Episodios
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This episode of The Liberal Soul is all about video games. I am joined by my two longtime friends Justin and Matt to list our top five favourite video games. We also chat along the way about why we love video games, what our earliest memories of them are, what they have done for our lives, and much more. Thanks for listening to the show!
Twitter:
@Liberalsoul87
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In this episode I discuss parts of the book The Conservative Sensibility by the American writer George Will. I wanted to branch out a little and read a book that is infused with Conservative philosophy to chew on. I especially was interested in Conservative philosophy that has no time for the modern manifestation of the alt right and QANON thinking; as well as a philosophy that self identifies as not needing theism. George Will manages to eschew both of those liabilities. In the book I talk about:
- The universality of human nature
- Natural Rights at the heart of the American founding - and the political philosophical backdrop to American life today is whether governments job is to secure rights for its citizens (Conservatism) or grant rights to its citizens (Progressivism)
- Natural Rights as a heuristic
- The three liberalisms in American political history
- Ignorance as an inevitable element is mass centralization
- Ingratitude as a function of intellectuals and bureaucrats
- Conservatism without Theism
- Living a flourishing life
Thanks for listening! If you want to get a hold of me you can:
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@liberalsoul87
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This is the second part of two on the book The Constitution of Knowledge by Jonathan Rauch. In this episode I discuss elements of the book such as:
James Madison as a harbinger for the Constitution of Knowledge, the Falibilist and Empirical rules, earned authority and credibility, the reality based community is not the only community, a lesson from wikipedia, innovation in the social and political world, being thick skinned, cancelling as performance, what to say, free expression as protecting minority rights, walking away and not taking the bait, and sticking to what the reality based community has found to be factually accurate.
Thank you so much for listening to The Liberal Soul.
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@liberalsoul87
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This is part one of a two parter on the book The Constitution of Knowledge by Jonathan Rauch. This book is about how we socially gather knowledge, and how it is distributed and adhered to in what Rauch calls the reality based community. I conceived of this book as being related to the liberal soul in the idea that knowledge is about disconfirmation; thus is something we only have provisionally, but still with degrees of certainty. This formulation always allows for further work to be done without ever having a final goal of knowledge.
In part one I discuss different backgrounds to Rauch's conception of the Consitution of Knowledge, and what it stands to give us in life (hint: knowledge, freedom and peace). Enjoy!
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For this episode I do a book that I wasn't even thinking of doing for this podcast before I started reading it. It's The Life Narrative of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave. There were a number of points of this book that struck me as relevant to The Liberal Soul; so I jotted them down. In this episode I discuss: birthdays, seperation from a parent, unjust punishments, slavery and the Soviet Union, rock bottoms, bad faith actors, meritocracy and cheating.
Thank you for listening to The Liberal Soul. If you are interested in the full catalogue here is the link:
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In this episode of The Liberal Soul I talk all things Ultimate Frisbee with my friends Tobias Gray and Nicole Perrin. We chat about our first encounters with the sport, the physicality of it, the many ways which it differs from other sports, the social and communal elements within it, and why we love to spend our free time engaged in Ultimate.
This episode was a blast, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. If you enjoy The Liberal Soul you can find all episodes at this link:
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Thanks again for listening, you found The Liberal Soul.
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Through no fault of my own, I am going back to Free Will! I am joined today on the podcast by Christian Cacibauda to talk once again about Free Will (with the primary text being Free Will by Sam Harris). Christian is an old friend from my Korea days and I thought it would be fun to chat with him about the concept because of our shared interest in Harris's work. We take a serpintine path in this episode, but along the way we discuss:
- Historicism, Fate, many examples of Free Will not existing, our thoughts on how this would shake up our lives, how a lack of Free Will could undermine our institutions, some personal anecdotes on the topic, and how Harris mis-emphasizes what people care about in this debate.
This episode was a ton of fun and I can't wait to have Christian back on the podcast. Please subscribe to the show on the podcast app of your choice to get new episodes when they are released.
The Liberal Soul
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Welcome to part two of my episodes on the book Letters To A Young Contrarian by Christopher Hitchens. In the continuation of the book, in this episode I talk about: being a self appointed thinker, how being a good friend sometimes means imposing yourself into your friends delusions, the universalism of people and how everywhere suffers from the narcissism of the small difference, how people everywhere just want the unquenchable sense of dignity, the uses and disuses of humor in dissidence, the next great goals for dissidents, and the importance of inspiration in mental and social life. Please see link for what I think is Hitch's most inspiring monologue:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qaBfB-p9Cbg
Thanks again for listening to The Liberal Soul. If you are interested in the full catalogue, here is the link to that:
https://theliberalsoul87.libsyn.com/ -
Welcome to a new episode of The Liberal Soul. This is part one of a two parter on the book Letters To A Young Contrarian by Christopher Hitchens. In December 2021 it was the ten year anniversary of the death of Hitch. Because of the impact Hitchens had on my intellectual development, I wanted to do an episode(s) on him. Letters being his most philosophical book, it seemed the appropriate one. In part one I muse on ideas from the book such as: how contrarian is a slightly misleading word considering what this book is about, being principled over partisan, anti-scapegoating, the As If principle and its relationship to Highest Common Denominator, moral triage, don't go thereism, and standing up to a crowd.
Links:
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In this short bonus episode I meditate on why Christmas is such a wonderful holiday beyond its religious affiliations.
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This episode is a celebration of the life and impact of Christopher Hitchens. December 15th, 2021 is the ten year anniversary of his death, so Cole and I discuss all things Hitchens in memorial. Both Cole and I were introduced to Hitchens through the religion angle, but there was so much more to his life and career. We free associate on his charm, intelligence, humor, wit and how he became must see Youtube. We also wax a bit on Hitchens as Quality (in a Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance sense), and finally give our thoughts on why Hitchens matters. Enjoy the episode!
Here is the link to Hitchens Free Speech debate in Toronto from 2006:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDap-K6GmL0&t=27s -
For this episode of The Liberal Soul I have borrowed a bonus episode from my other podcast Really True Fiction. For that episode, I recorded a chat with my RTF cohost (David Parker) and guest (Josiah Martinoski) on the 2021 film Dune; directed by Denis Villeneuve. This was a follow up to a recording about a year earlier on the novel Dune which was a full episode on RTF. Please check out that episode if you are interested.
In this episode the three of us discuss all things Dune from the new film and everything in between. Even though this wasn't initially intended as a Liberal Soul episode, I think it fits the bill. Enjoy!
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Welcome back to another episode of The Liberal Soul. This episode is a hashing out of something I have been thinking about for a while, as well as a concept alluded to in episode 4 of this podcast with Cole Kander. It is that I have always considered Religion to be much too broad of a term; thus allowing for confusing disagreement and talking past one another when debating its merits. As such, I have broken the concept of religion (specifically Christianity for this episode) into four separate categories in order to specify what is or isn't useful about them. Namely they are: Empirical claims about the world, Metaphysical claims about the world, the Social Ethic that comes with religion, and the Psychology of the stories.
My argument is that basically the first two are incorrect, completed, non sensical or damaging aspects of what we call religion and should be more or less discarded. But also that the latter two contain much wisdom, compassion and insight and deserve to be incorporated into modern life more tightly.
Either way, religion is not a useful term all on its own, and this is my first stab at asking what we are talking about at any given point under the rubric of "religion". Below are the time stamps for each of the four concepts. Enjoy!
Empiricism - 14:25
Metaphysics - 25:17
Social Ethics - 35:30
Psychology - 46:15
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Welcome to the last part of a three part series on the book The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. In this final episode I talk about:
- What it's like to live in fear with no peace of mind - which means no psychological freedom
- The betrayals in the Soviet Union - and how they are a little bit reminiscent of cancel culture
- The great lie - cliches and slogans and slave psychology
- The kids that are guarding him - like the puppies in Animal Farm
- Expansion of the enemy group will be inevitable when your Utopia not realized
- How there is no freedom to opt out of Utopia - a regime being irrelevant is insufferable
Thank you so much for listening. I will be back soon with another episode.
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This is part two of a three part series on the book The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. If you have not yet listened to part one I would recommend you do as it sets the context for the book and the episodes I am doing on it. In this episode I discuss the parts of the book that have to do with:
- The over capacity of the prison cells as well as the implications that has for basic human functions
- When the concentration camps started in the Soviet Union as well as the estimated amount of lives lost in said Union.
- All of the imaginative ways people could violate Rule 58 (political agitation)
- What it was like for the Communists who got arrested
- Particular forms of Soviet Logic
- The weeding out process of the guards until it was only the cruelest people left
Thanks again for listening! If you want to get in touch with me you can send an email to [email protected].
You can also follow on Twitter: @liberalsoul87 or search for The Liberal Soul on Facebook.
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In this episode of The Liberal Soul I begin the book The Gulag Archipelago by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Solzhenitsyn was a Russian novelist, essayist, dissident and one of the great moral titans of the twentieth century. Largely thanks to his courage the rest of the world learned in depth what was going on behind the Iron Curtain in the Soviet Union during the Stalin years. In part one I talk about Solzhenitsyn's observations on:
- How the Party would arrest people - and how eventually people felt relief at being arrested
- That this was happening from the start - group guilt was an essential part of the Soviet Unions ethos
- The performative and theatrical nature of the Soviet Union - because its not easy in a bureaucracy when you are bringing value
- Soviet relativity - but the bullet is absolute.
- The people who don't think or feel - these will be the interrogators in your society.
- The line of good and evil runs through everyone's heart. Ideologues don't think this.
- Insight on ideology in general - the ability to justify beliefs and behaviours.
Thanks to everyone who listens to this podcast. I will be back with more episodes on The Gulag Archipelago.
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For this episode I (only begin) tackling the concept of Free Will and it's relationship to our liberal lives. I use the short book Free Will by Sam Harris as a springboard to discuss to my thoughts on this concept; and why I think it's been a little misunderstood in the culture since his book was published in 2012. (At least to the extent it's been in the culture at all haha). Some of the things I talk about are:
- Framing the concept of Free Will different than Harris
- Volition is the kind of free will we care about because it manifests itself in the social world
- That there has been a confusion about Free Will that comes from Christian metaphysics and its attempts to solve the Problem of Evil
- A poker analogy for what part of the game (real life) we care about
- Some musical examples to illustrate my point (PS. I mention in the recording that I had perfect syllable fidelity for the Harry Potter song. I don't know if that is true actually, but it is very close if not).
- A tennis analogy for morality
- A special surprise at the end.
Thanks again for listening to The Liberal Soul. I hope you enjoy and please give a rating or review if you listen on Apple Podcasts. Here is the link to the show as well:
https://theliberalsoul87.libsyn.com/
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What are we talking about when we are talking about doing science? How is doing science different from the other forms that we call knowledge or discovery? This is the philosophical task at hand covered by Karl Popper in his work Conjectures and Refutations. I have already done several episodes on Popper's book The Open Society And Its Enemies; but I thought it would be fruitful to talk a little as well about some of the philosophical underpinnings of the scientific method as they strike me as similar to the concept of fallibility which is so crucial in understanding liberalism.
In this episode I discuss Popper's notions on:
- The problem of demarcation in science
- The difference between asking "How do you know that?" vs "How can be best eliminate errors?"
- Criticizing our own theories if we can - Critical Rationalism
- Verificationism actually a weakness of a theory, not a strength of it.
- Scientific theories are risky - and can be disproved by certain observations
- Irrefutability a vice
- Dogmatic thinking in line with verification thinking and critical thinking in line with scientific thinking
- Using philosophy to solve problems outside of philosophy - its about problem solving not just internal gazing
I hope you enjoy another episode from the unperishable Karl Popper.
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I am pleased to be joined by guests Brady Gavin and Danica Weager in this episode of The Liberal Soul to talk all about travelling and visiting different places around the world. Some of the things we talk about are:
- Where in the world we have all been
- How travel affects perspective
- How easy it can be to get along with people in other countries
- Weird travel stories and highlights
- Environmentalism in travel
- Travel as interconnectedness
Thanks again everyone. Please subscribe to The Liberal Soul if you like the podcast.
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This episode is a little bit more personal than most of the previous solo ones. In this episode, I discuss the Greek myth of Prometheus. I subsequently talk about my concept of a Promethean and how they relate to the liberal soul. After, I relay a few honorable mentions, plus my top five Prometheans that have given me fire in my life. There is no source text for this episode (other than the myth itself), so it's a little bit more spontaneous than most of the solo episodes. I hope you enjoy it. Some of the specifics of this episode include:
- The fact that Prometheus translates to foresight
- Go through the Prometheus story; also noticing how great it is that he is saved by a human.
- The difference between a Promethean and a hero
- My top five Prometheans.
Happy Twentieth episode and thank you for listening!
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