The Partially Examined Life Philosophy Podcast

Mark Linsenmayer, Wes Alwan, Seth Paskin, Dylan Casey
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6 snips
Jan 25, 2016 • 2h 4min

Episode 132: Living Stoically with Seneca and Massimo

On selected "moral epistles" (from around 65 CE) by Lucius Annaeus Seneca: 4. On the Terrors of Death, 12. On Old Age, 49. On the Shortness of Life, 59. On Pleasure and Joy, 62. On Good Company, 92. On the Happy Life, 96. On Facing Hardship, and 116. On Self Control. We're joined by Massimo Pigliucci of the How to Be a Stoic blog, who for a long time was on the Rationally Speaking podcast. How can one most profitably interpret weird-sounding Stoic recommendations about the emotions and about following nature? End song: "I Lose Control" by The MayTricks from So Chewy! (1993).
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Jan 11, 2016 • 1h 60min

Episode 131: Aristotle's "De Anima": What Is the Mind?

Our second discussion of De Anima or On the Soul (350 BCE), this time on book 3. What is the intellect? We talk about its highest part/function: nous, which is a "form of forms," literally nothing until it thinks, survives death and is not actually yours or mine, but just the universal mind! This continues the discussion from ep. 130 and includes a preview of the Aftershow featuring Rebecca Goldner. End song: "Wonderful You" (live 2001) by Mark Lint.
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Dec 28, 2015 • 1h 57min

Episode 130: Aristotle's "De Anima": What Is Life?

On De Anima or On the Soul (350 BCE), books 1 and 2, after some listener mail. What can this ancient text tell us about biological life? What counts as a scientific explanation? A. describes life as "the first actuality of a natural body which has organs," so bodies express their nature only when they're growing and reproducing and all that stuff that bodies do. The body is potential, and life is its actuality. So what the heck kind of explanation is that, and how does it tie into Aristotle's convoluted metaphysics? End song: "Intermission Song" by Mark Lint from Spanish Armada: Songs of Love and Related Neuroses (1993).
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Dec 24, 2015 • 2h 7min

Holiday Special 2015: Mark Lint's "Songs from the Partially Examined Life" with Many Guest Greetings

Mark is joined by numerous previous guests to catch up and engage the musical part of PEL's past episodes by introducing and playing the entirety of Mark Lint's "Songs from the Partially Examined Life," which you can own, along with the 2016 PEL wall calendar.
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Dec 14, 2015 • 2h 14min

Episode 129: Is Faith Rational?

Nathan Gilmour (Christian Humanist podcast) and Rob Dyer (God Complex Radio) join Mark and Wes for to discuss the reasonableness of religious belief reading Antony Flew's "The Presumption of Atheism," Norwood Russell Hanson's "The Agnostic's Dilemma," Steven Cahn's "The Irrelevance of Proof to Religion," Alvin Plantinga's "Is Belief in God Properly Basic?" Merold Westphal's "Sin and Reason," Basil Mitchell's "Faith and Criticism," Peter van Inwagen's "Clifford's Principle," William Alston's "Experience in Religious Belief," Richard Swinburne's "The Voluntariness of Faith" and "The World and Its Order," and Paul Helm's "Faith and Merit." Read synopses of all these at partiallyexaminedlife.com. End song: "Let Us Meet" by Mark Lint, setting an old poem by Kim Casey Linsenmayer.
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Nov 30, 2015 • 2h 3min

Episode 128: Hilary Putnam on Linguistic Meaning

On "The Meaning of Meaning" (1975). If meaning is not a matter of having a description in your head, then what is it? Hilary Putnam reformulates Kripke's insight (from #126) in terms of Twin Earths: Earthers with H20 and Twin Earthers with a substance that seems like water but is different have the same mental contents but are referring to different stuff with "water," so that word is speaker-relative in a certain way. With guest Matt Teichman. End song: "In the Boatyard" by Mark Lint & the Madison Lint Ensemble (2004, finished now).
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Nov 16, 2015 • 2h 19min

Episode 127: John Dewey on Experience and the World

They debate Dewey’s rejection of an appearance versus reality split and his claim that experience and the scientific world are the same. The conversation covers instrumentalism, how scientific concepts reshape experience, and whether objects arise through use and inquiry. They trace a genealogy of philosophical error, explore aesthetic immediacy, and consider how precarious life drives inquiry.
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6 snips
Nov 2, 2015 • 2h 18min

Episode 126: Saul Kripke on Possibilities, Language & Science

Philosopher Saul Kripke challenges conventional views on language and names, introducing 'possible worlds' to explain reference. They explore a priori truths, scientific identities, and Saul Kripke's stance on possibilities and language. The discussion goes deep on personal identity, modal reasoning, fictional characters, and the causal theory of reference in a captivating philosophical journey.
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Oct 25, 2015 • 1h 28min

Not School Digest: Asimov, Camus, Jaspers, Brecht, Peirce, Historical Jesus

On Isaac Asimov's "The Last Question," Albert Camus's "The Fall," Karl Jaspers's "Truth and Symbol," C.S. Peirce's "The Fixation of Belief," Bertold Brecht's "Theatre for Pleasure or Theatre for Instruction," and Thomas Sheehan's Stanford lectures on the Historical Jesus. These are snippets covering topics we haven't had time to cover on the podcast proper. Brief yourself via these 10–15 minute bursts, or become a PEL Citizen to listen to the full discussions.
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Oct 12, 2015 • 2h

Episode 125: Hannah Arendt on the Political & Private

On The Human Condition (1958), Prologue and Sections 1 and 2. How has our distinction between the private and public evolved over time? Arendt uses this history, and chiefly the differences between our time and ancient Athens, to launch a critique of modern society. The fab four conducted this podcast live at the Pittsburgh Continental Philosophy Conference. End song: "Space" by Mark Lint from The Cheese Stands Alone. Read about it. Get this and every episode ad-free by becoming a PEL supporter at partiallyexaminedlife.com/support.

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