show’s co-founder, longtime co-host, chief cheerleader, and guiding light. In this special episode, co-hosts Josh Landy and Debra Satz, along
Thumbnail for "Sanctuary Cities".
In the U.S. there are over 500 sanctuary cities—municipalities that limit their cooperation with the federal government’s immigration law enforcement. Although opponents portray sanctuary cities as besieged by crime, empirical data does not bear out such
Thumbnail for "Hobbes and the Ideal Citizen".
Seventeenth century philosopher Thomas Hobbes believed that without government to control our worst impulses, life would be ‘solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.’ Consequently, he thought that absolute monarchy is the best form of gover
Thumbnail for "Conscious Machines".
Computers have already surpassed us in their ability to perform certain cognitive tasks. Perhaps it won’t be long till every household has a super intelligent robot who can outperform us in almost every domain. While future AI might be excellent at appea
Thumbnail for "The Allure of Authoritarianism".
In George Orwell’s 1984, the party’s “final, most essential command” was “to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears.” Authoritarian regimes call on us to accept as fact whatever they tell us; or worse, as Hannah Arendt says, they get us to a point whe
Thumbnail for "Explanation At Its Best".
In science as well as everyday life, we often feel the pull of simpler, more elegant, or more beautiful explanations. For example, you notice the street is wet and infer the best explanation is that it rained earlier. But are we justified in assuming the
Thumbnail for "Changing Minds on Climate Change".
There is consensus among scientists that global warming is real and that it’s caused by human activity. Despite the overwhelming evidence and the urgency to act, there are still many who are skeptical of or flat-out deny climate change. Are these climate
Thumbnail for "Reading the Troubled Past".
Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe lambasted Joseph Conrad’s novel Heart of Darkness as a deeply racist work that should be removed from the Western canon. Defenders of Conrad say the novel is simply an expression of its time and not an endorsement of the rac
Thumbnail for "The Doomsday Doctrine".
The doctrine of mutually assured destruction is supposed to deter both sides in a war from launching the first nuclear strike. However, the strategy of the US, NATO, and other super powers has been to plan the destruction of nearly all life on Earth. If
Thumbnail for "Is Postmodernism Really to Blame for Post-Truth?".
Postmodernism is often characterized by its rejection of concepts championed by the Enlightenment, like meaning, truth, reason, and knowledge. Some philosophers blame postmodernism for making cynicism about truth and facts now respectable in political de
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading (and Misreading)".
What should you be reading this summer—and how should you be reading it? We’re often told that fiction offers us entertainment, moral examples, and lessons about life. But are we getting too quick to dismiss complicated fiction—the kind that doesn’t have
Thumbnail for "J.S. Mill and the Good Life".
John Stuart Mill was one of the most important British philosophers of the 19th century. As a liberal, he thought that individuals are generally the best judges of their own welfare. But Mill was also a utilitarian who thought that there were objectively
Thumbnail for "The Limits of Tolerance".
In order to reach compromise, people try to be tolerant of others with different beliefs. Despite its value, there are numerous factors that may hinder our exercise of tolerance. As the schisms between our beliefs grow larger, what happens when our moral
Thumbnail for "What Is Religious Belief?".
Many people profess to believe in an all-powerful, all-knowing, benevolent God. Yet psychological data shows that people often think and reason about God in ways contrary to their professed religious beliefs. So are these so-called religious beliefs genu
Thumbnail for "Is Philanthropy Bad for Democracy?".
In a liberal democracy, individuals should have the freedom to give money to charities of their choice. But is there a difference between charitable giving from ordinary individuals and philanthropic giving from extremely wealthy individuals? Whose inter
Thumbnail for "Authority and Resistance".
Authority can refer to people or institutions that have the political power to make decisions, give orders, and enforce rules. It can also refer to a certain kind of expertise or knowledge that we might defer to. Sometimes we respect authority, and somet
Thumbnail for "Hacking the Brain: Beyond the Five Senses".
Humans evolved to have a variety of senses—smell, sight, touch, etc.—that provide information about the world around us. Our brains use this sensory information to construct a particular picture of reality. But what if it were technologically possible to
Thumbnail for "Immigration and Multiculturalism".
Whether for economic reasons or to flee violence and persecution, immigration rates continue to climb globally. At the same time, opposition to immigration and intolerance of multiculturalism is also growing. Should cultural or ethnic identity ever be a
Thumbnail for "The 2019 Dionysus Awards".
What movies of the past year challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Josh and Ken talk to philosophers, film critics, and listeners as they present their sixth (mostly) annual Dionysus Awards for the most thoughtful films o
Thumbnail for "What Do We Owe Future Generations?".
We talk about owing future generations a better world. We might also think that we should do things for future generations even if our actions might not benefit present-day people. But is it possible to have obligations to people who are not yet born? Ca
Thumbnail for "Envy: Vice or Virtue?".
Bertrand Russell said that envy was one of the most potent causes of unhappiness, and it’s well known as one of the seven deadly sins. But is envy always a bad thing? Is it simply a petty emotion we should try to avoid, or could envy help us unders
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2018".
A new year offers an opportunity to reflect on the significant events of the previous year. So what happened over the past twelve months that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Join the Philosophers as they celebrate t
Thumbnail for "Foreign Aid – or Injury?".
Many of us might think that developed nations should lead the effort to end global poverty. But decades of foreign aid—from governments and non-governmental organizations—have failed to produce sustainable growth in the developing world. How can we empow
Thumbnail for "Foucault and Power".
Michel Foucault was a 20th century philosopher known for his work concerning power and knowledge. Foucault is often cited for his theory of knowledge and power, which are inextricably linked. But what exactly is Foucault’s philosophy of power? Is i
Thumbnail for "The Creative Life".
Parents and students alike often think that a college major defines possible career options. Yet what distinguishes today’s work world from bygone times is that it’s quite common for adults to have a variety of different careers in a single l
Thumbnail for "Does Reputation Matter?".
We think about about our own reputation all the time, and we constantly reference the reputations of the people we meet and interact with. But why do we care so much about reputation? Is it rational for us to rely on reputation so heavily in our day-to-d
Thumbnail for "Can Reason Save Us?".
To an optimist, things are constantly getting better: disease and extreme poverty are down; life expectancy, literacy, and equality are up; and it’s all thanks to the glory of human reason. But a pessimist would point to the continuing presence of injust
Thumbnail for "The New Golden Age of Television".
They called it a “vast wasteland” in the 1960s, but TV is very different today. Freedom from the broadcast schedule means TV makers can create longer, more complex, more philosophical stories, while binge-watching and on-demand viewing have changed the w
Thumbnail for "The Psychology of Cruelty".
Throughout history, people have committed all kinds of cruel, degrading, and evil acts toward other people. Many believe that for evil acts like genocide to be even possible, the victims must first be dehumanized by the perpetrators, starting with dehuma
Thumbnail for "The Athlete as Philosopher".
For the ancient Greeks, sport was an integral part of education. Athletic programs remain in schools today, but there is a growing gap between the modern sports experience and enduring educational values such as self-discovery, responsibility, respect, a
Thumbnail for "The Ethics of Algorithms".
Recent years have seen the rise of machine learning algorithms surrounding us in our homes and back pockets. They’re increasingly used in everything from recommending movies to guiding sentencing in criminal courts, thanks to their being perceived
Thumbnail for "Does Science Over-reach?".
We’ve all heard the phrase, “You can’t argue with science.” Appealing to scientific fact as a way to settle a question makes sense given the amazing advancements science has brought us in understanding how the world works. But sho
Thumbnail for "Radical Markets: Solutions for a Gilded Age?".
Many people think that growing inequality, the rise of populism and nativism, and the decay of democratic institutions all have the same cause—the overreach of markets. The solution, they believe, is to limit the market through regulation. But what if ra
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2018".
Summer is here – what philosophers, philosophies, or philosophical issues do you want to read up on? Heidegger’s Being and Time may not be the obvious choice to take on vacation, but there are lots of readable, beach-friendly classics and non-class
Thumbnail for "The Value of Care: Feminism and Ethics".
We sometimes think of the domains of ethics and morality as divorced from feeling and emotion. You keep your promises because it maximizes good. But what if care were thought of as the bedrock of morality? While we know that more care work is performed b
Thumbnail for "Repugnant Markets: Should Everything Be For Sale?".
We might ban buying or selling horse meat in the US not for the protection of horses, but because we find it morally repugnant. Yet this moral repugnance is clearly not universal, and on some level may even be arbitrary, given France’s attitude tow
Thumbnail for "Faith and Humility".
Some would argue that faith requires that one blindly—rather than rationally— believe. Faith in one ‘true’ religion often entails rejection of all others. Given this, can there ever be humility when it comes to religious faith? How unwavering should the
Thumbnail for "Are We Alone?".
News that life might exist or have existed on Mars or somewhere else in our universe excites many. But should we really be happy to hear that news? What are the philosophical implications of the possibility of extraterrestrial life? If life can blossom i
Thumbnail for "Trolling, Bullying, and Flame Wars: Humility and Online Discourse".
Open up any online comments section and you’ll find them: internet trolls, from the mildly inflammatory to the viciously bullying. It seems that the ease of posting online leads many to abandon any semblance of intellectual humility. So can we have intel
Thumbnail for "Monstrous Technologies?".
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein raises powerful questions about the responsibilities of scientists to consider the impact of their inventions on the world. Are these questions as relevant now as they were 200 years ago? What insights, if any, should today’s
Thumbnail for "Adorno and the Culture Industry".
What’s your favorite movie? Did you watch that season finale last night? No spoilers! Popular cultures pervades modern life. But what if pop culture was actually more pernicious than we ordinarily think? Could it be systematically deceiving us—erod
Thumbnail for "How to Humbly Disagree".
People like to argue, especially Philosophy Talk listeners! But no matter how hard we try to resolve disputes through rational discourse, sometimes we may still disagree about important issues. One response to this predicament is simply to agree to disag
Thumbnail for "Misogyny and Gender Inequality".
With the recent #MeToo viral campaign, along with the wave of prominent male figures toppled for being serial sexual harassers or worse, the topic of misogyny has come into sharp focus. But what exactly is misogyny? And how does it differ from sexism? Wh
Thumbnail for "The 5th (Mostly) Annual Dionysus Awards".
Josh and Ken talk to philosophers, film critics, and listeners in presenting their fifth (mostly) annual Dionysus Awards for the most philosophically compelling movies of the past year. Categories include: Most Searing Depiction of Humankind’s Pro
Thumbnail for "James Baldwin and Social Justice".
Sometimes, we struggle to tell the truth—especially when it’s the truth about ourselves. Why did James Baldwin, a prominent Civil Rights-era intellectual and novelist, believe that telling the truth about ourselves is not only difficult but can als
Thumbnail for "Frantz Fanon and the Violence of Colonialism".
Frantz Fanon is a thinker who has inspired radical liberation movements in places ranging from Palestine to South Africa to the United States. Most famous for his work The Wretched of the Earth, Fanon is often understood as a proponent of revolutionary v
Thumbnail for "Fractured Identities".
Despite tremendous strides made towards civil and political rights in the United States, discrimination and exclusion based on race, class, gender, and sexuality are still pervasive. As a result, individuals seen as “the other” often experien
Thumbnail for "The Philosophy of Retirement".
The Philosophy of Retirement
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2017".
A new year offers an opportunity to reflect on the significant events of the previous year. But what ideas and events took shape over the past twelve months that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Join Ken and Josh as
Thumbnail for "Can Speech Kill?".
Free speech is one of the core tenets of our democracy. We’re inclined to think that more speech is always better. Although the Supreme Court has outlined some minor restrictions to our right to free speech, the most courts are willing to admit is that s
Thumbnail for "Midlife and Meaning".
At some point or another, the midlife crisis comes for us all. But what is it really about? Is it a sense of our mortality, the fear of not achieving what we hoped to, or the sinking feeling that we’ve been spending our whole adult lives chasing our tail
Thumbnail for "Philosophy of Trash".
“One man’s trash is another man’s treasure,” or so the saying goes. But what makes something trash to begin with? The word can be used to describe disposable objects, pieces of culture, or even people. Underlying each of these use
Thumbnail for "Race Matters".
Started in the wake of George Zimmerman’s 2013 acquittal in the death of Trayvon Martin, the #BlackLivesMatter movement has become a powerful campaign demanding redress for the mistreatment of African-Americans by law enforcement in the United Stat
Thumbnail for "The Internet of Things".
Smart TVs, refrigerators, cars, and entire houses—the internet of things refers to the networking of all the devices in our lives, as they gather data and interact with one another, apparently to make our lives easier and more convenient. As we add more
Thumbnail for "A World Without Work".
Work: a lot lot of people do it, and a lot of people don’t seem to like it very much. But as computers and artificial intelligence get increasingly sophisticated, more and more of our workers will lose their jobs to technology. Should we view this inevit
Thumbnail for "Post-Truth Politics".
You’ve probably heard about the dangerous effects of fake news, and the spread of sensational and targeted falsities. But what about “legitimate” news, one might still ask? Well, do you want the “liberal truth” or the “
Thumbnail for "Polyamory".
In most if not all modern Western societies, monogamy is the dominant form of romantic relationship. In polyamorous or “open” relationships, however, each person is free to love multiple partners at once. Just as our friendships are non-exclu
Thumbnail for "Could the Laws of Physics Ever Change?".
From airplanes flying overhead to the cellular activity inside us, all events that take place in the world obey the laws of physics. Physicists seem to be getting closer and closer to understanding the physical laws that govern our universe. But what if
Thumbnail for "Driverless Cars at the Moral Crossroads".
Autonomous vehicles are quickly emerging as the next innovation that will change society in radical ways. Champions of this new technology say that driverless cars, which are programed to obey the law and avoid collisions, will be safer than human contro
Thumbnail for "Cognitive Bias".
Aristotle thought that rationality was the faculty that distinguished humans from other animals. However, psychological research shows that our judgments are plagued by systematic, irrational, unconscious errors known as ‘cognitive biases.’ In light of t
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2017".
Summer is the perfect time to dig in to deep reading. Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism may be a bit much for the beach, but there are lots of readable classics and new titles that could make your summer reading a transformative experience.
Thumbnail for "Habermas and Democracy".
Jürgen Habermas is regarded as one of the last great public intellectuals of Europe and a major contributor to the philosophy of democracy. A member of the Frankfurt School, Habermas argues that humans can have rational communication that will lead to th
Thumbnail for "Nonhuman Rights".
Human rights—like freedom from discrimination and slavery— are fundamental rights and freedoms that every person enjoys simply because they’re human. But what about other animals, like monkeys, elephants, and dolphins? Should they enjoy similar fun
Thumbnail for "Should Beliefs Aim at Truth?".
If beliefs can be described as having a goal or purpose, then surely that is something like aiming at the truth. Yet we all hold many false beliefs too. Do these false beliefs fail to meet their goal? Or are there some things we believe simply because th
Thumbnail for "The Limits of Medical Consent".
In our healthcare system, parents normally make medical decisions for their kids because, we think, children are not competent to make such decisions for themselves. Similarly, we permit doctors to violate or defer consent for mentally incompetent adults
Thumbnail for "The Phenomenology of Lived Experience".
Phenomenology is the philosophical study of experience and consciousness, performed by philosophers ranging from Sartre and Heidegger to contemporary analytic philosophers of mind. But what methods do phenomenologists use to study the mind and experience
Thumbnail for "The Space-Time Continuum".
Strange things are said about time: that it’s illusory, that it has no direction. But what about space, or the space-time continuum? What exactly is space-time? Are space and time fundamental features of the world? How do Einstein’s special and gen
Thumbnail for "Knowing What We Know (And What We Don’t)".
Knowing What We Know (And What We Don’t)
Thumbnail for "Queerness".
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Transsexual… it is safe to say that new ideas of gender and sexuality have broken into mainstream consciousness within the past few decades. What underlies each of these identities, however, is the notion of Queerness
Thumbnail for "Freedom of Speech on Campus".
In the last few years, conservatives and liberals alike have accused activists on college campuses of silencing contrary opinions. Many have argued—quite vociferously—that activists’ unwillingness to hear from people with opposing opinions endangers free
Thumbnail for "Philosophy Behind Bars".
In 1994, Congress eliminated federal funding for college education in prisons. It was, they argued, unjust for prisoners to be eligible for Pell grants when ordinary citizens could not afford higher education. However, research suggests that education in
Thumbnail for "Reparations".
The United States brutally enslaved African Americans for its first hundred or so years of existence. For the next hundred years, black Americans were lynched, deprived of basic rights, and widely discriminated against. Now, while there are still certain
Thumbnail for "The Value of a College Education".
With 43.3 million Americans burdened with a total of $1.3 trillion in student loan debt, high school students thinking about attending college are faced with a daunting decision. Should they risk joining the ranks of the indebted in order to get a colleg
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2016".
Our annus horribilis is over. But what ideas and events took shape in 2016 that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Join John, Ken, and their special guests as they celebrate the examined year with a philosophical look
Thumbnail for "The Mystery of the Multiverse".
At the foundation of modern theoretical physics lie the equations that define our universe, telling us of its beginnings, evolution, and future. Make even minor adjustments to the fundamental laws of the universe, and life as we know it would not exist.
Thumbnail for "Matter and Energy – The Dark Side".
All the matter we have ever observed accounts for less than 5% of the universe. The rest? Dark energy and dark matter: mysterious entities that we only know about from their interactions with other matter. We infer their existence to satisfy our laws—but
Thumbnail for "John Dewey and the Ideal of Democracy".
John Dewey is regarded by some as the American philosopher. In the first half of the 20th century, he stood as the most prominent public intellectual whose influence reached into intellectual movements in China, Japan, and India. Although we hear less of
Thumbnail for "Magical Thinking".
Have you ever avoided stepping on a crack, just in case you might break your mother’s back? Every day, people make decisions and act based on completely unfounded ideas and superstitions – even when they acknowledge that there is no evidence to support t
Thumbnail for "Election Special".
In this re-broadcast of our special episode from the lead-up to the 2016 election, John and Ken look beyond the horse races at some of the bigger questions raised by our electoral process. • Do we always have a duty to vote? with Stanford political scien
Thumbnail for "This Is Your Brain on Art".
Humans actively seek to create and consume art. Its compelling nature has been discussed in the humanities since its inception, and the philosophical branch of aesthetics has long investigated its fundamental questions: What is beauty? What is art? What
Thumbnail for "The Big Bang – Before and After".
The Big Bang theory is the prevailing theory about the “birth” of the universe. It posits a singularity, or super high density state from which the entire universe expanded and continues to expand. But what exactly is the Big Bang, and what’s the evidenc
Thumbnail for "More Than Pun and Games".
Puns have been called both the highest and lowest form of humor. There is something about them that is at once painful and pleasurable, capable of causing either a cringe or a chuckle. But what exactly is it about word play that we find humorous? Is ther
Thumbnail for "The Mystery of Music".
Most of us listen to music on a regular basis, but we don’t think much about how we listen. Moreover, when we disagree about music, we’re usually happy to agree that we just have different personal tastes. But maybe some of us just don’
Thumbnail for "Identity Politics".
The notion of identity has become so hugely important in contemporary political discourse that no conversation on social issues would be complete without it. Identity politics typically focuses on how to empower individuals from marginalized groups so th
Thumbnail for "The Radical Democracy Movement".
Liberal democracy has its problems, including the fact that in trying to build consensus, it often ends up oppressing minorities or those who dissent. Radical democracy, on the other hand, tries to build consensus around difference, and challenge oppress
Thumbnail for "The Philanthropy Trap".
Many of us generally admire people who donate large sums of money to charity. Yet people donate for all sorts of reasons – some selfless, some not so much. Should we consider philanthropy as mere ego expression for the wealthy, or is it genuinely altruis
Thumbnail for "Philosophy of Sleep".
“Blessed are the sleepy ones,” writes Nietzsche, “for they shall soon drop off.” Sleep is an extraordinarily, albeit profoundly odd, phenomenon, yet we seem to accept prolonged nightly blackouts without question. Still, sleep has
Thumbnail for "Altered States".
Aldous Huxley explains his conception of the brain as a “reducing valve” of consciousness in his provocative book, The Doors of Perception. His famous experiment with the psychedelic substance mescaline was an attempt to open this valve and e
Thumbnail for "Affirmative Action: Too Little or Too Much?".
Addressing our nation’s history of racial injustice can be a truly backbreaking endeavor. Race-based affirmative action is usually thought of as one such effort, and colleges and universities often use it in their admissions process. However, affirmative
Thumbnail for "One Child Too Many".
The United Nations predicts human population growth will surpass 9 billion around 2050. We know the consequences of overpopulation have the potential to be catastrophic in terms of our continued existence on the planet, with negative environmental effect
Thumbnail for "Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?".
The old metaphysical question – why anything exists at all – has perplexed and intrigued humankind for ages. It has long been a question reserved for philosophers, but now some physicists claim to have answered it. Yet these attempts have raised question
Thumbnail for "Extreme Altruism".
Extreme Altruism
Thumbnail for "Gun Control".
The right to bear arms, as guaranteed by the Second Amendment, is at once both distinctly American and highly controversial. Incidents such as the Sandy Hook school shooting force the nation to think hard about how the law should balance gun ownership wi
Thumbnail for "The Science of Happiness".
Positive psychology is an emerging science that investigates the qualities, attitudes, and practices that enable people to thrive and be happy. So what does this research reveal about human happiness? Are some of us just born with happier dispositions th
Thumbnail for "The Ancient Cosmos – When the Earth Stood Still".
Even in ancient Greek society, philosopher-scientists engaged in heated debate about the origin, composition, and structure of our universe. Tracking our understanding of cosmology from then until now shows monumental shifts in thinking. So what did the
Thumbnail for "“Ethics of Whistleblowing” wins Bronze Award for Social Impact at the New York Festivals".
Public Radio Show ‘Philosophy Talk’ Wins Bronze at the 2016 New York Festivals® International Radio Program Awards Nationally Syndicated show “Edward Snowden and the Ethics of Whistleblowing” is recognized in the Social Issues category for its insight, c
Thumbnail for "The Ethics of Debt".
According to a report from the Jubilee Debt Campaign, there are currently 24 countries facing a full-blown debt crisis, with 14 more on the verge. Globally, there is about $200 trillion of debt on the books. Although the poor and disenfranchised of the w
Thumbnail for "White Privilege and Racial Injustice".
“White privilege” has become a buzzword in discussions about racial inequality and racial justice. The call to “check your privilege” appeals to those privileged to acknowledge the various ways they receive special treatment that others don’t. But when w
Thumbnail for "Jean-Paul Sartre".
Jean-Paul Sartre was one of the first global public intellectuals, famous for his popular existentialist philosophy, his works of fiction, and his rivalry with Albert Camus. His existentialism was also adopted by Simone de Beauvoir, who used it as a foun
Thumbnail for "Dignity Denied: Life and Death in Prison".
According to the Treatment Advocacy Center, there are more people living with mental illness in prisons than in psychiatric hospitals across the country. Despite the fact that prisoners can have significant medical needs, healthcare services are often wo
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year – 2015".
A new year offers an opportunity to reflect on the significant events of the previous year. But what ideas and events took shape over the past twelve months that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Join John, Ken, and t
Thumbnail for "Taoism: Following the Way".
Taoism (sometimes Daoism) is one of the great philosophical traditions of China. Lao-Tzu, who is commonly regarded as its founder, said that “Those who know, do not speak; those who speak, do not know.” The arguments that Taoist texts offer for skepticis
Thumbnail for "Self and Self-Presentation".
We craft personal brands or images to accompany or represent ourselves in various situations. These personas are malleable – how we portray ourselves online differs from how we act at an event, which differs from the workplace or in the privacy of the ho
Thumbnail for "Your Lying Eyes – Perception, Memory, and Justice".
The criminal justice system often relies on the testimony of eyewitnesses to get convictions. Yet more and more, psychological science demonstrates how unreliable eyewitness reports can be. Moreover, jurors have all kinds of cognitive biases and unconsci
Thumbnail for "Will Innovation Kill Us?".
Innovation, be it social, economic, or technological, is often hailed as the panacea for all our troubles. Our obsession with innovation leads us to constantly want new things and to want them now. But past innovations are arguably the main reason for ma
Thumbnail for "Spinoza".
Baruch Spinoza was a 17th century Dutch philosopher who laid the foundations for the Enlightenment. He made the controversial claim that there is only one substance in the universe, which led him to the pantheistic belief in an abstract, impersonal God.
Thumbnail for "Living On Through Others".
Imagine that the world will end in thirty days. Would your life have meaning anymore? Would anyone’s? It seems that there would no longer be any point to making technological or medical advances, developing new forms of art, or even taking good care of o
Thumbnail for "In Praise of Love: Plato’s Symposium Meets Bernstein’s Serenade".
Plato’s Symposium is arguably the most memorable philosophical work ever written on the subject of love. It is also the inspiration for Leonard Bernstein’s gorgeous violin concerto, the Serenade. What would Plato think of Bernstein’s Serenade, especially
Thumbnail for "The Logic of Regret".
A teenager decides, on a whim, to conceive a child. Even though we might say that this decision was irrational, she cannot regret it later, because raising the child eventually becomes the most important part of her life. Cases like this show how complic
Thumbnail for "The Technology of Immortality".
Some futurists believe we are not far from a time when technology and medicine will be so advanced that humans need no longer die of old age or other natural causes. Eventually, not only will we be able to replace our natural body parts, but we might eve
Thumbnail for "The Changing Face of Feminism".
Reactions to the word ‘feminist’ today range from staunch rejection or ambivalence to fervent endorsement and activism. While many young women claim not to need feminism in their lives, others believe these women are simply confused about the meaning of
Thumbnail for "The Ethics of Drone Warfare".
The Unmanned Aerial Vehicle, aka ‘drone,’ is increasingly the weapon of choice in America’s military operations. Many laud its ability to maintain our global power while reducing human and financial costs. By the same token, however, this safe and
Thumbnail for "Leibniz".
The intellectual domain of Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz cannot be captured in a single word. For most of his life, he was a jurist, a courtier, a diplomat, and a librarian; he also made huge contributions to the study of logic, geometry, physics, botany
Thumbnail for "The Power and Peril of Satire".
Satire is everywhere – in conversations with friends, in books, on television, and online. When used effectively, it can be a very powerful form of social commentary. But what happens when someone goes too far, or even worse, when some publication repeat
Thumbnail for "Neuroscience and Free Will".
We like to think of ourselves as rational agents who exercise conscious control over most of our actions and decisions. Yet in recent years, neuroscientists have claimed to prove that free will is simply an illusion, that our brains decide for us before
Thumbnail for "Edward Snowden and the Ethics of Whistleblowing".
You might think we each have a moral duty to expose any serious misconduct, dishonesty, or illegal activity we discover in an organization, especially when such conduct directly threatens the public interest. However, increasingly we are seeing whistlebl
Thumbnail for "Heidegger".
Best known for his work Being and Time, Martin Heidegger has been hailed by many as the greatest philosopher of the twentieth century. He has also been criticized for being both nearly unreadable and a Nazi. Yet there is no disputing his seminal place in
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2015".
Summer is here – what philosophers, philosophies, or philosophical issues do you want to read up on? Heidegger’s Being and Time may not be the obvious choice to take on vacation, but there are lots of readable, beach-friendly classics and non-class
Thumbnail for "Science and Politics – Friends or Foes?".
The ideal of science is objectivity in the service of advancing knowledge. We tend to assume that to be objective, scientists must keep their politics from influencing their work. But time and time again we see that science, even some of our best science
Thumbnail for "Why Propaganda Matters".
Governments and other political institutions employ propaganda to sway public opinion, instill ideas, and exert a degree of control over people. While totalitarian regimes have been known to do this explicitly, democratic governments often disguise their
Thumbnail for "How Words Work: From Noise to Meaning".
Humans have an amazing capacity to communicate. By uttering sounds we are able to convey meaning to those around us. These noises we make take on properties – they mean certain things, they are true or false, etc. Some animals also use forms of language:
Thumbnail for "Reincarnation – Past Lives, Future Selves".
According to Buddhist tradition, all people must suffer illness, aging, and death. Yet the universe is seen as a vast living entity, in which cycles of individual life and death are repeated without cease. Therefore death is a necessary part of the proce
Thumbnail for "When Democracies Torture".
Torture is prohibited under international law and is widely considered a human rights violation. But despite the fact that 157 countries ratified the UN Convention Against Torture, it is still practiced in many states to this day. Moreover, while we migh
Thumbnail for "The Art of Non-Violence".
We all hope for peace. Yet in the face of violence, it often seems the only recourse is more violence. Advocates of non-violence claim it’s not necessary to respond to war in kind, and that responding violently, even in self-defense, just perpetuates the
Thumbnail for "Morality in a Godless World".
Belief in God is thought by many to be the only possible source of morality, such that without a God, “everything is permitted.” Yet godlessness is on the rise in the West, with figures like Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Lawrence Krauss leading the “N
Thumbnail for "Democracy in Crisis".
Democratic systems of government are supposed to reflect the interests of ordinary citizens, and not some shadowy political elite. But more and more, we see the influence of big money and special interest groups in so-called democratic politics, while in
Thumbnail for "Diseases of the Mind: Philosophy of Psychiatry".
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is the primary reference catalog for mental health illnesses. But whereas a medical textbook will show you the picture of a broken bone or a tumor, leaf through the DSM and you will find just one thing: lists of symp
Thumbnail for "Camus and the Absurd".
Albert Camus is most famous for his existential works of fiction including The Stranger as well as his philosophical essay The Myth of Sisyphus. He led the French resistance press during Nazi Occupation and became one of the youngest Nobel laureates in l
Thumbnail for "Cyber-Activism".
Whether it’s making donations and signing petitions online, or using social media to highlight political causes, cyber-activism has never been easier. With a few clicks, we can make our voices heard around the globe. But who’s listening, and
Thumbnail for "Food Justice".
The number of chronically hungry people in the world is over 800 million, yet developed countries are facing health challenges from rising rates of obesity. The growing problems of food security and water scarcity seem an issue of distribution rather tha
Thumbnail for "Anarchy: Utopian Dream or Dystopian Nightmare?".
Anarchism says there’s no need for a state, that it would be better to have a society without central government. Anarchists dislike the often heavy-handed authority that government brings. Yet the dream of the stateless society is not a simple one
Thumbnail for "What’s Next? Death and the Afterlife".
The question of what happens to us after we die remains as mysterious now as it always was. Some think that death amounts to total annihilation of the self; others adhere to certain religious traditions, which teach that the immaterial soul (and, in some
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year – 2014".
The unexamined year is not worth reviewing. But what ideas and events that took shape over the past year have prompted us to question our assumptions and to think about things in new ways? What significant events – in politics, in science, and in philoso
Thumbnail for "Humanity Violated".
People tend to treat other people who differ from them, even in seemingly small and insignificant ways, as less than fully human. Our tendency to dehumanize the “other” has sometimes led to great atrocities like the Holocaust, the genocide in
Thumbnail for "The Lure of Immortality".
Would you want to live forever? It’s a tempting notion that has been explored and imagined for centuries. Immortality may be desirable, but it may also be that death is a significant part of what gives meaning to life. So what would a society of im
Thumbnail for "Transformative Experiences".
We are faced with decisions all the time in life. Normally, we think about the possible outcomes and choose a course of action that matches what we take to be of most value to us. However, one might think that some decisions—like whether or not to have a
Thumbnail for "The Fairness Fixation".
Imagine that your eight-year-old son arrives home boasting that he won the race that day in gym class. Right as your heart begins to swell with pride, he reveals that he wasn’t the only winner—the whole class won the race. The gym teacher, it turns out,
Thumbnail for "Philosophy as Therapy".
From Plato and Sextus Empiricus to Wittgenstein, many important thinkers have thought of philosophy as a type of therapy. By looking at our way of life through a philosophical lens, we can achieve a particular kind of understanding that can bring us peac
Thumbnail for "Racial Profiling and Implicit Bias".
Whether for counterterrorism measures, street level crime, or immigration, racial profiling of minorities occurs frequently. However, racial profiling is illegal under many jurisdictions and many might say ineffective. Is racial profiling ever moral or i
Thumbnail for "Second-Guessing Ourselves".
We like to think of ourselves as self-aware, reflective beings, but psychological studies demonstrate that we’re usually overconfident in the accuracy of our own beliefs. Memory, for example, can be extremely unreliable, even when we feel certain we know
Thumbnail for "Machiavelli".
Niccolò Machiavelli is best known for arguing that people in power should use deception, force, and manipulation if those tactics are necessary to achieve their ends. In an age of unscrupulous politics and ruthless business practice, shouldn’t we b
Thumbnail for "Babies and the Birth of Morality".
Doing the right thing is often an extremely difficult task. Yet psychological research indicates that infants as young as 21 months old have a crude sense of what is right and wrong. This capacity is reflected by infants’ decisions to reward or pun
Thumbnail for "Intuition a Guide to Truth?".
Turns out that Galileo was right and Aristotle was wrong: in a vacuum, a feather and a bowling ball will fall from a tall building at exactly the same speed. This is not to say that Aristotle wasn’t a brilliant thinker; empirical evidence shows he just h
Thumbnail for "Remixing Reality – Art and Literature for the 21st Century".
For decades, literary critics have been questioning the relevance of the novel as a literary form, with some going so far as to declare its death. But if the novel is dead, it’s not clear what new form can take its place. Should we treat the popularity o
Thumbnail for "Captivity".
Whether it’s people incarcerated in prisons, or animals confined in zoos, aquariums, laboratories, farms, and in our own homes, millions of upon millions of sentient creatures live in captivity. To be held captive, some might say, is to be denied b
Thumbnail for "The New Surveillance Society – Big Brother Grows Up".
Recent revelations confirm what many already suspected: not only is Big Brother watching you, he is also potentially reading your emails, listening to your phone calls, mapping your personal networks, and tracking your every move. While many see whistleb
Thumbnail for "Tainted by the Sins of Our Fathers?".
Imagine discovering that your grandfather was a serial killer. Would you feel guilty about it? Would you be at all tempted to contact the families of his victims? Philosophers have long thought that we can only be responsible for what is under our volunt
Thumbnail for "Anatomy of a Terrorist".
Since George W. Bush first declared a “war on terror,” the US has been engaged in a global campaign to rid the world of terrorists. But what exactly is a “terrorist,” and how do we distinguish illicit terrorist organizations from legitimate f
Thumbnail for "Art and Obscenity".
What do Marcel Duchamp, Damien Hirst, and Andres Serrano have in common? They’ve all created modern works of art that have shocked and outraged the general public, causing many to question whether these works have any artistic value at all. But isn’t it
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2014".
What philosophers, philosophies, or philosophical issues would you like to read up on over the summer? John and Ken discuss one of this year’s most talked-about books, Capital in the 21st Century by Thomas Piketty, with political scientist Shannon
Thumbnail for "Am I Alone?".
A popular theme in science fiction is the eerily lifelike robot: a piece of machinery so well engineered that its outputs pass for genuinely human behaviors. Technology is not yet so advanced, but these robots might cause us to wonder how we could possib
Thumbnail for "The Reality of Time".
The Reality of Time
Thumbnail for "Seeing Red: The World in Color".
Is the red you see indeed the very same red that anyone else does? What is the redness of red even like? These sorts of questions are not just amusing, if worn-out, popular philosophical ponderings. Thinkers in the philosophy of perception take such ques
Thumbnail for "Risky Business: The Business of Risk".
Risky Business: The Business of Risk
Thumbnail for "Conspiracy Theories".
Some claim that the collapse of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001 was actually caused by a controlled demolition orchestrated by the U.S. government. Dramatic conspiracy theories of this kind are all over the place, but they are often dismissed as cr
Thumbnail for "Weapons of Mass Destruction".
The United States recently threatened military action against Syria in response to the Syrian government’s alleged use of chemical weapons. Similar threats have been made against states suspected of trying to develop nuclear arsenals such as North Korea
Thumbnail for "Acting Together".
Many goals are too complex for one person to accomplish alone. Every day, we pool together our planning abilities with those around us to get things done. It’s clear that without shared agency, none of our familiar social institutions could exist. Howeve
Thumbnail for "Simone de Beauvoir".
Simone de Beauvoir is often cast as only a novelist or a mere echo of Jean-Paul Sartre. But she authored many philosophical texts beyond The Second Sex, and the letters between her and Sartre reveal that both were equally concerned with existentialist qu
Thumbnail for "Science and Gender".
What does gender have to do with science? The obvious answer is ‘nothing.’ Science is the epitome of an objective, rational, and disinterested enterprise. But given the history of systemic under-representation of women in science, what does it mean that
Thumbnail for "The Legacy of Freud".
Did you really want to eat that last piece of cake, or were you secretly thinking about your mother? Sigmund Freud, who might have suggested the latter, established the unconscious mind as a legitimate domain for scientific research. He was the first to
Thumbnail for "Memory and the Self".
Ever since John Locke, philosophers have wondered about memory and its connection to the self. Locke believed that a continuity of consciousness and memory establish a “self” over time. Now psychology is weighing in with new research suggesti
Thumbnail for "Moral Luck".
It seems reasonable to believe that we can only be blamed or praised for actions that are under our control. Nevertheless, in many concrete scenarios, we’re inclined to base our moral assessment of people on circumstances that are ultimately beyond
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year – 2013".
A new year offers an opportunity to reflect on the significant events of the previous year.  But what ideas and events took shape over the past twelve months that have prompted us to question our assumptions and to think about things in new ways?  Join J
Thumbnail for "Trust and Mistrust".
If we couldn’t trust each other, our lives would be very different. We trust strangers not to harm us, we trust our friends to take care of our most prized possessions, we even trust politicians (sometimes) to come through on their campaign promise
Thumbnail for "Do Religions Deserve Special Status?".
In most Western democracies, religions are exempt from certain rules and regulations that most other organizations have to follow. For example, in the US, religious organizations are not required to pay taxes or follow non-discrimination employment laws.
Thumbnail for "Dangerous Demographics: The Challenges of an Aging Population".
All over the world, people are living longer and having fewer children than ever before. In less than two decades, one fifth of the US population will be over 65 years old. So what do these radically changed demographics mean for how we re-imagine the sh
Thumbnail for "The Dark Side of Science".
Science aims tell us something about nearly everything, from the atoms in our cells to the motions of the stars. It assumes that knowledge is good for its own sake, and therefore takes as its sole purpose the acquisition of knowledge. But shouldn’t knowl
Thumbnail for "When Is It Wrong to Save a Life? Lessons from the Trolley Problem".
A trolley is approaching a track junction, and you happen to be standing by the switch. If you do nothing, the trolley will kill a number of innocent children playing on the tracks.  If you throw the switch, it will kill only one fat man, who is sleeping
Thumbnail for "An Eye for an Eye: The Morality of Revenge".
We are often taught that vengeance is a reprehensible or unworthy motivation and that, as a result, pursuing revenge should not be the method of choice when meting out punishment for crimes. Incarceration and other penalties, according to this view, can
Thumbnail for "The Limits of Self-Knowledge".
Descartes considered the mind to be fully self-transparent; that is, he thought that we need only introspect to know what goes on inside our own minds. More recently, social psychology has shown that a great deal of high-level cognition takes place at an
Thumbnail for "Ancient Cynicism".
Today, the term ‘cynic’ brings to mind a person who has little or no faith in the goodness of the human race. In ancient Athens, however, it meant something quite different: one who rejects all social conventions in order to live in accordance with natur
Thumbnail for "The Moral Lives of Animals".
From Aristotle and Kant to Hume and Darwin, philosophers and scientists have long denied the idea that animals are capable of acting for moral reasons. Yet empirical evidence suggests that many animals have rich emotional lives, and some even demonstrate
Thumbnail for "Tenth Anniversary Special".
Philosophy Talk debuted on KALW 91.7 FM in San Francisco in August 2003, with regular broadcasts beginning in early 2004. Over the course of a decade the Philosophers, their guests, and their listeners have discussed and debated everything from the meani
Thumbnail for "Memes: Viruses of the Mind?".
Gangnam style, Lolcats, and Chuck Norris’ superhuman feats are all memes – units of cultural transmission – that spread through the internet. But when the term was originally coined, memes were posited as vehicles of a kind of evolution, similar to genes
Thumbnail for "Life as a Work of Art".
We know what it means for a painting to be beautiful. But what about a life? Like great works of art, great people exhibit style, originality, and creativity. Maybe, then, to live well is just to practice an ART of living. But what do the values that are
Thumbnail for "Finding Meaning in a Material World".
All there is in the world is physical stuff. That is the fundamental assumption of the materialist standpoint, and the picture given to us by science. But if there is no immaterial soul that survives the death of the body, no other realm to bestow meanin
Thumbnail for "Freedom and Free Enterprise".
“Freedom” means the human capacity to choose among options, based on one’s own preferences and reasoning. It also stands for the political status to exercise such freedom on matters of conscience and to express opinions without interference from the stat
Thumbnail for "Ancient Wisdom for Modern Times".
If the Ancients found themselves transported to the modern world, they would have much to learn about science, technology, and human thinking. But is there something the Ancients can still teach us about how to live a good life? What relevance do the vir
Thumbnail for "Nations and Borders".
One’s country of birth has a profound effect on life prospects. It’s often best to go elsewhere. But moving is not always so easy. Borders and immigration laws restrict people from going where they want to pursue a better life. On the one hand ther
Thumbnail for "Education and the Culture Wars".
In contemporary democracies, the state is responsible for providing children with an education. But parents surely have both the right and responsibility for instilling appropriate morals and values in their children. How should we reconcile conflicts be
Thumbnail for "Physics, Philosophy, and Theology".
The world disclosed by the physical sciences can seem depressing. Modern physics, for example, has undermined the religious idea that the universe has a spiritual dimension. Quantum physics in particular seems to present the world as more paradoxical tha
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2013".
Summer is the perfect time to dig in to deep reading. Heidegger’s Being and Time may be a bit much to take to the beach, but there are lots of readable classics that could make your summer reading a transformative experience. John and Ken ask a few
Thumbnail for "Faith, Reason, and the Art of Living".
It sounds plausible to require that all our beliefs be based on evidence and sound reasoning. Yet some people’s most cherished beliefs, like their belief in a deity, are based on faith alone. Does that make those beliefs fundamentally irrational, o
Thumbnail for "Good, Evil, and the Divine Plan".
A theodicy is an explanation by a philosopher or theologian about why a world created by a kind and all-powerful God contains so much suffering. It forces us to think about the nature of good and evil, whether the kind of knowledge an all-knowing God has
Thumbnail for "The Demands of Morality".
We all want to lead a moral life. But even if we all agreed on what that would mean, we still have to balance our own self-interest with the competing demands of morality. This becomes even more challenging when the decks are stacked against us, or when
Thumbnail for "Dance as a Way of Knowing".
Be it rhythmic or shuffling, athletic or pedestrian, erotic or just social, dance is an art form that utilizes movement of the body through space. Could the aesthetic experience of being physically present and embodied in the world be considered a way of
Thumbnail for "Truth and Other Fictions".
Most of us think we know the truth when we see it. But what exactly is truth, anyway? Philosophers have offered a blizzard of different answers, ranging from truth as correspondence or coherence all the way to the view that truth is a matter of pragmatic
Thumbnail for "God and the Fine-Tuned Universe".
If the precise value of many physical constants had been different, the universe would not have supported life, human life, consciousness, philosophy and us. Is it just luck – without which we wouldn’t even be here to worry about it? Or is there a
Thumbnail for "The Psychology of Partisan Politics".
Are you a tax-raising, soy latte-drinking, Prius-driving, New York Times-reading, Daily Show-watching, corporation-hating liberal? Or a gun-toting, Bible-loving, Walmart-shopping, homophobic, climate-change-denying, immigrant-hating conservative? Why doe
Thumbnail for "The Self".
What is a self? Merely a human being? Or perhaps a soul? Hume claimed he could not find a self when he looked within, only a succession of impressions. But other philosophers seem to find transcendental selves, momentary selves, and objective selves, amo
Thumbnail for "Bioethics: Myths and Realities".
Recent advances in mapping the human genome suggest a vision of the future that might fill us with equal parts hope and dread. On the one hand, the possibility of identifying disease-causing genes may enable us to eradicate cancer, obesity, or depression
Thumbnail for "The Linguistics of Name-Calling".
Sticks and bones may break your bones, but names can also hurt you. And language gives us surprisingly many ways to deride, hurt and demean – from a subtly sneering intonation to hurtful and offensive names. How does such language work? And why is there
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year – 2012".
A new year offers an opportunity to reflect on the significant events of the previous year.  But what ideas and events took shape over the past twelve months that have prompted us to question our assumptions and to think about things in new ways?
Thumbnail for "Turbo-Charging the Mind".
The rapid advance of computer technology in recent decades has produced a vast array of intelligent machines that far outstrip the human mind in speed and capacity. Yet these machines know far less than we do about almost everything. Is it possible to ha
Thumbnail for "Has Science Replaced Philosophy?".
Modern science has made astounding progress in our understanding of ourselves and the universe. Physics, neuroscience, and psychology now tackle questions that a few decades ago could only be explored through philosophical speculation. So some vocal memb
Thumbnail for "Unconditional Love".
According to Corinthians 13, “Love is patient, love is kind and envies no one.” But is love always unconditional? Should it be? If unconditional love means that we love no matter what our beloved’s actions or traits are, doesn’t that suggest we should lo
Thumbnail for "Are Some People Better Than Others?".
Egalitarian principles play an important role in our moral and political discourse. Yet there’s no doubt that some people are smarter, stronger, or more talented in certain respects than others. So was Thomas Jefferson wrong to think that all men are cre
Thumbnail for "How Fiction Shapes Us".
A good novel can do many things. It can distract us from the humdrum of daily existence, stimulate our imaginations, and delight us with its creative use of language. But isn’t there something more we gain from engaging with fictional worlds and characte
Thumbnail for "Economics – Science or Cult?".
With the recent global economic crisis, many people wonder if our economic policies are built on sound principles or on dubious, unscientific claims. What kinds of assumptions does Economics make about markets and the behavior of producers and consumers?
Thumbnail for "The Evolution of Storytelling".
Humans are unique as the only creatures on this planet who tell stories. Whether it be fiction, history, mythology, gossip, daydreams, news, or personal narrative – stories permeate every aspect of our lives. But how did we evolve into such creatur
Thumbnail for "Forbidden Words".
Some words, like n****r, ch*nk, and c*nt, are so forbidden that we won’t even spell them out here. Decent people simply don’t use these words to refer to others; they are intrinsically disrespectful. But aren’t words just strings of sou
Thumbnail for "Prostitution and the Sex Trade".
Some consider the commodification of sexual services inherently wrong, something that ought to be abolished outright. Others claim that prostitution is a legitimate form of commerce and that changing its legal status would reduce or eliminate most harms
Thumbnail for "Regulating Bodies".
Most countries allow their citizens to smoke cigarettes, get intoxicated, and eat unhealthy food – despite the harms that such behaviors may bring to the individual’s health and to the social and economic interests of the state. Yet taking certain
Thumbnail for "Why Be Moral?".
Why Be Moral?
Thumbnail for "The Nature of Wilderness".
Nowadays we think of wilderness as a fully natural environment that contrasts sharply with the designed and constructed environments in which we normally move. But does that vision of wilderness really exist anymore? What is natural and what is
Thumbnail for "The Moral Costs of Climate Change".
Global climate change confronts us not only with well-known pragmatic challenges, but also with less commonly acknowledged moral challenges. Who is responsible for responding to environmental catastrophes around the world? What kind of help does the indu
Thumbnail for "Neuroscience and the Law".
Recent advances in neuroscience have revealed that certain neurological disorders, like a brain tumor, can cause an otherwise normal person to behave in criminally deviant ways. Would knowing that an underlying neurological condition had caused criminal
Thumbnail for "Gut Feelings and the Art of Decision-Making".
We may think of ourselves as rational decision-makers, but we often base even high-stakes decisions on intuitions or “gut feelings” rather than explicit reasoning. Decisions based on intuition are not highly esteemed in business, politics, or
Thumbnail for "Hypocrisy".
Hypocrites believe one thing, but do another. Jefferson opposed slavery, but owned slaves. Jesus professed universal love, but cursed an innocent fig tree. Jerry Brown opposes the death penalty, but as governor of California will be responsible for execu
Thumbnail for "Identities Lost & Found in a Global Age".
Throughout human history, people have tended to live and die in the place they’re born. Place is an important part of identity. But what happens when people are deprived of this sense of place? What psychological effects do emigrants, exiles, and e
Thumbnail for "Corporations and the Future of Democracy".
The US prides itself on the strength of its democratic institutions and considers itself a leader in the promotion of democratic values around the globe. But can we consistently maintain this self-image in the face of the growing power of corporations? A
Thumbnail for "What Might Have Been".
When we make claims about things that could have been—what philosophers call counterfactual statements—we are, in some sense, sliding between different worlds. We all use counterfactual statements frequently. But what would make our speculations about wh
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2012".
Summer is the perfect time to dig in to deep reading. Plato’s Collected Dialogues may be a bit much to take on vacation, but there are lots of readable, beach-friendly classics and non-classics to add philosophical depth to your summer reading. Not
Thumbnail for "Freedom, Blame, and Resentment".
When someone acts without regard for our feelings or needs, a natural response is to feel resentment toward that person. But is that a rational response? What if there’s no such thing as free will? Is blame still appropriate in a deterministic univ
Thumbnail for "What Is Love?".
It may seem doubtful that philosophers have much to tell us about love (beyond their love of wisdom). Surely it is the poets who have the market cornered when it comes to deep reflection on the nature of love. John and Ken question the notion that love c
Thumbnail for "What Are Leaders Made of?".
There seems to be a paradox in leadership: the qualities of ruthlessness and opportunism necessary to attain power and become a leader are not necessarily the qualities of morality and a sense of justice that make for a good leader. Do the traits that ma
Thumbnail for "Poetry as a Way of Knowing".
What is poetry? Mere word play? A pretty, or at any rate striking, way of expressing thought and emotion? Or does great poetry involve an approach to the world that provides insight and information not available in other ways? Ken and John explore how po
Thumbnail for "Epicurus and the Good Life".
Though his name is often misleadingly associated with indulgence in sensual pleasures, the Greek philosopher Epicurus developed a far-reaching system of thought that incorporated an empiricist theory of knowledge, a description of nature based on atomist
Thumbnail for "Pantheism".
Pantheism is the doctrine that the world is either identical with God or an expression of His nature. Pantheistic ideas appear in many schools of Buddhism and Hinduism, and in the Tao-te-Ching. Pantheism also has had defenders in Western philosophy, incl
Thumbnail for "The 2012 Dionysus Awards".
Movies play a large role in modern life. We enjoy watching them; we idolize the actors and actresses who appear in them; we analyze the directors. But how well do movies tackle bigger philosophical questions? With the help of listeners and special guests
Thumbnail for "Black Solidarity".
From the abolition of slavery to the Black Power movement, African-American unity has been considered a powerful method to achieve freedom and equality. But does Black solidarity still make sense in a supposedly post-racial era? And how should we think a
Thumbnail for "The Right to Privacy".
Is the right to privacy – the right to be left alone and to control one’s personal information – really a right? Is privacy just a privilege that can be revoked any time it conflicts with other more important needs, like the need to protect our security?
Thumbnail for "Is Democracy a Universal Value?".
Americans value democracy, and expect others to value it. But is it a universal value? Does God, or rationality, or something very basic about human sensibility, dictate that states should be organized democratically? What if there were empirical evidenc
Thumbnail for "The Examined Year: 2011".
A new year offers an opportunity to reflect on the significant events of the previous year. But what ideas and events took shape over the past twelve months that have prompted us to question our assumptions and to think about things in new ways? What sig
Thumbnail for "Forgive and Forget".
At least forgive OR forget.  Get things behind you.  All good advice for those who don’t want their life dominated by the bad things that have happened to them at the hands of others. This advice has also been applied to aggrieved populations follo
Thumbnail for "The Military: What Is It Good For?".
Is the military draft a natural expression of democratic values, or a challenge to our most basic concepts of individual rights and liberties?  Are the values that make for an effective military consistent with the values that make for a free and democra
Thumbnail for "Is Nothing Sacred Anymore?".
Tribal societies lived in a world of the sacred and profane, ritual and taboo. Is there anything left of this structure in the modern world? Is anything really taboo, or are things just inadvisable, problematic, unhealthy, unwise, and less than optimal u
Thumbnail for "Miracles".
Religions rely on miracles to demonstrate the authenticity of figures thought to have supernatural powers.  Many people feel that key events in their lives were literally miracles.  Many even claim to have witnessed miracles.  But what counts as a miracl
Thumbnail for "Thinking Inside the Box".
Speaking to the National Association of Broadcasters in May 1961, FCC Chairman Newton Minow famously introduced the characterization of television as a “vast wasteland.” And that wasteland has only become vaster – though occasionally a flower will bloom,
Thumbnail for "Cooperation and Conflict".
The Prisoner’s Dilemma is a problem studied in game theory that shows how two people might not cooperate even if it’s in both their best interests to do so. It highlights the inherent tension between individual interests and a larger society. Shoul
Thumbnail for "Morality and the Self".
Social psychologists have discovered that our self-images play a surprising role in our thinking about everyday moral matters. People who feel they have already proven themselves to be morally good feel less pressure to do the right thing than someone wh
Thumbnail for "Wisdom".
Philosophy is the love of wisdom – or is it? Is this traditional definition outmoded? Is wisdom an anachronism, an elitist concept deployed by old learned people with nothing of practical value to say? Do the professors of philosophy around the world
Thumbnail for "Latin-American Philosophy".
Latin American Philosophy began centuries before anything of much philosophical consequence happened in North America.  Yet in our own time, Latin American Philosophy is undergoing a protracted identity crisis.  Is it just transplanted European philosoph
Thumbnail for "Deconstructing the College Admissions Rat Race".
America’s elite colleges and universities spend millions of dollars to generate thousands of applicants, the vast majority of whom they reject. High school students – and their parents – work hard to gain entry to such institutions, and can be dev
Thumbnail for "Time, Space, and Quantum Mechanics".
Quantum physics is regarded by many as the most powerful predictive theory science has produced.  But there is no interpretation of what the theory means that all knowledgeable scientists and philosophers agree on.  For example, quantum mechanics deliver
Thumbnail for "The State of Public Philosophy".
In the 18th and 19th Century, philosophers and intellectuals were immersed in politics and popular culture.  Even in the early 20th Century some of the leading academic figures of the time, like Betrand Russell, also wrote for a broader public.  Where ha
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and Everyday Life".
Philosophy isn’t just about cosmic issues.  Every day is full of events that raise philosophical questions: why do we eat the things we eat, work the way we work, go to the places we go?  What ideas underlie our most basic activities?
Thumbnail for "The Psychology of Evil".
True evil seems easy to recognize: the killing of innocent children; assigning whole populations to death by gassing, or napalm, or aerial bombing. These acts go beyond the criminal, the mean, the bad. But what is the psychology of evil-doers? Are they m
Thumbnail for "Atheism and the Well-Lived Life".
Atheists don’t believe in God – does that mean they don’t find life meaningful?  Are atheists doomed to be grouchy nihilists, finding meaning only in criticizing theists?  Or does a world without God offer its own meanings and values to struc
Thumbnail for "Whodunit: The Language of Responsibility".
Who is responsible for the broken vase in the foyer? How harshly should criminals be punished for their crimes? Did Justin Timberlake mean to disrobe Janet Jackson during her infamous ‘wardrobe malfunction’? Cognitive scientists have recently discovered
Thumbnail for "Gay Pride & Prejudice".
The question of gay rights has become a hot button issue, with opposition taking on the air of a moral panic and support taking on the air of a righteous crusade. John and Ken attempt to dispassionately examine the competing scientific, religious, and ph
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2011".
Summer’s just around the corner – what philosophers, philosophies, or philosophical issues do you want to read up on?  Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason may not be the obvious choice to take on vacation, but there are lots of readable, beac
Thumbnail for "Cities, Gentrification, and Inequality".
In the 1960s, as many American cities burst and burned, the upper and middle classes fled to the suburbs, leaving behind a decaying infrastructure and a socially isolated urban underclass.  In more recent times, many urban centers have undergone re-gentr
Thumbnail for "Should Marriage Be Abolished?".
State-sanctioned marriage has long been regarded as one of the bedrocks of a stable society.  But in recent times, this venerable institution has become the focus of intense debate, as those long denied the right to marry clamor to be let in and tho
Thumbnail for "The Extended Mind".
The question of gay rights has become a hot button issue, with opposition taking on the air of a moral panic and support taking on the air of a righteous crusade. John and Ken attempt to dispassionately examine the competing scientific, religious, and ph
Thumbnail for "What is an Adult?".
In the Middle Ages, people married, had children, went off to war and took on all the traditional trappings of adulthood by their early teens.  But today many people put off those trappings until well into their thirties.  Some have even sugges
Thumbnail for "Is It All Relative?".
We’ve all heard a disenchanted teenager claim that everything is relative and that there is no absolute morality or truth.  Of course, there seems to be something wrong with that; isn’t the relativity of everything then an absolute? 
Thumbnail for "John Locke".
Thomas Jefferson identified John Locke as one of “the three greatest men that have ever lived, without any exception.” Many debates in modern political theory have their roots in the writings of John Locke, and Locke’s work on other philosophical issues,
Thumbnail for "The 2011 Dionysus Awards".
It’s the third annual Philosophy Talk Dionysus Awards show!  With the help of listeners and special guests, John and Ken turn a philosophical eye to the past year’s cinematic offerings, and present their Dionysus Awards for the most philosoph
Thumbnail for "Procrastination".
Everyone procrastinates – academics are especially prone to it.  But why do we procrastinate?  Is it lack of will-power?  Or is procrastination more like a disease, something that might be cured?  Can we structure our priorities in su
Thumbnail for "Derrida and Deconstruction".
Jacques Derrida was one of the most influential and also one of the most polarizing philosophers of the twentieth century.  With his method of “deconstruction,” Derrida provided critiques not only of literary trends and philosophical ide
Thumbnail for "Abortion".
Nothing stirs up controversy like abortion.  To some, it carries the steep moral cost of destroying human life, while to others, it represents an inviolable bastion of women’s rights over their own bodies.  Despite the polarizing nature of the
Thumbnail for "The Moral Costs of Free Markets".
We live in a market-driven society – our day-to-day lives consist of buying and selling goods and services, and to some, our ability to do so without government regulation is the underpinning of democratic freedom itself. Everything has a price, and pret
Thumbnail for "Philosophy for Children".
Because of their innocent approach to things, do children make good philosophers?  Or do they lack the equipment for clear-thinking?  Is exposure to philosophy good for children?  Or will it undermine their sense of security?  John an
Thumbnail for "The Power of Thought".
Human thought is an amazing thing. It has given us not only science, literature, and morality, but also superstition, slavery, and war.  Thought has the power to uncover the deepest mysteries of the universe.  Or to create new realities – social realitie
Thumbnail for "Disagreement".
Sometimes people who seem to be your epistemic peers – that is, people as experienced, as well trained, as thoughtful, and as intelligent as you – disagree with you.  Should this shake your confidence in your own beliefs?  When, how much, and under what
Thumbnail for "Reading, Narrative, and the Self".
Reading is a lot of fun, especially narrative fiction – everyone loves a good story. But maybe there’s more to it than that. Maybe everyone is, or at least tries to be, a good story themselves. Perhaps our very personal identities rest on narrative
Thumbnail for "The Occult Philosophy".
The occult is routinely dismissed in our times as the province of quacks, the irrational, and the superstitious.  But during the Renaissance, many of the best minds in Europe studied the philosophy and science of the occult.  The period witnessed an outp
Thumbnail for "Bargaining with the Devil".
Compromise is the condition of peace and progress.  But there are times when we should not compromise – when compromise would undermine integrity and amount to cooperating with evil.  How do we distinguish between when are we ‘bargaining
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and the Alma Mater".
Scholars from Berkeley and from Stanford have played a big role on Philosophy Talk.  Sure, John and Ken are from Stanford, but many of our most frequent and most brilliant guests are from Berkeley: Alison Gopnik, John Searle, Geoff Nunberg, George L
Thumbnail for "Meaning and the Revolution".
The American Revolution was saturated with meaning and ambiguity, from the words of the Declaration of Independence, to the beliefs of the founding fathers, to the vagueness, hedges, and contradictions of the Constitution on which the possibility of unio
Thumbnail for "Philosophy for the Young – Corrupting or Empowering?".
Socrates was executed for corrupting the youth. In America, youth below college age are usually not exposed to philosophy in the classroom. Is philosophy all that dangerous? Should it be taught to teenagers? Or would this lead to a generation of self-abs
Thumbnail for "Self-Deception".
Self-deception sounds like a contradiction: intentionally convincing yourself of something you know to be untrue.  But it is a pervasive aspect of human nature.  What is the nature of self-deception, and what are its main patterns?  Does i
Thumbnail for "Humanism".
Humanism as a movement arose with the Renaissance.  It took powerful expression with the Enlightenment, and deeply influenced the founding of the United States.  But now “secular humanism” is widely decried and even derided.  W
Thumbnail for "Social Reality".
Few things affect our lives as much as the fact that we are citizens of one country rather than another.  The government of, the economy of, and the rights recognized and opportunities provided by the country we live in shape our lives.  But ho
Thumbnail for "Loyalty".
Loyalty is usually reckoned to be an important virtue; even loyalty to lost causes is often admired.  But loyalty to evil causes is no virtue.  To whom and what should one be loyal?  When is loyalty a virtue?  When is it wrong? 
Thumbnail for "Democracy and The Press".
Our founding fathers believed that a free press would serve democracy by promoting unfettered political debate and expose the actions of the government to the harsh scrutiny of an informed and engaged populace.  Today, however, large media conglomer
Thumbnail for "What are Human Rights?".
According to the Declaration of Independence, the basic human rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are God-given. Whatever the role of God, rights must be recognized by the society in which one lives to be of any use. Are rights universal
Thumbnail for "The Corporation as a Person".
The Supreme Court recently decided that corporations had the right of free speech under the U.S. Constitution, since they are persons.  But what does it mean to say corporations are persons?  Why should they have rights?  If they have free
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2010".
What philosophers, philosophies, or philosophical issues do you want to read up on over the summer?  Heidegger’s Being and Time probably isn’t the obvious choice to take on vacation, but there are a lot of readable, beach-friendly classi
Thumbnail for "Philosophy Talk “Live” Highlights".
It’s a Philosophy Talk highlight reel for the membership drive! In this special episode, John and Ken relive some favorite moments from Philosophy Talk episodes recorded in front of live audiences around the country. We start at the Marsh theatre i
Thumbnail for "Mental Illness and Culture".
Paranoia, depression, schizophrenia, bipolarity, and all the other ways Americans have discovered to be crazy – are they universal phenomena, rooted in human biology?  Or are they cultural kinks, rooted in one society’s peculiar pressures and
Thumbnail for "Faces, Feelings, and Lies".
According to Proverbs, lying lips are an abomination to the Lord.  But lies on human lips are as common as fleas on a dog.  What is a lie?  Are all untruths lies?  Is lying always immoral?  Do our faces inevitably betray our lies
Thumbnail for "The Ethics of Torture".
According to former Vice President Cheney, practices widely regarded as torture prevented further attack on America after 9/11.  The facts are in dispute.  But suppose he is correct – can torture be justified on such utilitarian grounds? 
Thumbnail for "What Is a Wife?".
The concept of a wife has been embedded in cultures, religious practices, social customs and economic patterns of wildly different sorts.  Is there a core concept of what it is to be a wife?  Is it a good concept, or one that deserves to be thrown on the
Thumbnail for "Fear".
Fear
Thumbnail for "What is ‘Normal’?".
What does it mean to be normal? And abnormal? Who gets to decide, and what are the repercussions? When do we applaud deviations from the norm, when do we condemn them, and why? Ken and John take a look at the uses and abuses of making judgments about nor
Thumbnail for "The 2010 Dionysus Awards".
Movies play a large role in modern life. We enjoy watching them; we idolize the actors and actresses who appear in them; we analyze the directors. But how well do movies tackle bigger philosophical questions? With the help of listeners, John and Ken pres
Thumbnail for "Mind Reading".
We base many decisions every day not only on the belief that other people have minds, but on detailed beliefs about what is going on in those minds: what these other people believe, feel, hope, and fear. The basis of our ability to “read” the
Thumbnail for "Philosophy in Fiction".
Philosophers think a lot about fiction. But do novelists think about philosophy? Do philosophers make good fictional characters? Can good stories be built around philosophical problems? When awarding its Genius prize to philosopher-novelist Rebecca Golds
Thumbnail for "Paradoxes".
A paradox is a persuasive argument that something, which we judge must be false, is true. Zeno’s Paradox, for example, is a convincing argument that it’s impossible to move. Paradoxes are valuable in philosophy because they help us become awa
Thumbnail for "Nihilism and Meaning".
The ancients believed in an enchanted universe – a universe suffused with meaning and purpose. But with the dawn of modernity, philosophy and science conspired together to disenchant the universe, to reveal it as entirely devoid of meaning and purpose. M
Thumbnail for "Kierkegaard".
Philosophy usually suggests a striving for rationality and objectivity. But the Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard advocated subjectivity and the leap of faith—his conception of how an individual would believe in God or act in love. Kierkegaard, whose
Thumbnail for "Is It Wrong to Wreck the Earth?".
There are too many people, doing too much damage to the ecosystem, essentially guaranteeing that future generations will have a damaged Earth, and will have to invest incredible amounts of time, money and labor to repairing what can be repaired. But futu
Thumbnail for "How Relevant Is Jesus?".
Some people think Jesus was the son of God, though many who are skeptical about that still think he was a great moral teacher. But if we really knew what Jesus would think about moral issues that he didn’t confront while he lived – abortion, terror
Thumbnail for "The Philosophical Legacy of Darwin".
More than a century and a half after On the Origin of Species, Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution continues to shape our thinking, not only in biology, but also in psychology, economics, and all other attempts to understand human beings including
Thumbnail for "From the Minds of Babies".
Consciousness, morality, meaning and truth have perplexed and puzzled generations upon generations of philosophers. But could it be that we have been looking in all the wrong places to solve these imponderable mysteries? Could the minds of babies hold th
Thumbnail for "200 and Counting".
The program that questions everything – except your intelligence – started off questioning the conventional wisdom that there would be no audience for a radio show about philosophy.  One hundred and ninety-nine programs later, Ken and John are hangi
Thumbnail for "Health Care: Right or Privilege?".
Do we have a right to healthcare, and to good high quality healthcare, in any precise and defensible sense?  Or is the “right to healthcare” just a nice way to say it would be very nice if everyone had healthcare?  John and Ken take
Thumbnail for "Schizophrenia and the Mind".
To be human, philosophers have often said, is to be rational. But many people, for biological reasons, are clearly not rational. Schizophrenia is not only a malady, it is also a window on how the human mind works, and what it means to be human. Ken and J
Thumbnail for "War, Sacrifice, and the Media".
The media often present a sanitized and one sided narrative of war, torture and other forms of violence that blots out the faces and silences the voices of many of the main victims: the refugees, the victims of unjust imprisonment and torture, and the im
Thumbnail for "What are Words Worth?".
How do words shape our minds?  Do the French suffer because they have no word for berry or cozy?  Do we suffer because we have no word for schadenfreude?  Why do we adopt new words, or give old words new meaning?  Can we eliminate a c
Thumbnail for "Philosophy Talk Highlights".
It’s a Philosophy Talk highlight reel for the membership drive. In this special episode, John and Ken relive some favorite moments from the Philosophy Talk archives. Listen to cognitive scientist Margaret Boden on creativity, computers, and the emo
Thumbnail for "The Postmodern Family".
What is a family, and what distinguishes it from other kinds of associations?  Is the traditional role of the family merely grounded in custom and habit, or is there a deeper philosophical justification for it?  How has the structure of familie
Thumbnail for "Pornography".
Is pornography an art form, or simply anything that depicts genitals in action?  Where does mere eroticism end and pornography begin?  In the internet age, pornography appears to have become not only more accessible but also more acceptable in
Thumbnail for "Money and Morality".
Does our system of credit and money make upward social mobility possible for anyone willing to work hard?  Or is it just a big Ponzi scheme?  Are corporations the essential structures necessary to harness the capital, energy, intelligence, and
Thumbnail for "The Prison System".
As of June 30, 2007, the prisons and jails in the land of the free held 2,299,116 inmates; one in every 31 American adults is in prison, on parole, or on probation.  The state of California has more people in jail than China does, and this year expe
Thumbnail for "Social Networking".
From online bulletin boards at the dawn of the internet to the modern mammoths of Facebook and MySpace, people have used communications technology to associate in innovative ways.  How do our old-fashioned values fit in to our new digital playground
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2009".
Even if you’re not going to Biarritz for the summer as usual, you can relax in the sun and read.  There are a lot of readable, beach-friendly classics and non-classics to add philosophical depth to your Summer Reading.  Join Ken and John
Thumbnail for "The Mind and the World".
The Mind and the World
Thumbnail for "Lincoln as a Philosopher".
More than any other President, Abraham Lincoln is known for his words, from the Lincoln-Douglass debates to the second inaugural address, as well as his deeds.  What was Lincoln’s basic philosophy, and did it change over the course of his Presidenc
Thumbnail for "Worship".
Worship is the feeling or expression of reverence and adoration for something.  The attitude of worship towards God or gods or ancestors is a universal of human culture.  But why do we worship?  Do objects of worship need to fulfill certai
Thumbnail for "Beliefs Gone Wild".
Our brains evolved on the African savannah, but are now expected to deal with complex statistical information and other intricate concepts every day.  The result: beliefs gone wild.  Ken and John reveal the traps that the mismatch between our b
Thumbnail for "Desire".
There are two ways to have your desires fulfilled: you can either get what you want (if you’re lucky enough) or change your desires. If we can fit our desires to what we have, we’re likely to be a lot happier. So why do we desire things that
Thumbnail for "Too Much Information".
“We’re just never going to catch up,” writes David Weinberger in Everything Is Miscellaneous.  That is, we’re never going to catch up with the flood of information that is thrown at us by modern technology, especially the internet.  We can never ge
Thumbnail for "The Root of All Evil?".
Money makes the world go around.  But what sort of thing is money?  Bits of paper and metal?  An elaborate set of IOUs to be redeemed with more IOUs?  An abstract accounting tool?  If money is real, how can billions disappear on
Thumbnail for "The Copyright Wars".
Today there is an entire generation of people who have never paid for music.  From Napster to YouTube, some of our most innovative and inventive young people have been the targets of lawsuits by entertainment industry lawyers for violating copyright
Thumbnail for "Challenges to Free Will".
Challenges to Free Will
Thumbnail for "Biracial Identities".
Many people identify strongly with the ethnic or racial group to which they belong – as Jews, or African-Americans, or Latinos.  But to which groups does a person truly belong?  President Obama has a white mother from Kansas and an African fath
Thumbnail for "Different Cultures, Different Selves".
Why do we do what we do? To please others? To live up to what culture expects? Or for our own reasons –- as “autonomous agents”? Americans tend to admire (at least in theory) the autonomous individual, the person who knows what he wants, and
Thumbnail for "The Movie Show".
Movies play a large role in modern life.  We enjoy watching them; we idolize the actors and actresses who appear in them; we analyze the directors. What is special about cinema as an art form, a mode of learning, a technique of propaganda?  Do movies pos
Thumbnail for "Creativity".
What makes an idea or work of art creative?  Can creativity be measured?  Can a computer be creative?  What is the relationship between creativity and consciousness? John and Ken explore their creative sides with Margaret Boden from the University of Sus
Thumbnail for "Civil Disobedience".
Thoreau, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King all engaged in civil disobedience, and are widely admired for doing so.  But how can democratic society function if each person’s conscience has to be satisfied for a law to be obeyed?  When is civi
Thumbnail for "Philosophy of History".
Is history just a series of events, or an interpretation of those events?  Is there progress in history?  Can history be objective, or is it, as Napoleon said, just the version of past events that people have decided to agree upon?  Ken an
Thumbnail for "The Idea of the University".
Is a university a research institute with students, or and educational institution with research around the edges – or something in between?  To whom does the university answer – the trustees?  The administration?  The faculty?  The students?  Or somethi
Thumbnail for "John Rawls".
John Rawls was one of the most influential political philosophers of the twentieth century. In his book A Theory of Justice he articulated a concept of justice as fairness, which won many fans among liberals, and provoked important responses from thought
Thumbnail for "Bodies For Sale".
I can sell my house, the things I make, and the services I provide.  So why can’t I sell one of my kidneys?  What is the philosophical basis for the taboo against selling parts of our bodies?  There is an (illegal) market in body par
Thumbnail for "Levels of Reality".
Are there levels of reality, with each level emerging from the other in a way that provides a truly new aspect of reality?  The concept of emergence has been seen as an alternative to mere reducibility in discussion of the relation of the physical w
Thumbnail for "Gandhi as a Philosopher".
Gandhi is famous as the leader of the movement for Indian independence, which he based on his philosophy of non-violence, an important influence on Martin Luther King Jr. Gandhi’s ideas and the effects of his leadership continue to influence the wo
Thumbnail for "William James".
William James is one of the great American philosophers, historically important as a philosopher (pragmatism and radical empiricism), a student of religion (author of the monumental Varieties of Religious Experience), and psychology.  Ken and John e
Thumbnail for "Making Decisions".
When we make decisions we think we’re in control, making rational choices. But are we? This is the central question posed by Dan Ariely, Professor of Behavioral Economics at Duke University, in his book Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces Tha
Thumbnail for "Digital Selves".
Second Life and dozens of other online adventures involve creating digital selves, and millions of users are taking advantage of the opportunity to develop new personas. Cyberpunk literature, like William Gibson’s Neuromancer, describes worlds in w
Thumbnail for "Overcoming the Terror of Death".
To many death is terrifying. But why? As David Hume pointed out, all the years we didn’t exist before we were born seemed painless enough. Why worry about future non-existence? Is the real worry that we will continue to exist? Ken and John confront
Thumbnail for "The Morality of Food".
Veganism, freeganism, organic, sustainability, simplicity, biofuel, animal rights, worker’s rights, nutrition, preventing hunger, reducing waste and protecting the environment.  What obligations do we have when it comes to buying, eating and p
Thumbnail for "Utilitarianism".
Can morality be quantified?  Can the good be calculated?  Utilitarianism says the right action is the one which leads to the most overall happiness -– a deceptively simple theory, but not without its detractors.  Is utilitarianism compatib
Thumbnail for "Global Justice and Human Rights".
What constitutes a just society?  What are the obligations of liberal democracies to ensure the rights and well-being of the citizens of other countries?  What kinds of interventions and institutions are most suitable to the task of preventing
Thumbnail for "Dualism".
What is the relationship between the mind and the brain?  Monists believe that there is only one substance or property in the Universe, be it physical (Materialists) or mental (Idealists).  But Dualists, like the 17th Century French philosopher
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and Pop Culture".
From Star Trek and the Grateful Dead to South Park and Stephen Colbert, philosophical questions are everywhere in popular culture: Is time travel possible?  Can a person survive being disintegrated and reassembled?  Does humor enable the expres
Thumbnail for "Giving and Keeping".
How should people allocate their assets – however modest or grand – ethically and effectively?  What kinds of giving should the government encourage through tax incentives and other measures?  Is providing for loved ones more worthy than self-e
Thumbnail for "The Luck of the Draw".
Sometimes it isn’t possible to distribute goods evenly. When this happens, we often leave it up to randomness – in the form of lotteries – to decide who gets what.  Is this just?  Or is it merely the best we can do?  What distinguish
Thumbnail for "Altruism".
Are people genuinely altruistic, or is altruism just a type of selfish-behavior?  Are other animals altruistic? Should we strive to be altruistic, or is selfishness a higher virtue?  John and Ken take the moral high ground with their guest Jeff
Thumbnail for "Hannah Arendt".
Hannah Arendt was one of the most original and influential philosophers of the 20th century.  Her work considered historical and contemporary political events, such as the rise and fall of Nazism, and drew conclusions about the relation between the indiv
Thumbnail for "The Problem of Evil".
Many religions tell us that God is perfect: all-knowing, all-powerful, and beneficent.  Why then do bad things happen?  John and Ken discuss the problem of evil with their guest, Michael Tooley from the University of Colorado at Boulder, co-aut
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2008".
Summer’s just around the corner – what books are you going to pack with your Speedo? John and Ken leaf through some of this summer’s philosophy, fiction, and non-fiction reading with Danielle Marshall from Powell’s City of Books.
Thumbnail for "Promises".
What is a promise: a prediction?  A statement of intention?  Is promising rational?  Does it create an obligation?  John and Ken promise to raise these issues and more with Sir Neil MacCormick from the University of Edinburgh, author
Thumbnail for "Experimental Philosophy".
Philosophical reasoning relies on intuitions.  John Rawls called this method “reflective equilibrium.” But where do we get our data about “intuitions”? John and Ken welcome back Anthony Appiah from Princeton University, author of E
Thumbnail for "Varieties of Love".
Is love a single thing, or just a word we use to express any number of unrelated emotions? Is love intrinsically irrational? What have philosophers said about love? Did they know what they were talking about? Christopher Phillips, author of Socrates in L
Thumbnail for "Politics and Cognitive Science".
Can cognitive science explain the difference between liberals and conservatives?  Do we elect our presidents on the basis of stale metaphors and the manipulations of pernicious language mavens? We put these questions to George Lakoff, Professor of L
Thumbnail for "Philosophy of Wine".
The discriminating wine palate: bouquet, nose, great vintages, genius vintners.  Are these just myths perpetrated by winemakers and taken up by snobs with too much money to spend?  John and Ken raise a philosophical glass with Barry Smith from
Thumbnail for "Apologizing".
Can you be sorry without intending to change your behavior in the future? Without being ashamed? Do other cultures have different concepts of sorrow and guilt? John and Ken unapologetically explore the language and philosophy of contrition with Nick Smit
Thumbnail for "Science vs. Pseudo-science".
Astronomy is science; Astrology is pseudo-science. Evolutionary Biology is science; Creationism is pseudo-science. How about cultural anthropology, abstract economics, string-theory, and evolutionary psychology – science or pseudo-science? Is pseudo-scie
Thumbnail for "Infinity".
 Infinity is a puzzling concept. Mathematicians say there are as many odd numbers as there are numbers altogether. That seems like saying there are as many men as there are people altogether – which we know is untrue. And if you subtract infini
Thumbnail for "Connectionism".
Does the human mind work like a computer? If so, what kind of computer? A theory known as connectionism offers a revolutionary perspective on these issues. Ken and John delve into cutting-edge cognitive science with Jay McClelland from Stanford Universit
Thumbnail for "Saint Augustine".
The philosopher Saint Augustine of Hippo is one of the most important figures in the history of Christianity. His efforts against the Manichean, Arian and Pelagain heresies shaped the fundamentals of Christian doctrine. His Confessions tells the story of
Thumbnail for "Persons, Selves, Souls, and Loops".
Persons, Selves, Souls, and Loops
Thumbnail for "Why Music Matters".
There is something deeply mysterious about music. Why does it affect us so powerfully? Is it like a language, telling us something? A subtle form of communication? Are there universal interpretations of the emotions that various pieces of music expresses
Thumbnail for "Work".
Is work the curse of the working class? Or a human’s best opportunity for happiness and meaning? What is work, and what is leisure? Are you what you do? And how does American society differ in its attitude towards work, and holidays, from others? J
Thumbnail for "Personal Identity".
What is necessary for a person to survive over time?  Is it the continued existence of the living body?  Or is it just the living brain?  Or is it one’s psychology, which might persist even without one’s original brain in a com
Thumbnail for "Concept of God".
What does “God” mean?  Is God a concrete thing like a chair or a human; or is it an abstract thing, like love or goodness?  Is there something that all concepts of God have in common, some feature that all cultures attribute to God?
Thumbnail for "Political Correctness".
What is political correctness?  Has it always existed?  What’s “political” about it?  Some people think that concerns over being PC lead to censorship and the stifling of free debate.  Others think the label “p
Thumbnail for "Islamic Philosophy".
Some of the many topics discussed in Islamic philosophy are the Qur’an, knowledge, dreams, justice, poetry, reality, prophethood, peace, and the State.  How has Islamic philosophy interacted historically with other philosophical traditions?
Thumbnail for "Immigration and Citizenship".
What are the effects of immigration on culture in America?  Does it promote homogenization, diversity, or both?  Cultural enrichment, or assimilation? What challenges does immigration raise?  What immigration policies should the American g
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and Literature".
What can we learn from studying philosophy?  What can we learn from reading great (or not-so-great) literature?  Some philosophers and literary theorists believe that philosophy and literature converge in a number of places.  Great literat
Thumbnail for "Predicting the Future".
People who predict the future well are sometimes said to be psychic. But we all make predictions about the future, with more or less success. We confidently predict the sun will rise tomorrow, that ice will be cold, etc. But maybe we’re not quite a
Thumbnail for "Faith, Reason, and Science".
Does faith obscure reason? Does reason obscure faith? Or perhaps their subject matters are different. Faith might address one area of our lives and reason and science another. Faith may allow us to see meaning, values, and God, while reason sees everythi
Thumbnail for "Love, Poetry and Philosophy".
For Plato, love and philosophy were closely related. Love of beauty causes one to contemplate the whole sea of beauties, including beautiful systems of justice and beautiful scientific theories. But Plato wasn’t such a fan of poetry, arguing that i
Thumbnail for "Math and the Mind".
How does a bunch of grey matter in our skulls have the ability to solve mathematical problems? Are we the only species that can? Does catching a baseball require doing calculations? Join John, Ken, and their guest, noted cognitive scientist and NPR’
Thumbnail for "The Value of Art".
An art lover will argue that art brings beauty to our surroundings and provides occasions for intellectual and emotional reflection. But those who don’t appreciate art see it as unnecessary and frivolous – at any rate, certainly not something
Thumbnail for "Postmodernism".
In art, architecture, music, film, literature, sociology, communications, fashion and philosophy there is a contrast between “the modern” and “the post-modern.” But just what are the main hallmarks of the postmodern? How does the
Thumbnail for "Flirting with Philosophy".
What is flirting? Can you flirt without intending to? Can you flirt by dressing a certain way, by walking a certain way? Is flirtatious behavior culturally relative? Could you flirt with a robot? With your own long-term partner? With an idea? Join John a
Thumbnail for "Philosophy Through Humor".
Why did Nietzsche cross the road? To get beyond good and evil! How is a good joke like a good philosophical argument? Are philosophical tenets at the core of much of humor? To find out, join the philosophers and their guests, Thomas Cathcart and Daniel K
Thumbnail for "Capital Punishment".
The death penalty: An effective deterrent? A just retribution for horrendous crimes? Or a racist, classist form of state-sanctioned murder? Join John and Ken and their guest, Robert Weisberg, Director of the Stanford Criminal Justice Center, as they disc
Thumbnail for "Where Does Morality Come From?".
Time is the most familiar thing in the world, and yet philosophically one of the most puzzling. Is the present what’s left when you subtract what has already happened, and what is yet to happen? Then it seems to vanish into a mere instant.  Are fut
Thumbnail for "Summer Reading List 2007".
Are there philosophers, philosophies, or philosophical issues you want to read up on over the summer? Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason probably isn’t the obvious choice to take to the beach (though it does make great radio), but there are a lot
Thumbnail for "Aging and the Well-Lived Life".
Aging is a physical process that will always be with us.  But conceptions of aging, views about the contributions older people can make to society, and what society owes them change from era to era and differ from culture to culture. In conjunc
Thumbnail for "Artificial Intelligence".
At least some versions of artificial intelligence are attempts not merely to model human intelligence, but to make computers and robots that exhibit it: that have thoughts, use language, and even have free will. Does this make sense? What would it show u
Thumbnail for "Science, Ethics, and Censorship".
Science is, on the one hand, a huge enterprise funded to a great extent by the government and by industry.  On the other hand, science is supposed to be the dispassionate, objective search for truth.  What happens when the search for truth conf
Thumbnail for "Autonomy".
Philosophers call a person autonomous if she is responsible not just for what she does but also for the principles and rules that guide her. But does this really make sense? Aren’t we all just products of culture, education and genes? Join John and
Thumbnail for "Ethics in Journalism".
Freedom of speech tells us the government shouldn’t restrict the journalist.  But should anything restrict the journalist?  Should the duty to inform be limited by the duty not to betray national security, not to injure the innocent, not
Thumbnail for "Can Science Explain Consciousness?".
Humans are conscious, billiard balls are not, and computers aren’t either.  But all three are just collections of molecules, aren’t they?  What is consciousness, and does it go beyond what science can explain?  John and Ken pro
Thumbnail for "A Philosophical Shout-Out".
On this special pledge-week episode, John and Ken open the phones and the inbox to their listeners, answering questions about art, politics, proof, and philosophy itself.
Thumbnail for "Skepticism".
Various forms of skepticism play important roles in the history of philosophy.  Do we really know there are external objects?  That there are other minds?  That there is a distant (or even a not-so-distant) past?  All the evidence we
Thumbnail for "Immortality and the Afterlife".
Many religions contemplate some form of personal continued existence after death: reincarnation in another body, or continued being in some vastly different place like Heaven or Hell. Do any of these conceptions make sense? If so, is there any evidence f
Thumbnail for "Animal Minds".
People have strong but divergent opinions about the nature of animals’ minds.  Do dogs make plans?  Do they remember specific events?  Do they dream?  Do cats recognize their owners as unified wholes, or just as collections of p
Thumbnail for "Wittgenstein".
The Austrian/British philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein exercised enormous influence over philosophy in the middle third of the last century, and his view and his life continue to fascinate thinkers around the world.  What are the basic tenets of Wittg
Thumbnail for "The Judiciary in Democracy".
In many democracies, the judiciary is protected, to one degree or another, from the voters.  Our federal judges, for example, though appointed by elected officials, then have lifetime tenure.  In more local venues, however, many judges are dire
Thumbnail for "Mental Imagery".
In the Early Modern period many philosophers took ideas to be mental images of the objects they stood for.  During the 20th century, that notion fell into considerable disrepute.  Yet recent cognitive science has revived the idea that at least
Thumbnail for "If Truth is so valuable, why is there so much BS?".
Everywhere we look — in the media, in our political campaigns, in the hallowed halls of the academy — we are confronted with an endless stream of BS, spin, propaganda, half-truths, and even outright lies.  Yet for centuries, philosophers
Thumbnail for "Legal Ethics".
Lawyers are often thought to be hardly better than hired guns, who, in the words of Plato, are paid to “make the weaker argument the stronger” — like the sophists of old.  In fact, lawyers are legally and morally bound by stringent
Thumbnail for "We’ve Been Framed: How Language Shapes Politics".
Does the hijacking of words by political forces tell us something interesting about the nature of language and meaning?  Would liberals by some other name smell sweeter, or are they really tax-raising, latte-drinking, sushi-eating, Volvo-driving, Ne
Thumbnail for "The Promise and Perils of the New Genomics".
John and Ken welcome their special guest, noted scientist and entrepreneur, Craig Venter.  From the mapping of the human genome, to the patenting of synthetic life forms, to bio-prospecting for genetic gold in the depths of the oceans and the deepes
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and Film".
Despite the crass commercialism that drives the production of many movies, there’s no doubt that film is a distinctive and distinctively powerful art form.  Cinematic representations move us in ways that few others do.  Film has also prov
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and Neuroscience".
Philosophers have always been concerned with the mind.  What is consciousness? Representation?  Emotion?  Now that neuroscience is making headway on these same questions, we should ask: how should philosophy and neuroscience relate? 
Thumbnail for "American Pragmatism".
Pragmatism is perhaps America’s most distinctive contribution to philosophy.  Developed by Pierce, Dewey, and James in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, pragmatism holds that both the meaning and the truth of any idea is a function of it
Thumbnail for "What is a Child?".
Back in the middle ages, people thought of children simply as little adults. Modern psychology has destroyed that theory.  But then, what is a child?  How are their minds different?  And what are the moral implications of these differences
Thumbnail for "Dreaming".
A scary dream brings all the fears that a scary real situation can, and a happy dream can make us feel truly happy. But what are dreams? Where do they come from? And why do they feel so real? Thinkers from Descartes to Freud have been fascinated by dream
Thumbnail for "Separation of Powers".
In America, there’s not just one governing body, there are three: executive, legislative, and judicial. You might think that separating those powers is just less efficient.  But the founding fathers put a lot of philosophical thought into comi
Thumbnail for "Believing in God".
Some have argued that there aren’t any good arguments for believing in God. Is belief in God just an act of faith without reason? Plenty of philosophers would disagree. Why are philosophers so divided on the matter? In this episode Ken and John dis
Thumbnail for "Language and Thought".
You might think our thoughts simply determine what we say. But maybe the language we speak is what really determines the thoughts we can have. As Wittgenstein famously wrote, “The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.” And Benjam
Thumbnail for "Karl Popper".
Karl Popper is a landmark figure in the philosophy of science.  His notion of “falsifiability” endures to this day and even appears in arguments about creation versus evolution.  But what does it mean for a theory to be falsifiable? And where
Thumbnail for "Jewish Philosophy".
Rabbis and Talmudic scholars have spent centuries puzzling over theology, texts, and life.  In the process they came up with many philosophical ideas that have inspired the work of more recent philosophers such as Martin Buber and Emmanuel Levinas.&
Thumbnail for "The Philosophy of Music".
Most people enjoy music daily and have strong listening preferences. Music – along with love – is often thought of as a universal language. But what makes a collection of sounds a piece of music as opposed to just noise? Can music teach us
Thumbnail for "War Crimes".
In war, people do awful things to other people. But the concept of ‘war crime’ suggests that some things are worse than others. How do we disentangle what’s fair play from what’s criminal? What are the ethical justifications for r
Thumbnail for "Liberty vs. Security".
Edward Gibbon and James Madison both noted how liberties in Rome were among the victims of its growing empire.  Is our society facing a similar problem, given what some public figures have said about choosing between how much liberty and how much se
Thumbnail for "100th Episode".
It’s our anniversary!  Join the philosophers for a celebration of the program that questions everything – except your intelligence – with a look back on the issues and the people that have made Philosophy Talk a hit.
Thumbnail for "Language in Action".
How do we communicate ideas with language? Where does the literal meaning of a word end and the subtle connotation begin? John and Ken tackle the semantics, pragmatics, and mysteries of meaning with Dan Sperber, co-author of Relevance: Communication and
Thumbnail for "Athletic Beauty".
Figure skating is athletic and beautiful.  How about a bone-crunching tackle?  Or a  spikes-high slide into second?  Or a slam-dunk?  Or an overweight sixty-year-old at a bowling alley?  John and Ken discuss the nature of at
Thumbnail for "Race, Class, and Inequality".
The concept of equality is as important to America’s self-conception as it is confusing.  What sort of equality?  Equality before the law; equality of opportunity; equal access to all the benefits of modern society?  If we treat ever
Thumbnail for "The Future of Philosophy".
Ken and John discuss the future of philosophy with three rising stars in American philosophy: Elizabeth Harman from New York University, Brian Weatherson from Cornell University, and Sean Kelly from Princeton University. This program was recorded li
Thumbnail for "Stoicism".
People who don’t seem affected by emotions are often called “stoic.”  But there’s a lot more to Stoicism than simply being unaffected.  Stoicism dates back to ancient Greece and Rome and offers a comprehensive approach t
Thumbnail for "Leadership".
At certain crucial times, such as the American Revolution, the Civil War, and World War II, America was blessed with great leaders.  But now?  What is leadership?  How is it cultivated?  What political processes bring great leaders to
Thumbnail for "Hegel".
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel is without doubt one of the most influential philosophers of all time. He has, however, been largely ignored by American “analytic” philosophers of the twentieth century. John in particular, and Ken to a lesser e
Thumbnail for "The Nature of Imagination".
A lot of our thinking, and even our perception, has to do not only with what is, but what might be, and what would have been. That is, the imagination is an important part of our intellectual life. And learning to use our imaginations without losing sigh
Thumbnail for "A Philosophical Summer Reading List".
Are there some philosophers, philosophies, or philosophical issues you want to bone up on over the Summer?  Hegel’s Phenomenology of the Spirit probably isn’t a very good choice to take to the beach, but there are a lot of readable, beac
Thumbnail for "Justice Across Boundaries".
Philosophical conceptions of justice have most often been directed at the nature of a just state. But many contemporary issues of justice reach across boundaries. Are our immigration policies fair and just? Can a just state invade another state in order
Thumbnail for "Existentialism".
Being and Nothingness, the for-itself and the in-itself, bad faith, and the existential predicament; these Existentialist concepts were central to the philosophical scene in Europe and America after World War II. Join the Philosophers as they examine the
Thumbnail for "What Is Art?".
Anything someone wants to call art?  Or are there some objective criteria, that not every instance of paint smeared on canvas and not every murder mystery meets?  What are the main philosophies of art?  Are any of them plausible?  Joh
Thumbnail for "Philosophy and the Law".
With what right do governments make and enforce laws? To what extent are citizens obligated to obey the law, even if a law is unjust? John and Ken talk about philosophy and the law with Jules Coleman from Yale University.
Thumbnail for "The Value of Truth".
The pursuit of truth is often thought to be “intrinsically” valuable. Scientists and philosophers, who eschew religious rationales for their life’s work, take the pursuit of truth to be obviously a worthwhile enterprise. But what’
Thumbnail for "The Philosophy of Hoops".
Basketball, an American invention but a world-wide phenomenon, is sometimes characterized as the most athletic and aesthetic of sports. What makes a sport interesting? Valuable? Fun? Entertaining? What values does sport exemplify, and does basketball rea
Thumbnail for "Suicide".
Taking human life is wrong. But what if it is one’s own life? Is suicide worse or less bad than murder? Is it wrong at all? Can suicide be rational? How about helping another commit suicide? The Philosophers discuss the metaphysics and morality of
Thumbnail for "What Are Numbers?".
Plato claimed that numbers exist in some mind-independent abstract heaven. Nominalists claim that there is no such heaven. Clearly, we can’t see, hear, taste or feel numbers. But if there are no numbers what is mathematics all about? John and Ken c
Thumbnail for "The Science of Humor".
Being funny isn’t easy. Figuring out what makes things funny is even harder. Still, a number of psychologists (e.g., Freud) and philosophers (e.g., Bergson) have tried. Now computer scientists are trying to learn enough about humor to construct pro
Thumbnail for "Marriage and Monogamy".
Monogamy is traditional in most cultures, and it is the law throughout America since Utah gave up polygamy to acquire statehood. Is there any philosophical basis for favoring monogamy over polygamy? Or any reasons grounded in clear empirical facts or soc
Thumbnail for "W.E.B. Du Bois".
Sociologist, historian, philosopher, editor, writer, and activist, W.E.B. Du Bois was one of the most influential intellectuals of the twentieth century. The first African-American Ph.D. from Harvard University, Du Bois died in Ghana after having renounc
Thumbnail for "Legislating Values".
How should we decide what laws to pass? Should majority rule, even when they are legislating values? Ken thinks this results in tyranny. What kinds of values are there? There are values that are essential to democracy, e.g. education. Ken introduces the
Thumbnail for "Philosophy of Science".
Is philosophy the queen of the sciences, with the job of synthesizing, interpreting and evaluating the results of the particular sciences? Or should we adopt John Locke’s conception of philosophy as a handmaiden to science: clarifying concepts, def
Thumbnail for "Intelligent Design".
Is there any reason to think the cause or causes of order in the universe bear an even remote analogy to human intelligence? Even if they did, would that mean these intelligent causes had the benevolence and sense of justice required of a Christian God?
Thumbnail for "Progress and the Environment".
Does the value of preserving our environment conflict with the development of a world community in which all enjoy the fruits of human progress? Is the environment important intrinsically, or only as a source of pleasure and other goods for human beings?
Thumbnail for "The Existence of God".
The question of whether or not God exists is profoundly fascinating and important. What are the proofs of the existence of God? How can one prove that God does not exist? Join us as John and Ken explore issues such as religious experience, the Bible, evi
Thumbnail for "Kant".
Immanuel Kant introduced the human mind as an active originator of experience rather than just a passive recipient of perception.  How has his philosophy influenced the world after him?  John and Ken dig into the brilliantly active mind of Kant
Thumbnail for "Freedom of Speech in Times of War".
The Constitution grants the freedom of speech to every citizen.  Journalists value it more than anything else.  Should the freedom of speech be unlimited?  Would unlimited freedom of speech do more good or bad to our society?  Would l
Thumbnail for "Friendship".
Who do we call friends?  Do we need friends out of love for others or for ourselves?  Is a life with friends necessarily a better life?  Ancient philosophers, such as Aristotle, wrote extensively on the topic.  John and Ken examine ju
Thumbnail for "Language of Fiction".
What are we talking about when we talk about Sherlock Holmes or Santa Claus? Something that doesn’t exist?  Something that exists only in the mind? Something that exists only in a fictional or imaginary world? Are statements about fictional ob
Thumbnail for "George Berkeley".
Berkeley founded and defended idealism, the doctrine that there is not a material world; reality is the orchestration of ideas in minds, nothing more.  He influenced Hume, Mill, Russell, and many other philosophers.  John and Ken expl
Thumbnail for "The Willing Suspension of Disbelief".
Why don’t we run out of the movie theatre when a monster shows on the screen? What kind of mental state is the willing suspension of disbelief? Why do fiction and drama affect our emotions even when we know they are not real? John and Ken examine
Thumbnail for "Reconciliation".
Justice, truth, and identity;  race, society, and law—these all come into dramatic play as South Africa makes the tumultuous transition to a post-apartheid democracy.  How has the new South Africa constructed its concepts of reconciliation?
Thumbnail for "The Strange World of Quantum Reality".
Quantum mechanics is an astoundly successful, mathematically elegant, explanatorily deep, even beautiful scientific theory.  Yet it reveals a truly puzzling world of micro-entities: entities that can be at two places at once, that can “travel&
Thumbnail for "Ethics in War".
After World War II the Nurenberg trials and the conventions that arose out of them codified the idea that there are right and wrong ways to wage war.  That prisoners of war have definite rights, and that non-combatants should be treated differently than
Thumbnail for "Language of Politics".
Politics, especially American politics, puts pressure on words like “liberal”, “conservative” and “values” as they are used more as weapons than as tools for communication. John and Ken discuss this process and the p
Thumbnail for "Saints, Heroes, and Well-Lived Lives".
Some actions are right, and some are wrong. But aren’t some even better than right—the kinds of things that heroes and saints do? Yet some philosophers think that such “supererogatory” acts make no sense; we should always do the b
Thumbnail for "Descartes".
The 17th Century philosopher Rene Descartes is often considered the father of modern philosophy.  His Meditations are a staple in introductory philosophy courses, and his views on the relation of mind and body have dominated philosophical discussion of t
Thumbnail for "The Indispensable Emotions".
Where would we be without emotions?  Many philosophers throughout history have thought the emotions serve only to cloud our judgments and actions.  Phrases like “He’s just acting emotionally” or “Her judgment is clouded
Thumbnail for "Moral Dilemmas and Moral Ambiguity".
It would be nice if we always knew the morally right thing to do, if our choices and commitments were painted in stark black and white.  Unfortunately life is full of gray areas, including situations in which all the choices that confront us seem mo
Thumbnail for "Zen".
What is the sound of one hand clapping?  Does Zen Buddhism provide a unique perspective on the world that transcends the wisdom in Western Philosophy?  Is there a special kind of Zen logic?  Or is it just one more religion?  John and Ken welcome Robert S
Thumbnail for "Global Poverty and International Aid".
Global Poverty and International Aid
Thumbnail for "The Ethics of Identity".
The Ethics of Identity
Thumbnail for "Intergenerational Obligations".
Parents have duties to their children. But do grown up children have obligations to their parents? More generally, do the younger members of a society have obligations to their elders? Where would such obligations come from? What are their limits? John a
Thumbnail for "Evolution of the Human Mind".
Is the human mind a relatively inflexible program bequeathed to us by evolution, and culture just a veneer that gives age-old urges a respectable cover?   Or our minds largely the product of language, culture, and civilization, with evolution having
Thumbnail for "Prostitution".
Is prostitution morally objectionable?   Should it be illegal?   Or is it simply a market transaction, where one party sells a service for a price that another party is willing to pay, and no third party is harmed?   Philosophy Talk favorite Debra Satz j
Thumbnail for "Confucius".
Confucius laid down a pattern of thinking followed by more people for more generations than any other human being on the face of the earth. No matter what religion, no matter what form of government, the Chinese (and most other East Asian civilizations)
Thumbnail for "Forgiveness".
Justice is a virtue and so, many claim, is forgiveness. But they seem inconsistent. Is forgiveness really a virtue? Philosopher Charles Griswold discusses the South African reconciliation process, truly evil people, and the virtue of forgiveness.
Thumbnail for "Propaganda".
Allegedly independent radio commentators taking money to spout the government line! Fake news reports being produced and distributed by the Administration to promote a partisan agenda! Journalists abandoning neutrality and objectivity to become cheerlead
Thumbnail for "Genetic Determinism".
Are there genes for practically everything? For being gay? For being mean? For being a philosopher? Does modern science show that we are largely the product of our genes — or not? Join Ken and John and famed philosopher of biology John Dupre to see
Thumbnail for "Schopenhauer".
Arthur Schopenhauer, the great Nineteenth Century philosopher, had a pessimistic vision of the world as “will and idea.” Our will to survive serves no high purpose; the world is at best a shared illusion.   Schopenhauer influenced Nietzsche an
Thumbnail for "Is Free Will an Illusion?".
We like to think of ourselves as enjoying unrestricted freedom of the will.  But modern science increasingly teaches us that our choices are causally determined by some combination of our genes, our upbringing, and our present circumstances.
Thumbnail for "Neurocosmetology".
Progress in neuroscience may soon make possible an age of neurocosmetology: the use of drugs to let people affect the way their brains work, so as to make them more effective, more attractive, and more like their “cognitive ideal.” A wor
Thumbnail for "What is Beauty?".
Are there objective standards of beauty? Or is beauty in the eye of the beholder? Must art be beautiful to be great art? What is the role of the experience of beauty in a good life? John and Ken take in the beauty with Alexander Nehamas from Princeton Un
Thumbnail for "Religion and the Secular State".
Can committed believers and committed non-believers share a common political life in the context of a secular state?  Committed believers may want the policies of the state to reflect their deeply held religious convictions and values
Thumbnail for "Hume".
David Hume was a superb essayist, a brilliant philosopher, and a world-class bon vivant. His philosophical views in ethics, epistemology, aesthetics, and the philosophy of religion, though shocking to many in his own time, are enduring touchstones of mod
Thumbnail for "The Erotic vs. The Pornographic".
Erotic experience is a human good. Mature, consenting adults should be able to explore the erotic realm freely, without outside interference. Pornography is illicit and destructive. But what is the real difference between the erotic and the pornographic?
Thumbnail for "Ethics in Sport".
Once upon a time, student athletes were students first, athletes second; the Olympics was about amateurism and the pursuit of excellence, not the pursuit of endorsements; and professional athletes enhanced the physics through rigorous work-outs, not thro
Thumbnail for "Evil".
Is there such a thing as pure evil in the world? How should we confront evil? Can evil ever be finally overcome? If the universe was created by a supremely good, supremely powerful, supremely loving deity, why is there evil in the world to begin with? On
Thumbnail for "Aristotle".
Aristotle’s philosophical doctrines have permeated and helped shape Western Culture in spheres as disparate as cosmology, biology, ethics, physics, politics, and logic. John and Ken take a tour of some of the greatest hits of one of the g
Thumbnail for "The Mystery of Mind".
Modern science tells us that the mind is just the brain working. But science cannot yet tell us how consciousness, rationality, free will, autonomy, or even our sense of self arises out of the merely material processes of the brain. Could our confidence
Thumbnail for "Gender".
Are gender roles and differences fixed, once and for, all by biology? Or is gender socially constructed and culturally variable?  How does gender differ from sex? John and Ken explore whether men and women are really from different planets after all with
Thumbnail for "Nature vs. Nurture".
The philosopher John Locke thought we had no innate ideas; our minds are blank slates, upon which experience writes.  Nurture is everything, nature nothing.  Modern popular genetics gives the impression that we are nothing but the sta
Thumbnail for "Disability".
The Americans with Disabilities Act recognizes that people with disabilities are often prevented from leading productive and satisfying lives because social, school and work environments are often thoughtlessly and unnecessarily designed with only people
Thumbnail for "Love".
Is love just a (second-hand) emotion?  Is it a feeling?  A disparate group of feelings, glandular responses, and ill-considered commitments called by a single word so that poets will have something to write about?  A poor substitute for true friendship i
Thumbnail for "Truth and Relativism".
Is there such a thing as absolute truth, independent of who is doing the thinking, and where? Or is truth relative to backgrounds, cultures, creeds, times, and places? Can it be true that what is right for me isn’t right for you? John and Ken searc
Thumbnail for "Time".
Time is the most familiar thing in the world, and yet philosophically one of the most puzzling. Is the present what’s left when you subtract what has already happened, and what is yet to happen? Then it seems to vanish into a mere instant. Are futu
Thumbnail for "Is This Any Way to Run a Democracy?".
America prides itself on being the oldest continuous democracy in the world. But criticisms of the America system are widespread. Our system is tailored to narrow interests and wealthy elites. Our two parties lock out alternative voices. Our voting proce
Thumbnail for "Karl Marx".
The ideas of Karl Marx vie with those of Rousseau, Locke and Jefferson for shaping the politics of the twentieth century. Are Marx’s ideas of real philosophical value and interest, or simply relics of interest only in trying to understand the benig
Thumbnail for "Feminism".
Some feminists hold that there are specially feminine ways of knowing, and the current scientific research is flawed for not recognizing them. Some hold that philosophy itself is a thoroughly phallocentric enterprise, and deeply flawed. Other feminists v
Thumbnail for "The Environment and Global Justice".
Our current way of life is unsustainable. Depletion of the ozone layer, the dwindling of the rain forest, the loss of animal habitat, and toxic runoff into lakes, streams and rivers are just a few of the environmental challenges we face. The environment
Thumbnail for "Corporations".
Corporations are recognized as persons in the eyes of the law. But if they are persons, they would seem to be pathologically self-interested persons, driven by nothing but the desire for their own further aggrandizement. John and Ken ask how we can cope
Thumbnail for "Plato".
From his theory of the Forms, to his views about morality, justice, and the soul Plato was one the greatest and most influential philosophers of all time. Indeed, it has been said that all of philosophy is but a footnote to Plato. Find out why as John an
Thumbnail for "Happiness".
Is happiness a mere psychological state? And if so, what’s so important about it? Is there anything more to being happy than just thinking you’re happy? Or is happiness a way of life? John and Ken get happy with Robert Solomon from the Univer
Thumbnail for "Gambling".
Rolling the dice in a game you’re rigged to lose sounds like a bad idea. So why is it so much fun? Is gambling an exciting pastime, or a vicious addiction? John and Ken take their chances with Will Barrett from the University of Melbourne, author o
Thumbnail for "Affirmative Action".
Is affirmative action a way of balancing out inequality? Or is it just another form of bias in admissions and hiring practices? And where’s the line between fostering diversity and lowering standards? John and Ken affirmatively welcome Elizabeth An
Thumbnail for "Who Owns Ideas?".
Who Owns Ideas?
Thumbnail for "Paternalism and Health".
Paternalism and Health: Some diseases such as Alzheimer’s inhibit our abilities to make decisions and lessen our quality of life. In cases like these, we often think that others are justified in stepping in and making decisions for that person. But
Thumbnail for "Humans: The Irrational Animal".
Some psychologists claim to have demonstrated that humans are systematically, deeply and perhaps irredeemably irrational in their reasoning and decision making. But what is rationality and why does it matter? If we are really so irrational, how have we m
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What is virtue? Is virtue the key human happiness and flourishing, as the ancients held, or a quaint notion of at best secondary interest for ethics, as many modern theorists hold? Does the return of virtue ethics to contemporary philosophy mark an advan
Thumbnail for "Dignity and the End of Life".
Is physician assisted suicide morally okay? What about active euthanasia for patients suffering terminal illnesses? If we begin traveling down this path, how do we put a break to our slide down the slippery slope toward a world in which we license physic
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We like to think that terrorism is always wrong. But what if the cause is just? Do the ends ever justify the means? And how do we define “terrorism” anyway?
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Does life have a meaning? If we were created by a powerful God, would that give our lives meaning? Who gave God’s existence meaning? What if we were created by a crazy scientist wholly for the purpose of irritating their spouse? John and Ken search
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We shouldn’t be mean to animals. Is that because animals have rights, like people do? Or is it just because people care about animals? Is it intrinsically worse to step on dog than on a spider? John and Ken play nice with Lori Gruen from Wesleyan U
Thumbnail for "Whose Language Is It?".
Is there a right and a wrong way to speak English? Is there really something wrong with saying, “Hopefully, we’ll have a good century,” or “Where is the library at?” or “There is no way to correctly split an infinitive
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What can we learn from baseball? Are the passions we have for our baseball teams and heroes irrational?  If so, what makes passions for families, cities, countries, universities, or radio stations more rational? Are all allegiances and loyalties ultimate
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How is taxation different from stealing? What right does the government have to take some of our money? No taxation without representation? What difference does representation make? John and Ken pay their dues with Barbara Fried from the Stanford Law Sch
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Is the conscious mind just the brain or something more? Can science explain consciousness? How does Ken know that John is a conscious being and not just an automaton programmed to act like a conscious being? Or is John just an automaton? John and Ken con
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What is humor? What makes some jokes funny? Why did the chicken cross the road? Tune in for deep thoughts and big laughs as Ken, John and guest Ted Cohen, author of Jokes: Philosophical Thoughts on Joking Matters, discuss the philosophical aspects of hum
Thumbnail for "Has Science Replaced Religion?".
Has science replaced religion? Can one be religious and maintain a scientific viewpoint? Does belief in evolution undermine morality or belief in God, or vice versa? Ken and John take on the big questions with George Ellis from the University of Cape Tow
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Nietzsche. Ken and John and Übermensch-at-large Brian Leiter discuss everyone’s favorite syphilitic philosopher. Was he a mysogynistic Nazi-supporter, or an artistic visionary who sought to set us free from our moralistic chains? Boring radio is de
Thumbnail for "Markets and Morality".
Does the free market provide incentives for behavior that is problematic from a moral perspective? Or does the free market punish morally problematic behavior? Is respecting the free market itself moral, insofar as respecting the free market is also resp
Thumbnail for "Genetic Engineering and Cloning".
When is genetic manipulation morally permissible? For health? Beauty? Wit? What sorts of animals is it acceptable to clone? Should we ban stem cell research? John and Ken discuss cloning and the ethical issues surrounding genetic engineering with Hank Gr
Thumbnail for "Drug Legalization".
Does America’s drug problem rest on confused philosophy? Ken and John discuss the philosophical issues underlying arguments for and against the legalization of drugs with Peter De Marneffe from Arizona State University, co-author of The Legalizatio
Thumbnail for "The Insanity Defense".
Ken and John debate (use?) the insanity defense. What difference does it make if the person who commits a crime is, in one way or another, mentally ill? Does this make punishment illegitimate? Why is punishment, rather than therapy, ever legitimate? Whic
Thumbnail for "Patriotism versus Cosmopolitanism".
Patriotism versus Comopolitanism: Is your loyalty to America and Americans more important than the common humanity you share with everyone on the globe?
Thumbnail for "Marriage and the State".
With what right does the state say who can and cannot marry? The state has, at various times, said that people of different races cannot marry, that people of the same sex cannot marry, that no one can marry more than one person at at time. But with what
Thumbnail for "What Is Race?".
Is race a discredited pseudo-scientific category? Or a real dimension of difference among humans? Or a socially constructed reality? What difference does it make? John and Ken question the category of race with Anthony Appiah from Princeton University.
Thumbnail for "Would You Want to Live Forever?".
Pick your favorite age. You are healthy, career thriving, family intact (at least pretend!). Would you like to live forever at that age, in that health, with those friends and family members also living forever with you? Immortality, on earth? How about
Thumbnail for "The Bush Doctrine of Preemptive Self-Defense".
What is the difference between mere aggression and preemptive self defense?  Can you really permissibly “defend” yourself against an attack that hasn’t even begun?  How does preemptive self defense differ from preventive war, from human
Thumbnail for "Live Pilot: Is Lying Always Bad?".
Many philosophers have been tempted to condemn lying as an absolute evil. The problem is that as soon as you articulate some absolute principle such as “Never lie!” you can almost immediately think of circumstances in which lying seems the be
Thumbnail for "Demo #2: What Is Terrorism?".
What is terrorism? Is terrorism morally worse than other forms of warfare. Was Truman’s decision to drop the A-bomb and act of terrorism? Is the US a terrorist State? Is terrorism an insult the powerful use to deligitimate the only means of resista
Thumbnail for "Demo #1: Can Machines Think?".
Will Computers someday be able to have humanlike consciousnes and intelligence? Will they someday outstrip the thinking of humans? Would it matter if they did? Or is Artificial Intelligence on fundamentally the wrong track?

Wise Woman: Mary Wollstonecraft

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March 1, 202651min 58sec

Mary Wollstonecraft is often labeled as a “liberal feminist” because of her concern for women’s rights and conceptions of freedom. But that label narrows her work, which was broadly critical of all social inequalities that distort human relations. So why did Wollstonecraft think that virtue is not truly possible unless we are all free? What did she think was key to the liberation of women? And what were her criticisms of the powerful institutions of her day, like the monarchy? Josh and Ray explore the life and thought of Mary Wollstonecraft with Sylvana Tomaselli from the University of Cambridge, author of Wollstonecraft: Philosophy, Passion, and Politics.

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Wise Woman: Mary Wollstonecraft
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