Philosophy Bites

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 107:29:02
  • More information

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Synopsis

top philosophers interviewed on bite-sized topics

Episodes

  • Alain de Botton on Philosophy Within and Outside the Academy

    11/11/2007 Duration: 13min

    What is philosophy? Does academic philosophy squeeze the life out of some of the most important questions we can ask? Alain de Botton, author of the bestseller The Consolations of Philosophy, discusses his conception of philosophy and the importance of literary style with Nigel Warburton in this episode of Philosophy Bites.

  • Angie Hobbs on Plato on Erotic Love

    04/11/2007 Duration: 15min

    Plato's Symposium is the most famous philosophical discussion of love, its joys, risks and pleasures. In this episode of Philosophy Bites Angie Hobbs gives a lively account of what Plato thought about erotic love.

  • Stewart Sutherland on Hume on Design

    28/10/2007 Duration: 11min

    Is there evidence of intelligent design in the Universe? In the Eighteenth Century David Hume presented a series of powerful arguments against the Argument from Design. In this interview for Philosophy Bites Stewart Sutherland outlines these arguments and demonstrates their continuing relevance.

  • Onora O'Neill on Medical Consent

    21/10/2007 Duration: 13min

    What do we mean by 'consent' in a medical context? Is it reasonable to ask for informed consent before performing medical procedures? Is consent even the most important issue. Onora O'Neill challenges some widely-held assumptions in this area in this interview for Philosophy Bites.

  • Quentin Skinner on Hobbes on the State

    15/10/2007 Duration: 17min

    What is the state? How do individuals combine to lend legitimate authority to those who act on the state's behalf? These are fundamental questions in political philosophy that Thomas Hobbes addressed in the seventeenth century. In this interview Quentin Skinner gives a fascinating account of Hobbes' ideas about the state.

  • Anthony Kenny on his New History of Philosophy

    08/10/2007 Duration: 12min

    Anthony Kenny has recently published a major new four-volume history of philosophy. Nigel Warburton interviews him about this project for this episode of Philosophy Bites.

  • Tim Crane on Mind and Body

    30/09/2007 Duration: 10min

    What is the mind and how does it relate to our bodies? How can something physical think? These are fundamental questions in the philosophy of mind. Tim Crane addresses these difficult issues in this interview for Philosophy Bites.

  • Jonathan Ree on Philosophy as an Art

    23/09/2007 Duration: 14min

    Some people see Philosophy as close to science. In this episode of the podcast Philosophy Bites Jonathan Rée explores the idea that Philosophy is an art.

  • Mary Warnock on Sartre's Existentialism

    17/09/2007 Duration: 11min

    What is existentialism? Is it still relevant to us? Sartre believed that we are free to choose what we make of our lives. Was he right?  In this interview for Philosophy Bites Mary Warnock gives her views on Jean-Paul Sartre's existentialism.

  • Peter Adamson on Avicenna

    10/09/2007 Duration: 13min

    In this week's episode of Philosophy Bites Nigel Warburton interviews Peter Adamson about Avicenna (born in 973) whom he describes as the greatest philosopher in the history of Islamic thought. The discussion focusses on Avicenna's argument for God's existence.

  • Brad Hooker on Consequentialism

    03/09/2007 Duration: 13min

    What makes an action a good one? According to consequentialists this question is decided by the action's actual or likely consequences. In this episode of Philosophy Bites the moral philosopher Brad Hooker explains what consequentialism is and defends it against possible criticism.

  • Simon Blackburn on Moral Relativism

    27/08/2007 Duration: 14min

    Are moral choices simply relative, a matter of culture or taste? Are genuine moral disagreements possible? Should we just tolerate different ways that people choose to live?  Nigel Warburton interviews Simon Blackburn on these important questions. In the course of the discussion Blackburn outlines his own quasi-realist position.

  • Jonathan Wolff on Disadvantage

    19/08/2007 Duration: 12min

    What is disadvantage? How can we identify the most disadvantaged in society and what should we or governments do about it? Jonathan Wolff, co-author of a new book on the topic, outlines his answers to these questions in this interview for Philosophy Bites.

  • Timothy Williamson on Vagueness

    13/08/2007 Duration: 14min

    Philosopher Timothy Williamson explains how we can make sense of such vague concepts as 'heap' or 'red' or 'bald' in the process outlining his own solution to what are usually known as Sorites Paradoxes. Williamson gives a precise account of what 'vagueness' means, how it differs from ambiguity, and why this matters.

  • David Papineau on Physicalism

    07/08/2007 Duration: 15min

    Are all our thoughts simply physical events in our bodies? Can we give a purely physical account of the conscious human mind?  David Papineau believes that we can. In this interview for Philosophy Bites he explains what physicalism is, why he believes it to be true, and how it can be defended against a range of criticisms.

  • Anthony Grayling on Atheism

    30/07/2007 Duration: 12min

    Is belief in the existence of a God or gods the equivalent of believing that there are fairies at the bottom of the garden? Or can it be defended on the basis of reason or evidence? In this interview for Philosophy Bites  Anthony Grayling gives a philosophical defence of atheism and explains why he believes it to be a well-grounded and ultimately life-affirming position to hold.

  • Adrian Moore on Infinity

    24/07/2007 Duration: 14min

    Infinity is a difficult concept to grasp and one that introduces several paradoxes. In this interview for Philosophy Bites, Adrian Moore, author of an important book on the subject, gives a clear and stimulating introduction to the philosophy of infinity.

  • Roger Crisp on Utilitarianism

    16/07/2007 Duration: 13min

    How should we live? John Stuart Mill, one of the great thinkers of the nineteenth century thought that we should maximise happiness. Here Roger Crisp, author of an acclaimed book on Mill, explains Mill's utilitarian ethical theory.

  • Edward Craig - What is Philosophy?

    10/07/2007 Duration: 12min

    Edward Craig, editor of the Routledge Encylopedia of Philosophy and author of Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction gives an interesting angle on the nature of philosophy, how it relates to other kinds of thinking, and what makes good philosophy good.

  • Anne Phillips on Multiculturalism

    03/07/2007 Duration: 15min

    Should members of a minority group be left to lead their lives as they see fit, even where their values differ from those of the majority? Anne Phillips, author of a recent book on multiculturalism, addresses the difficult question of how people from different cultures can live together without conflict.

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