Thinking Hard and Slow

Mind-expanding long-form philosophy talks and discussions that are both rigorous and accessible. Recorded live from our annual themed lecture series, special lectures and our big debate, the series features leading figures in philosophy, from distinguished senior professors to up and coming talent. This is real, in-depth philosophy without the jargon, for minds that like a good workout. Presented by Julian Baggini, Academic Director of the Royal Institute of Philosophy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

https://www.royalinstitutephilosophy.org/

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 1h14m. Bisher sind 21 Folge(n) erschienen. Jede Woche gibt es eine neue Folge dieses Podcasts.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 23 hours 59 minutes

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episode 19: Has Science Killed Philosophy? - The 2021 Annual Debate


Stephen Hawking's proclamation that philosophy is dead was clearly hyperbole. But when it comes to understanding the fundamental nature of reality, has philosophy really got anything left to contribute? Does the rise of physics demand the end of metaphysics?


Debating these questions are Carlo Rovelli (Centre de Physique Théorique of the Aix-Marseille University), Eleanor Knox (King’s College London) and Alex Rosenberg (Duke University) with the BBC’s Ritula Shah in the chair...


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 August 12, 2022  1h17m
 
 

episode 18: Differentiating Scientific Inquiry and Politics with Heather Douglas


Over the past two decades, our view of the ideals for science in society has changed. Discussions of the roles for values in science and changes in the views on the responsibilities in science have shifted the understanding of science from ideally value-free to properly value-laden. This shift, however, seems to remove a key difference between science and politics, as now both science and politics are value-laden, and disputes in both can arise from value disagreements...


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 August 5, 2022  1h17m
 
 

episode 17: Work – A Short History of a Modern Concept with Axel Honneth


Axel Honneth’s 2021 Royal Institute of Philosophy Dublin Lecture seeks briefly to reconstruct the history of conceptual disputes about the meaning of work from the beginning of capitalist industrialisation. Initially, the only kind of activity that counted as work in the proper sense was the industrialised manufacture of goods...


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 July 29, 2022  1h35m
 
 

episode 16: The Philosophical Retreat to the Here and Now with Richard Moran


Certain philosophies describe us as prone to forms of attachment that are illusory, and promise to indemnify us against the hazards of life by exposing such illusions. One such hazard is that of transience and temporal life itself, and it is sometimes urged that since the present is the only genuine reality, attachments to the past or the future are forms of illusion we can and should be free of...


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 July 22, 2022  1h12m
 
 

episode 15: Systemic, Structural, and Institutional Injustice with Sally Haslanger


The terms 'systemic injustice' and 'structural injustice' are often used interchangeably and are often equated with 'institutional injustice.' But in order to understand these different forms of injustice, we should have a clear idea of what they are and how to distinguish them. Using racism as a paradigm case, Sally Haslanger sketches an account of society as a complex system and shows how relations that make up the structures are constituted by social practices...


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 July 8, 2022  1h16m
 
 

Announcement about Ep. 10


There was an editing error on Ep. 10: Culture and Value in Du Bois’ The Gift of Black Folk with Chike Jeffers which has since been corrected. If you downloaded the episode before July 6th, please download the corrected version here: https://shows.acast.com/thinking-hard-and-slow/culture-and-value-chike-jeffers or by finding Ep. 10 on any podcast app.




Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


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 July 7, 2022  0m
 
 

episode 14: Rendering Trauma Audible with María del Rosario Acosta López


What would it mean to do justice to testimonies of traumatic experience? That is, how can experiences which do not fit the customary scripts of sense-making be heard? Whereas processes of official memorialization or legal redress often demand that victims and survivors convey their experiences through familiar modes of narration, María del Rosario Acosta López's project on “grammars of listening” asks how it might be possible to hear these experiences on their own terms and what are the...


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 July 1, 2022  1h23m
 
 

episode 13: Fernando Pessoa: The Poet as Philosopher with Jonardon Ganeri


Fernando Pessoa (1888–1935) lived what was in many ways an astonishingly modern, transcultural and translingual life. He was born in Lisbon and grew up in Anglophone Durban, acquiring a life-long love for English poetry and language. Returning to Lisbon, from where he would never again leave, he set himself the goal to travel throughout an infinitude of inner landscapes, to be an explorer of inner worlds...


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 June 24, 2022  1h9m
 
 

episode 12: A New Name for an Old Way of Thinking with Roger Ames


The classical Greeks give us a concept of substance that guarantees a permanent and unchanging subject as the substratum for the human experience. Roger Ames argues that in the Yijing or "Book of Changes" we find a stark alternative to this ontology which reflects a holistic, organic, and ecological worldview...


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 June 17, 2022  1h14m
 
 

episode 11: Decolonising Philosophy with Lewis Gordon


Lewis Gordon examines what it means for philosophy to be ‘colonised’ and the challenges involved in ‘decolonising’ it in philosophical and political terms. 


Lewis Gordon is professor of philosophy and head of the department of philosophy at the University of Connecticut. He works in a number of areas of philosophy including Africana philosophy, existentialism, phenomenology, social and political thought, post-colonial thought and on the work of thinkers like W.E.B...


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 June 10, 2022  1h26m
 
 
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