The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast

Jack Symes | Andrew Horton, Oliver Marley, Rose de Castellane, Gregory Mill
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Aug 12, 2018 • 34min

Episode 43, The Galen Strawson Interview (Part II)

Galen Strawson is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. Amongst countless papers in metaphysics and philosophy of mind, Galen is the author of Freedom and Belief, The Subject of Experience, Consciousness and Its Place in Nature and most recently, Things That Bother Me: Death, Freedom, the Self, Etc. The widespread impact of these works cannot be understated. In the words of Stephen Fry: Galen Strawson has a marvellous gift for untangling even the most complex lines in philosophical thinking and laying them straight. He writes with humour, clarity and always from a recognizably human place. Even the most complex and controversial areas in modern philosophy come into the light when you are in his benign company…. He opens windows and finds light-switches like no other philosopher writing today.
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Aug 5, 2018 • 1h 4min

Episode 43, The Galen Strawson Interview (Part I)

Galen Strawson is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. Amongst countless papers in metaphysics and philosophy of mind, Galen is the author of Freedom and Belief, The Subject of Experience, Consciousness and Its Place in Nature and most recently, Things That Bother Me: Death, Freedom, the Self, Etc. The widespread impact of these works cannot be understated. In the words of Stephen Fry: Galen Strawson has a marvellous gift for untangling even the most complex lines in philosophical thinking and laying them straight. He writes with humour, clarity and always from a recognizably human place. Even the most complex and controversial areas in modern philosophy come into the light when you are in his benign company…. He opens windows and finds light-switches like no other philosopher writing today.
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Jul 29, 2018 • 45min

Episode 42, The Nature or Attributes of God (Part IV - Further Analysis and Discussion)

For religious believers, considering the questions that surround the nature or attributes of God, is important in their attempt to form a coherent understanding of their creator. In the Summa Theologica, shortly after arguing for the existence of God, Saint Thomas Aquinas writes the following: "Having recognised that a certain thing exists, we have still to investigate the way in which it exists, that we may come to understand what it is that exists." This seems like a peculiar thing to state. I know that there exists something, but I have no idea as to what this thing is. As Brian Davies points out in his book Philosophy of Religion: A Guide and Anthology, this not such an odd statement after all. Suppose I attempt to open a door, and something stops it from opening. I might say, 'well something is certainly in the way'. If it makes sense to make this statement, it also makes sense to ask, 'what is it'?
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Jul 22, 2018 • 31min

Episode 42, The Nature or Attributes of God (Part III - Omnibenevolence)

For religious believers, considering the questions that surround the nature or attributes of God, is important in their attempt to form a coherent understanding of their creator. In the Summa Theologica, shortly after arguing for the existence of God, Saint Thomas Aquinas writes the following: "Having recognised that a certain thing exists, we have still to investigate the way in which it exists, that we may come to understand what it is that exists." This seems like a peculiar thing to state. I know that there exists something, but I have no idea as to what this thing is. As Brian Davies points out in his book Philosophy of Religion: A Guide and Anthology, this not such an odd statement after all. Suppose I attempt to open a door, and something stops it from opening. I might say, 'well something is certainly in the way'. If it makes sense to make this statement, it also makes sense to ask, 'what is it'?
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Jul 15, 2018 • 43min

Episode 42, The Nature or Attributes of God (Part II - Omniscience)

In the Summa Theologica, shortly after arguing for the existence of God, Saint Thomas Aquinas writes the following: "Having recognised that a certain thing exists, we have still to investigate the way in which it exists, that we may come to understand what it is that exists." This seems like a peculiar thing to state. I know that there exists something, but I have no idea as to what this thing is. As Brian Davies points out in his book Philosophy of Religion: A Guide and Anthology, this not such an odd statement after all. Suppose I attempt to open a door, and something stops it from opening. I might say, 'well something is certainly in the way'. If it makes sense to make this statement, it also makes sense to ask, 'what is it'?
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Jul 8, 2018 • 1h 27min

Episode 42, The Nature or Attributes of God (Part I - Omnipotence)

For religious believers, considering the questions that surround the nature or attributes of God, is important in their attempt to form a coherent understanding of their creator. In the Summa Theologica, shortly after arguing for the existence of God, Saint Thomas Aquinas writes the following: "Having recognised that a certain thing exists, we have still to investigate the way in which it exists, that we may come to understand what it is that exists." This seems like a peculiar thing to state. I know that there exists something, but I have no idea as to what this thing is. As Brian Davies points out in his book Philosophy of Religion: A Guide and Anthology, this not such an odd statement after all. Suppose I attempt to open a door, and something stops it from opening. I might say, 'well something is certainly in the way'. If it makes sense to make this statement, it also makes sense to ask, 'what is it'?
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Jul 1, 2018 • 28min

Episode 41, Christian B. Miller and 'The Character Gap' (Part II)

Bringing together contemporary psychology and moral philosophy, the work of Christian B. Miller in character education has been tremendously influential. Christian Miller is the A.C. Reid Professor of Philosophy at Wake Forest University and the Director of the Character Project funded by the John Templeton Foundation and the Templeton World Charity Foundation. As well as publishing over 75 papers, Professor Miller is the author of Moral Character: An Empirical Theory, Character and Moral Psychology, and The Character Gap: How Good Are We? Links to all of which can be found on our website. In today's interview, we'll be talking to Professor Miller about his latest book, The Character Gap. In his own words: Here is the predicament that most of us seem to be in. We are not virtuous people. We simply do not have characters that are good enough to qualify as honest, compassionate, wise, courageous and the like. We are not vicious people either – dishonest, callous, foolish cowardly, and so forth. Rather, we have a mixed character with some good sides and some bad sides. This, I have claimed, is the most plausible interpretation of what psychology tells us. It is also true to our lived experience in the world. Those are the facts as I see them. Now comes the value judgement – this is a real shame. . . Excellence of character, or being virtuous, is what we should all strive for.
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Jun 24, 2018 • 59min

Episode 41, Christian B. Miller and 'The Character Gap' (Part I)

Bringing together contemporary psychology and moral philosophy, the work of Christian B. Miller in character education has been tremendously influential. Christian Miller is the A.C. Reid Professor of Philosophy at Wake Forest University and the Director of the Character Project funded by the John Templeton Foundation and the Templeton World Charity Foundation. As well as publishing over 75 papers, Professor Miller is the author of Moral Character: An Empirical Theory, Character and Moral Psychology, and The Character Gap: How Good Are We? Links to all of which can be found on our website. In today's interview, we'll be talking to Professor Miller about his latest book, The Character Gap. In his own words: Here is the predicament that most of us seem to be in. We are not virtuous people. We simply do not have characters that are good enough to qualify as honest, compassionate, wise, courageous and the like. We are not vicious people either – dishonest, callous, foolish cowardly, and so forth. Rather, we have a mixed character with some good sides and some bad sides. This, I have claimed, is the most plausible interpretation of what psychology tells us. It is also true to our lived experience in the world. Those are the facts as I see them. Now comes the value judgement – this is a real shame. . . Excellence of character, or being virtuous, is what we should all strive for.
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Jun 17, 2018 • 46min

Episode 40, 'Offensive Language' with Rebecca Roache

Rebecca Roache is a Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at Royal Holloway, University of London. Dr Roache specialises in practical ethics, logic, philosophy of mind, philosophy of psychiatry and early modern philosophy, but in this episode, we'll be speaking to Rebecca specifically about the philosophy of language and swearing. In the words of Rebecca Roache: "With a little imagination, we can find limitless and powerful ways to offend people if that's what we want to do. We don't need to give a f*ck about whether our favourite swear words are declining in their capacity to shock." (Ethics Centre,2015 - click for full article) This interview is produced 'in association with The Institute of Art and Ideas and the Philosophy for Our Times podcast'. A very special thank you to everybody at the Institute of Art and Ideas for making this interview possible. *We apologise for the audio quality of this episode. We recorded the interview at How the Light Gets In Festival, and although the rain had stopped for us momentarily, you'll be able to hear festival-goers celebrating the outbreak of sunshine in the background. We'll be back in the studio after this episode. Thank you, we hope you enjoy the show!
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Jun 10, 2018 • 28min

Episode 39, 'The Philosophy of Perception' with Bence Nanay

Bence Nanay is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Antwerp and Research Associate in philosophy at the University of Cambridge. Nanay is also the principal investigator of the European Research Council project, Seeing Things You Don't See: Unifying the Philosophy, Psychology and Neuroscience of Multimodal Mental Imagery. As well as publishing more than 100 peer-reviewed articles, Nanay is the author of Between Perception and Action (2013) and Aesthetics as Philosophy of Perception (2016). It will, therefore, come as no surprise that our focus today will be Nanay's work in the field of 'philosophy of perception'. In a rare intersection between psychology, neuroscience and philosophy, 'the philosophy of perception' is concerned with the status of perceptual data, the nature of perceptual experience, and how this data and these experiences relate to beliefs about, or knowledge of, the world. This interview is produced 'in association with The Institute of Art and Ideas and the Philosophy for Our Times podcast'. A very special thank you to everybody at the Institute of Art and Ideas for making this interview possible. To celebrate the release of this interview, we're giving away three signed copies of Nanay's Between Perception and Action– to be in with a chance of winning, just head over to our Twitter page. *We apologise for the length and audio quality of this episode. We recorded the interview in-between Bence's talks at How the Light Gets In Festival, where it was tipping it down with rain.

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