Philosophy Bites

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

Informações:

Synopsis

top philosophers interviewed on bite-sized topics

Episodes

  • Leif Wenar on Trade and Tyranny

    10/01/2016 Duration: 18min

    Where does our oil come from? Does it matter? Leif Wenar, author of the recent book Blood Oil, argues that Western democracies are compromising themselves by buying either directly or indirectly from vicious tyrants. 

  • Katrin Flikschuh on Philosophy in Africa

    16/12/2015 Duration: 17min

    In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Katrin Flikschuh addresses the question 'What sort of philosophy is going on in Africa?'

  • Carlo Rovelli on Philosophy and Physics

    29/11/2015 Duration: 22min

    Some eminent physicists, including Stephen Hawking, have been sceptical of the value of philosophy to physics. Carlo Rovelli, a theoretical physicist with a strong interest in philosophy, disagrees. Here he discusses the relationship between philosophy and physics with Nigel Warburton.

  • John Worrall on Evidence-Based Medicine

    17/11/2015 Duration: 12min

    What sort of conclusions can we legitimately draw from the experiments that support evidence-based medicine? John Worrall questions some of the received opinion on this topic in this interview with David Edmonds for Philosophy Bites. 

  • Joshua Greene on the Construction of Thought

    31/10/2015 Duration: 12min

    We take for granted the fact that we can combine concepts to give new thoughts, and understand the thoughts too. How do we do that? Joshua D. Greene discusses this question in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

  • Graham Priest on Buddhism and Philosophy

    13/10/2015 Duration: 17min

    What is the nature of the self? What is reality? How should we live? These are fundamental philosophical questions. Graham Priest discusses how such questions have been discussed in the Buddhist tradition for this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

  • Jesse Prinz on Is Everything Socially Constructed?

    27/09/2015 Duration: 20min

    To what degree is reality something created by us? Jesse Prinz explores this fascinating question in conversation with Nigel Warburton. 

  • Massimo Pigliucci on the Demarcation Problem

    13/09/2015 Duration: 23min

    How can you tell science from non-science? Karl Popper argued that the falsifiability of a hypothesis is the mark of science. Massimo Pigliucci is not so sure about that.     

  • David Owens on Duty

    01/09/2015 Duration: 12min

    What is a duty and what sort of obligation does it put us on? David Owens explores the nature of duty in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast. If you enjoy Philosophy Bites, please consider supporting us via Patreon.

  • Kimberley Brownlee on Social Deprivation

    19/08/2015 Duration: 17min

    We are a highly social species: we need human contact. But do we have a right to it? In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Kimberley Brownlee suggests that this is an ingredient in a minimally decent human life...

  • Shelly Kagan on Speciesism

    01/08/2015 Duration: 24min

    The philosopher Peter Singer is famous for his attack on speciesism, the alleged prejudice that many exhibit in favour of human interests when compared with the interests of other animals. Here Shelly Kagan outlines Singer's position and takes issue with it. In the process he makes some interesting points about prejudices in general.

  • Susan James on Foucault and Knowledge

    22/07/2015 Duration: 21min

    Michel Foucault's work explores a wide range of topics; it includes histories of both punishment and sex. He also wrote more abstractly about philosophical topics. One theme to which he kept returning, whatever the topic, was the nature of our knowledge. Susan James discusses this thread in his work in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

  • Larry Temkin on Transitivity

    06/07/2015 Duration: 20min

    How do you choose which course of action is best? It seems reasonable that if A is better than B, and B is better than C, A must be better than C. But is it? Larry Temkin challenges this idea, known as the axiom of transitivity.

  • William B. Irvine on Living Stoically

    21/06/2015 Duration: 13min

    How should we live? is a basic philosophical question. The Stoics had some answers. But are they relevant today? William B. Irvine thinks so. Listen to his conversation with Nigel Warburton on this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

  • Steven Lukes on Power

    06/06/2015 Duration: 14min

    What is power? Steven Lukes argues for a three-dimensional account of this concept in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

  • Theodore Zeldin on Philosophy and History

    06/06/2015 Duration: 12min

    The historian and writer Theodore Zeldin gives his personal take on the relation betwen philosophy and history in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast. 

  • Jesse Prinz on Art and Emotion

    22/05/2015 Duration: 20min

    What part do emotions play in our appreciation of art? Jesse Prinz explores the sense of wonder at artworks in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

  • Cassim Quassam on Conspiracy Theories

    10/05/2015 Duration: 20min

    What is a conspiracy? Why do conspiracies - real or imagined -  matter to philsophy? Cassim Quaassam explores these questions in conversation with Nigel Warburton

  • Tim Williamson on the Appeal of Relativism

    28/04/2015 Duration: 13min

    Are all truths relative? That's an attractive idea for many people. Tim Williamson, Wykeham Professor of Logic at Oxford University discusses why and attempts to immunise us against sloppy thinking in this area.

  • Shaun Nichols on Death and the Self

    14/04/2015 Duration: 14min

    How does your view of the self affect your attitude to your own death? Shaun Nichols discusses this question in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

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