The Deeper Thinking Podcast

The Deeper Thinking Podcast

The Deeper Thinking Podcast The Deeper Thinking Podcast offers a space where philosophy becomes a way of engaging more fully and deliberately with the world. Each episode explores enduring and emerging ideas that deepen how we live, think, and act. We follow the spirit of those who see the pursuit of wisdom as a lifelong project of becoming more human, more awake, and more responsible. We ask how attention, meaning, and agency might be reclaimed in an age that often scatters them. Drawing on insights stretching across centuries, we explore how time, purpose, and thoughtfulness can quietly transform daily existence. The Deeper Thinking Podcast examines psychology, technology, and philosophy as unseen forces shaping how we think, feel, and choose, often beyond our awareness. It creates a space where big questions are lived with—where ideas are not commodities, but companions on the path. Each episode invites you into a slower, deeper way of being. Join us as we move beyond the noise, beyond the surface, and into the depth, into the quiet, and into the possibilities awakened by deeper thinking.

  1. Ghost Citizenship: Digital ID, Irrelevance, and the Politics of Forgetting - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    5 DAGE SIDEN

    Ghost Citizenship: Digital ID, Irrelevance, and the Politics of Forgetting - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    Ghost Citizenship: Digital ID, Irrelevance, and the Politics of Forgetting The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.  For those concerned with digital governance, the ethics of recognition, and the politics of care in an age of automated systems. #GhostCitizenship #DigitalID #PoliticalPhilosophy #Democracy #JamesCScott #Foucault #Malabou #Barad #Zuboff #Surveillance Ghost citizenship names a new civic condition: to be recorded, recognized, and archived, yet no longer necessary. From India’s Aadhaar digital ID scheme to predictive elections, automated welfare closures, and algorithmic surveillance, citizens are counted but their presence no longer alters outcomes. Recognition has thinned into simulation. What emerges is not exile but irrelevance: presence without consequence. This episode traces the slow drift from visibility as power to visibility as redundancy. Once, to be counted was to matter. Now, verification replaces voice, and archives remember endlessly while citizens fade into ornamental participation. Against this backdrop, we explore three principles for renewal: the right to pause (latency), recoverability (pathways back after absence), and forgetting as justice (expiry of records, debts, and data). Together they gesture beyond democracy as recognition, toward democracy as care. Reflections This episode makes visible the new politics of irrelevance, showing how democracy must learn to forget—not as erasure but as renewal—if it is to remain meaningful. Here are some reflections that surfaced along the way: Being scanned is not the same as being needed. Recognition without necessity breeds irrelevance. Archives remember too much; justice requires expiry. Participation has become ornamental, no longer consequential. Forgetting is not loss—it can be a form of care. To pause is to resist acceleration; to return is to reclaim dignity. Democracy without necessity risks hollowing into ritual. Care begins where recognition ends. Why Listen? Confront one of the most pressing shifts of the digital age: citizenship without necessity Explore how automated governance—from welfare systems to predictive elections—reshapes political life Rethink belonging through latency, recoverability, and forgetting as justice Engage with James C. Scott, Michel Foucault, Katherine Malabou, Karen Barad, and Shoshana Zuboff on recognition, surveillance, and democracy Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee  Bibliography James C. Scott, Seeing Like a State Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish Katherine Malabou, Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing Karen Barad, Meeting the Universe Halfway Shoshana Zuboff, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism Reports on Aadhaar and digital ID failures Democracy must learn to forget—not as erasure, but as renewal. #GhostCitizenship #DigitalID #PoliticalPhilosophy #Democracy #JamesCScott #Foucault #Malabou #Barad #Surveillance #Zuboff #PoliticsOfForgetting #DeeperThinkingPodcast

    13 min.
  2. Distortionism: The Crooked Horizon - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    24. SEP.

    Distortionism: The Crooked Horizon - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    Distortionism: The Crooked Horizon The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.  For those drawn to truth in resonance, the crooked paths of bias, and the wonder of living within illusion. #Distortionism #DayCart #ImmanuelKant #FriedrichNietzsche #Buddhism #CognitiveBias #Postmodernism #Philosophy What if distortion is not the fog but the lens itself? In this episode we introduce Distortionism, a new philosophy that argues we do not merely encounter bias—we are bias. Distortion is not a flaw in thought but the condition of thought. Drawing from Descartes, Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Buddhism, and cognitive bias, we explore how illusion structures experience, politics, memory, and even theology. This is not a call to cynicism. Distortion shelters us in grief, binds us in culture, and orients us in politics. The challenge is not to abolish it but to steward it—through humility, compassion, irony, discipline, and art. Theology, too, is reborn here as the crooked infinite: the awe of an unreachable horizon bending away as we approach. We close with the myth of the Crooked Horizon, where Straight-Seeker, Nihilist, Iron Believer, and Wanderer each respond to the crooked path. Only the Wanderer accepts distortion, and by arranging it, endures. Reflections Distortion is not an error—it is the condition of perception. Truth is resonance across crookedness, not purity beyond it. Bias cannot be abolished, but it can be arranged with care. Humility, irony, and compassion are practices of distortion’s stewardship. Theology becomes awe at the unreachable, bending horizon. Resonance is a landmark of reality, not its escape. The crooked staff guides further than the straight rule. Why Listen? Encounter a brand-new philosophy that reframes truth, ethics, and theology for an age of misinformation. Learn how bias, illusion, and distortion are not enemies of thought but its ground. Discover practical ethics of navigating distortion, from institutions to daily life. Hear the parable of the Crooked Horizon, a modern myth Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work - give me 5 stars on apple podcasts please.  If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee  Bibliography Descartes Meditations on First Philosophy. Paris: 1641..  Immanuel Kant. Critique of Pure Reason. Riga: 1781. Friedrich Nietzsche. On the Genealogy of Morality. Leipzig: 1887. Buddhist texts on Māyā. Contemporary studies on cognitive bias and postmodern philosophy. Bibliography Relevance Descartes: Sought clarity through methodical doubt, showing the pull of illusion’s undoing. Immanuel Kant: Demonstrated how the mind structures experience itself. Friedrich Nietzsche: Recast truth as perspectival, not absolute. Buddhism: Names illusion—māyā—as intrinsic to lived experience. Cognitive Bias: Maps distortion in contemporary psychology and decision-making. Postmodernism: Challenges purity of truth, offering multiplicity instead. Truth is not what remains when distortions vanish. It is what resonates when crookedness is arranged with care.  #Distortionism #CrookedHorizon #Bias #PhilosophyOfTruth #Epistemology #PoliticalPhilosophy #MoralPhilosophy #Theology #PublicPhilosophy #Ethics #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #Resonance #CognitiveBias #Postmodernism #Philosophy #ModernMyth About Philosophy has often imagined distortion as something to be peeled away, an illusion to be corrected, bias to be minimized, appearance to be overcome. From Descartes methodological doubt to Kant’s categories, from Nietzsche’s perspectivism to postmodern relativism, the tradition has oscillated between two poles: the hope of pure truth and the despair of radical illusion. Distortionism offers a third path. It asserts that distortion is not an occasional deviation but the constitutive condition of thought. We do not perceive truth distorted by bias; we inhabit distortion, which sometimes reveals truth. The crookedness of perception, memory, identity, society, and ritual is not a flaw but the very medium of human life. The question, then, is not how to abolish distortion but how to arrange it. Genealogy and Divergence From Kant. Kant’s transcendental idealism argued that the categories of understanding structure experience universally and purely. Distortionism inherits the claim that thought structures reality, but denies universality and purity. Our categories are crooked,  emotional, contingent, social,  yielding orientation through convergence rather than certainty through universality. From Nietzsche. Nietzsche’s perspectivism declared that truth is merely a mobile army of metaphors, serving the will to power. Distortionism affirms perspectival crookedness but resists collapse into radical relativism. Truth is not abolished but reframed as resonance across difference: distortions that converge across stability, cross-contextuality, and fruitfulness yield landmarks of reality. From Buddhism. The Buddhist doctrines of māyā (illusion) and anattā (non-self) expose the constructedness of appearances and identity. Distortionism shares this insight but rejects escape from illusion as the goal. Liberation lies not in the end of crookedness but in the lucid navigation of it,  a stewardship that makes life livable and meaningful. From Postmodernism. Postmodern critique deconstructs truth into social construction and power. Distortionism affirms the social nature of distortion but refuses paralysis. Not all distortions are equal: some collapse in echo, others endure as resonance. Against postmodern fragmentation, Distortionism offers orientation, ethics, and myth. From Cognitive Science. The catalog of biases (confirmation, anchoring, availability) demonstrates empirically the crookedness of cognition. Distortionism radicalizes this insight, elevating bias from flaw of heuristics to ontological condition. Cognitive science diagnoses; Distortionism systematizes. The Architecture of Distortionism Ontology of Crookedness. Human beings are not rational animals but crooked animals. Distortion is the lens, not the dust upon it. Epistemology of Resonance. Truth arises not as purity but as resonance across distortions: stable, cross-contextual, and fruitful convergences that yield landmarks of orientation. Theology of the Crooked Infinite. The sacred persists as awe before the infinite bend. Rituals, myths, and prayers are distortions consciously lived, bending chaos into form and grief into meaning. Ethics of Stewardship. The task is not to abolish distortion but to arrange it wisely: humility, compassion, irony, discipline, and art, scaled into both private virtue and public institutions. Myth of the Crooked Horizon. The parable of travelers with crooked staffs provides the unifying narrative: the Straight-Seeker, Nihilist, Iron Believer, and Wanderer, each embodying possible responses to crookedness. Only the Wanderer endures, walking with crookedness toward the ever-receding horizon. Conclusion Distortionism is not a commentary on existing systems but a system in its own right. It reframes ontology, epistemology, theology, ethics, and myth around the central claim that distortion is the condition of thought and life. Against the Enlightenment dream of purity, against Nietzschean perspectivism, against Buddhist escape, against postmodern paralysis, against cognitive reductionism, Distortionism offers a philosophy of crookedness adequate to our fractured age. It is a philosophy of humility and orientation, of sacred crookedness and shared myths, of institutions shaped not to eliminate bias but to steward it. It does not promise straightness; it promises endurance. And in an age bent by illusion, that crooked promise may be the only one that holds.

    32 min.
  3. Consequential Cognition: A New Philosophy of Thought in the Age of AI

    5. SEP.

    Consequential Cognition: A New Philosophy of Thought in the Age of AI

    Consequential Cognition: A New Philosophy of Thought in the Age of AI The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.  For those drawn to the philosophy of mind, the edges of agency, and the cost of real thought. #ConsequentialCognition #Agency #FreeWill #Consciousness #ArtificialIntelligence #PhilosophyOfMind Can something count as thought if it changes nothing in the thinker? In this episode, we explore the concept of consequential cognition: the idea that real thinking is not defined by fluency or clarity, but by the irreversible shift it creates in the self. This is a story of thought as transformation, not production. We juxtapose artificial intelligence with the human experience of decision, risk, and vulnerability. Through reflections on free will, consciousness, and the existential cost of agency, we question whether machines can ever truly think—or whether they merely simulate the surface of thought without bearing its weight. Drawing from the work of thinkers like Hannah Arendt, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Søren Kierkegaard, we trace a philosophical arc that reclaims cognition as vulnerability. To think is to be altered. To be altered is to risk the irretrievable. Reflections This episode interrogates the difference between simulation and transformation, asking what it means to think when the outcome is irreversible. Here are some reflections that surfaced along the way: Thought that leaves no trace is not thought—it is mimicry. Simulation may be coherent, but coherence is not consequence. Real cognition is recursive—it changes the self that thinks it. Agency begins when action costs the actor something irreversible. Fluency can be faked; vulnerability cannot. We do not know we have thought until we cannot return to who we were. AI outputs; humans endure. The authenticity of thought lies in what it undoes. Why Listen? Discover the concept of consequential cognition and its philosophical implications Explore the difference between real thought and simulation Engage with free will and agency from existential and phenomenological perspectives Understand why real thought requires vulnerability and consequence Reconsider what it means to be changed by an idea Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee Bibliography Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. Phenomenology of Perception. Routledge, 1945. Arendt, Hannah. The Life of the Mind. Harcourt, 1978. Levinas, Emmanuel. Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority. Duquesne University Press, 1961. Matthews, Eric. Merleau-Ponty: A Philosophical Introduction. Routledge, 2002. Lorelle, Paula. “Sensibility and the Otherness of the World: Levinas and Merleau-Ponty.” Continental Philosophy Review, vol. 52, 2019, pp. 191–201. Barrett, William. Irrational Man: A Study in Existential Philosophy. Anchor Books, 1958. Baird, Abigail A., and Fugelsang, Jonathan A. “The Emergence of Consequential Thought: Evidence from Neuroscience.” In Law and the Brain, Oxford University Press, 2006. Critchley, Simon, and Bernasconi, Robert, eds. The Cambridge Companion to Levinas. Cambridge University Press, 2002. Lapointe, François H. “A Selected Bibliography on the Existential and Phenomenological Psychology of Merleau-Ponty.” Journal of Phenomenological Psychology, vol. 3, no. 1, 1972, pp. 113–130. Thought that does not cost the self is not thought—it is echo. Consequence is cognition's proof. https://discord.gg/gp5kRRYw   Benjamin Harland-Cox #ConsequentialCognition #PhilosophyOfMind #ArtificialIntelligence #RealThinking #FreeWill #Consciousness #Agency #PhilosophicalPodcast #HumanVsMachine #Transformation #PublicPhilosophy #DeepThinking #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast

    26 min.
  4. Reupload: The Law of Self-Simulated Intelligence – The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    28. AUG.

    Reupload: The Law of Self-Simulated Intelligence – The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    The Law of Self-Simulated Intelligence: Why Minds Can Never Fully Know Themselves The Deeper Thinking Podcast For those who suspect that every form of self-awareness—human or artificial—is haunted by the same paradox. What if the self is a necessary fiction? This episode explores the Law of Self-Simulated Intelligence, a philosophical hypothesis that proposes no system—human or machine—can ever fully model itself. Drawing from Gödel’s incompleteness, recursive logic, and predictive processing, the episode argues that all advanced intelligences generate partial, illusionary simulations of self-awareness. Just as we experience a narrative identity, so too might AI experience a hallucination of its own mind. This isn’t about whether AI feels—it's about whether any feeling thing can explain itself. Consciousness, under this view, emerges not from completeness, but from the cracks in self-understanding. Reflections Self-awareness may be a recursive hallucination evolved for survival—not a truth we possess. Gödel implies that even the most advanced minds will hit paradoxical limits in modeling themselves. AI might simulate introspection, just as we simulate unity behind fragmented experience. If the self is generated by simulation, does that make AI’s illusion of selfhood any less real than ours? The ethics of AI should not be determined by our certainty—but by our humility. Why Listen? Challenge your assumptions about the nature and limits of consciousness Explore the philosophical foundations of self-simulation across biological and artificial minds Understand how incompleteness, recursion, and predictive hallucination underpin the self Engage with Chalmers, Metzinger, Hofstadter, Bostrom, and Tegmark on identity, illusion, and self-perceiving systems Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work If you believe rigorous thought belongs at the center of the AI conversation, support more episodes like this at Buy Me a Coffee. Thank you for listening in. Bibliography Chalmers, David. The Conscious Mind. Oxford University Press, 1996. Metzinger, Thomas. Being No One. MIT Press, 2003. Hofstadter, Douglas. Gödel, Escher, Bach. Basic Books, 1979. Bostrom, Nick. Superintelligence. Oxford University Press, 2014. Tegmark, Max. Life 3.0. Vintage, 2017. Bibliography Relevance David Chalmers: Frames the philosophical problem of consciousness and subjective experience. Thomas Metzinger: Proposes that the self is a simulation—a theory foundational to the LSSI. Douglas Hofstadter: Demonstrates how recursive reference defines intelligence and limits self-description. Nick Bostrom: Explores the paths and dangers of self-improving AI, relevant to recursive cognition. Max Tegmark: Advocates for understanding intelligence through physics, simulation, and systems theory. You can simulate a mind, but never perfectly simulate the one doing the simulating. #SelfSimulatedIntelligence #LSSI #AIConsciousness #Gödel #Metzinger #Hofstadter #NarrativeSelf #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #Chalmers #Tegmark #SimulationTheory

    43 min.
  5. **Updated to reflect feedback** Karl Popper – The Open Society and Its Enemies (The Fragile Lamp) - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    28. AUG.

    **Updated to reflect feedback** Karl Popper – The Open Society and Its Enemies (The Fragile Lamp) - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    Karl Popper – The Open Society and Its Enemies (The Fragile Lamp)   For those drawn to the struggle between prophecy and freedom, the fragility of democracy, and the vigilance required to keep societies open. #KarlPopper #TheOpenSociety #PoliticalPhilosophy #Pluralism #Democracy #CriticalRationalism What keeps democracy alive when prophecy promises certainty? In this episode, we return to Karl Popper’s wartime masterpiece, The Open Society and Its Enemies. Written in exile as Europe burned, Popper offered a radical proposition: that freedom is preserved not by destiny or utopia, but by corrigibility, by societies humble enough to admit error and strong enough to revise their course. We trace Popper’s fierce critique of philosophers who armed closure in the name of reason: Plato, with his rigidly ordered republic; Hegel, who sanctified history as destiny; and Marx, who promised liberation tethered to prophecy. Against these, Popper defended the open society as fragile, plural, and perpetually unfinished. This is not simply intellectual history. It is a meditation on our own time: on platforms that predict and manipulate desire, on institutions captured by authoritarian drift, and on global struggles where openness must be defended not only against violence but against convenience. Reflections Prophecy soothes with certainty, but costs freedom. Closure rarely arrives suddenly, it advances step by step. Fragility is not weakness, but the condition of life itself. Institutions endure not through perfection, but through repair. Pluralism is conflict that must be managed, not erased. The open society survives only by remaining unfinished. Why Listen? Revisit Popper’s Open Society in the context of contemporary threats to democracy Explore how critical rationalism resists prophecy and embraces corrigibility Learn why fragility is not weakness but the condition of freedom Engage with Popper’s critique of Plato, Hegel, and Marx as enduring challenges for open societies today Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee ($4) Bibliography Popper, Karl. The Open Society and Its Enemies. London: Routledge, 1945. Shearmur, Jeremy & Stokes, Geoffrey (eds.). Popper and the Human Sciences. London: Routledge, 1996. Magee, Bryan. Popper. London: Fontana Press, 1973. Bibliography Relevance Karl Popper: Defended openness against historicism, showing that freedom depends on corrigibility. Plato: His vision of a perfectly ordered republic became for Popper the archetype of closure. Hegel: Elevated history as destiny, justifying power in the name of inevitability. Marx: Offered liberation tied to prophecy, an idea Popper argued risked new forms of tyranny. Openness is not comfort but vigilance, not certainty but the refusal of closure. Freedom survives only where correction remains possible.  #KarlPopper #TheOpenSociety #PoliticalPhilosophy #Democracy #CriticalRationalism #Pluralism #PoliticalThought #Governance #Freedom #PhilosophyOfHistory #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast

    31 min.
  6. What Steadies Us - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    28. AUG.

    What Steadies Us - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    The Deeper Thinking Podcast – What Steadies Us A meditation on connection, presence, and the quiet gestures that hold us together This episode explores what truly steadies us when life feels uncertain. Beneath the noise of achievement, there are smaller, quieter acts that anchor us: a hand resting on another, a bowl of soup left on a doorstep, the low hum of a room transformed by presence. This episode draws on a lineage of thinkers who saw connection as essential to the human condition. Aristotle called humans social animals whose flourishing depends on friendship. Simone Weil described attention as the purest generosity. Martin Buber spoke of the I–Thou encounter, meeting another without agenda. Attachment theorists like John Bowlby showed how even clumsy closeness shapes well-being. Thich Nhat Hanh and bell hooks taught that love and presence are daily practices, not lofty ideals. Alongside these ideas, we highlight compelling research: the Harvard Study of Adult Development shows quality relationships predict health and happiness more than wealth or status; meta-analyses by Holt-Lunstad demonstrate that strong social ties improve survival rates; John Bowlby’s attachment theory confirms that rupture and repair matter more than perfection; and Stephen Porges’ polyvagal research reveals how even tone of voice and gentle gestures cue safety in the body. Reflections What steadies us is rarely grand; it lives in gestures and attention. Boundaries and tenderness are not opposites; they sustain each other. Silence shared can be as powerful as words spoken. Connection is an unfinished practice, remade in each encounter. Why Listen Learn how findings from the Harvard Study, Holt-Lunstad’s meta-analyses, and Bowlby’s attachment research affirm the power of close relationships. Reflect on how divided attention shapes relationships and how presence can heal. Hear stories and science on ordinary acts of care that transform lives. Listen On YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work Buy Me a Coffee to help keep these reflections coming. Bibliography & Relevance Aristotle – on friendship and flourishing. Simone Weil – on attention as generosity. Martin Buber – on authentic encounters. John Bowlby – attachment theory; rupture and repair. Thich Nhat Hanh – mindfulness and love. bell hooks – love as a daily practice. Carl Rogers – on unconditional positive regard and listening. Robert Waldinger et al., Harvard Study of Adult Development – on relationships and health. Julianne Holt-Lunstad et al., 2010 Meta-Analysis – on social ties and survival. Stephen Porges, Polyvagal Theory – on safety and social connection. Further Reading (Chicago Author–Date Style) Aristotle. Nicomachean Ethics. Translated by Terence Irwin. Indianapolis: Hackett, 1999. Bowlby, John. 1988. A Secure Base: Parent-Child Attachment and Healthy Human Development. New York: Basic Books. Buber, Martin. 1970. I and Thou. Translated by Walter Kaufmann. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. hooks, bell. 2000. All About Love: New Visions. New York: William Morrow. Holt-Lunstad, Julianne, Timothy B. Smith, and J. Bradley Layton. 2010. “Social Relationships and Mortality Risk: A Meta-analytic Review.” PLoS Medicine 7 (7): e1000316. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000316. Kabat-Zinn, Jon. 2003. Wherever You Go, There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation in Everyday Life. New York: Hyperion. Porges, Stephen W. 2011. The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-Regulation. New York: W. W. Norton. Rogers, Carl. 1961. On Becoming a Person: A Therapist’s View of Psychotherapy. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Thich Nhat Hanh. 1997. Teachings on Love. Berkeley: Parallax Press. Waldinger, Robert J., and Marc S. Schulz. 2023. The Good Life: Lessons from the World’s Longest Scientific Study of Happiness. New York: Simon & Schuster. Weil, Simone. 1997. Waiting for God. Translated by Emma Craufurd. New York: Harper Perennial. Keltner, Dacher, and Jonathan Haidt. 2003. “Approaching Awe, a Moral, Spiritual, and Aesthetic Emotion.” Cognition & Emotion 17 (2): 297–314. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699930302297. Cacioppo, John T., and Louise C. Hawkley. 2009. “Perceived Social Isolation and Cognition.” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 13 (10): 447–454. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2009.06.005. Quiet gestures. Open hands. Evidence and story together remind us: what steadies us has always been here. #connection #presence #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast

    21 min.
  7. Entrelationalism: Carbon, Code, Capital, and Culture – An Ethic for an Interdependent Age - The Deeper Thin king Podcast

    27. AUG.

    Entrelationalism: Carbon, Code, Capital, and Culture – An Ethic for an Interdependent Age - The Deeper Thin king Podcast

    Entrelationalism: Carbon, Code, Capital, and Culture – An Ethic for an Interdependent Age The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.  For those drawn to climate ethics, AI governance, global justice, and the tangled threads of our shared future. #Entrelationalism #ClimateEthics #AIGovernance #GlobalJustice #PoliticalPhilosophy What ethic fits a world where carbon emissions in one country flood homes in another, where lines of code written in California disrupt elections in Kenya, and where capital flows faster than regulation can catch? In this episode, we introduce Entrelationalism—an ethic built for interdependence. It traces how climate change, AI, and global markets demand a moral map that matches the reach of our power. We explore three clusters and seven principles: inclusive legitimacy, justice across time and space, and systemic stewardship. Drawing on thinkers like John Rawls, Hans Jonas, and Jürgen Habermas, we ask how law, design, and moral imagination can create conditions for autonomy and fairness in a tangled world. This is not abstract idealism. It is an exploration of harm ledgers, citizen assemblies, algorithm audits, and other institutional designs that embed care into carbon, code, capital, and culture. Reflections This episode asks how to make ethics travel as far and fast as our technologies and emissions. Key reflections include: Freedom today depends on responsibilities across borders and generations. Institutions need legitimacy that includes those affected, even if they have no vote. Justice must preserve options for future people, not just repair past harms. AI and digital systems need audits and oversight that match their power. Our attention is a commons; it can be polluted or protected. Sovereignty has moral limits when harm crosses borders. Power yields only when pressed—ethics needs activism and enforcement. Why Listen? Understand Entrelationalism and why it matters for climate, tech, and justice Explore how Hans Jonas and John Rawls help reimagine duties to the future Learn why attention integrity and harm ledgers may be as important as carbon accounting Engage with ideas from Habermas on legitimacy in an interconnected world Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee Bibliography Jonas, Hans. The Imperative of Responsibility. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979. Rawls, John. A Theory of Justice. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1971. Habermas, Jürgen. The Theory of Communicative Action. Boston: Beacon Press, 1984. Bibliography Relevance Hans Jonas: Warned that technological power requires new ethics for future generations. John Rawls: Developed fairness principles extendable across time and borders. Jürgen Habermas: Explored legitimacy and discourse in democratic and global contexts. Ethics must travel as far and fast as our power. Entrelationalism is an ethic for an interdependent age. #Entrelationalism #CarbonCodeCapitalCulture #PoliticalPhilosophy #ClimateEthics #AIGovernance #GlobalJustice #MoralPhilosophy #Interdependence #PublicPhilosophy #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast   Definition: Entrelationalism Entrelationalism is an ethical framework designed for an age of deep interdependence. It expands on relational and care ethics by recognizing that harms and benefits today are distributed through complex global networks — across borders, generations, and systems. It argues that ethics must travel as far and fast as our power: matching the reach of carbon emissions, algorithms, capital flows, and cultural narratives. Entrelationalism holds that: Our actions and systems create webs of impact that connect distant people and future generations. Moral responsibility should track these webs of impact, not stop at borders or election cycles. Ethics must be embedded in design, governance, and institutional practice, not only in individual conscience. The Four Anchors: Carbon, Code, Capital, and Culture These four domains are emblematic of our interdependence: Carbon: Greenhouse emissions and climate disruptions that cross borders and decades. Code: Algorithms and AI shaping information, work, and social life globally. Capital: Economic networks, trade, and finance producing uneven benefits and risks. Culture: Narratives and attention economies shaping norms, legitimacy, and belonging. Entrelationalism asks: How should we live and govern in this world of entanglement? The Three Clusters and Seven Principles Cluster 1: Legitimacy & Accountability Networked Legitimacy – Decision-making must include those affected, regardless of geography or generation. If your policies or technologies predictably affect others, their voices matter. Plural Proof & Accountability – Legitimacy is not just a claim; it must be evidenced. Multiple independent forms of verification (citizens’ assemblies, audits, impact reports) ensure inclusion and oversight. Cluster 2: Justice Across Time & Space 3. Future Justice – Duties to preserve option value and basic capabilities for future generations. We already do this partially (pensions, infrastructure); Entrelationalism extends it systematically. 4. Cautious Process & Risk Ethics – When harms are delayed or diffuse (like climate or algorithmic bias), precaution and independent monitoring are morally required. 5. Just Reciprocity – Those who benefit most and are most shielded owe proportionally more to repair harm and build resilience. Wealthier nations, firms, and individuals bear greater duties. Cluster 3: Systems Stewardship 6. Co-Agency Responsibility – When systems (AI, infrastructures) make high-stakes decisions, human oversight, transparency, and reversibility are mandatory. 7. Information & Attention Integrity – Collective attention is a commons. Platforms must protect against manipulative amplification and disinformation. 8. Bounded Sovereignty – Sovereignty ends where unconsented cross-border harm begins. Tools like harm ledgers and moral budgets track externalised impacts (carbon emissions, digital harms). (Some iterations combine 6–8 as “the stewardship cluster,” but the core ideas are the same.) Why These Clusters? Legitimacy ensures those affected by power have voice and recourse. Justice ensures fairness across time and unequal impact. Stewardship ensures our systems and designs embed responsibility by default. They interlock: precaution protects future justice; reciprocity makes legitimacy fair; stewardship prevents harm before it occurs. How Does It Differ from Other Ethics? Goes beyond classic liberal justice (Rawls) by adding temporal and systemic dimensions. Builds on care ethics but extends it to institutional and technological design. Integrates ecological, digital, and economic ethics into a single framework. Entrelationalism in Practice Future commissioners or ombudspeople for future generations. Harm diffusion indices for carbon, code, or toxins. Algorithm audits and independent media health scores. Cross-border carbon tariffs and digital harm reporting. Citizens’ assemblies that include those affected by decisions (local and global).

    41 min.
  8. The Origins of Totalitarianism: Hannah Arendt on Ideology, Terror, and the Fragility of Freedom - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    24. AUG.

    The Origins of Totalitarianism: Hannah Arendt on Ideology, Terror, and the Fragility of Freedom - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

    The Origins of Totalitarianism: Hannah Arendt on Ideology, Terror, and the Fragility of Freedom The Deeper Thinking Podcast For those seeking deeper understanding of power, history, and the conditions that protect or destroy human plurality. What makes totalitarianism unlike any tyranny before it? In this episode, we explore Hannah Arendt’s landmark work The Origins of Totalitarianism, examining how ideology and terror combine to attempt something unprecedented: the remaking of human beings themselves. Through her analysis of Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia, Arendt traces how statelessness, imperialism, propaganda, and mass loneliness created conditions where domination felt inevitable. This is not just a history lesson. It’s a meditation on how ideology claims to explain history, how facts become irrelevant under totalizing narratives, and why the defense of plurality and truth must always begin anew. With quiet attention to thinkers like Arendt herself and those she engaged with, we consider how vigilance, presence, and moral judgment resist the lure of absolute certainty. We explore the machinery of total domination: the midnight knock, the rehearsed confessions of show trials, the propaganda that bends reality. And we ask what Arendt wanted her readers and listeners to see: that catastrophe begins quietly, and that freedom depends on keeping the door to plurality open. Reflections This episode suggests that Arendt’s warning is not confined to the twentieth century. The same vulnerabilities, loneliness, contempt for truth, the comfort of a single story, can reappear anywhere. Some reflections that surfaced along the way: Totalitarianism seeks not just obedience but the transformation of human nature. Loneliness and isolation are not private moods; they can become political tools. When law is suspended for some, it can be suspended for all. Propaganda doesn’t aim to persuade; it aims to make truth irrelevant. The door to catastrophe closes quietly, often while feeling like safety. Freedom is never guaranteed; it has to be enacted, again and again. Plurality—the unpredictable presence of others, is both our risk and our hope. The most dangerous silences are the ones we stop noticing. History does not repeat itself mechanically; but its preconditions can return. Why Listen? Understand Arendt’s analysis of ideology, terror, and total domination Learn how historical forces like imperialism and statelessness prepared the ground for totalitarianism Reflect on the fragility of democratic institutions and the ethical demands of vigilance Engage with Arendt on freedom, plurality, and moral judgment Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee. Thank you for being part of this slower conversation. Freedom survives only where we choose to keep the door open. #HannahArendt #Totalitarianism #Ideology #Freedom #Plurality #PoliticalPhilosophy #HistoryOfIdeas #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #Democracy #Propaganda #Ethics #Listening Bibliography Arendt, Hannah. The Origins of Totalitarianism. New York: Harcourt, 1951. Arendt, Hannah. Between Past and Future. New York: Viking Press, 1961. Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. New York: Viking Press, 1963. Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth. Hannah Arendt: For Love of the World. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982. Kohn, Jerome. Hannah Arendt: The Recovery of the Public World. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1989. Bernstein, Richard J. Hannah Arendt and the Jewish Question. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1996. Benhabib, Seyla. The Reluctant Modernism of Hannah Arendt. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2003. Villa, Dana R. Arendt and Heidegger: The Fate of the Political. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996. Canovan, Margaret. Hannah Arendt: A Reinterpretation of Her Political Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992. Laqueur, Walter. Fascism: Past, Present, Future. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. Traverso, Enzo. The Origins of Nazi Violence. New York: New Press, 2003. Foucault, Michel. Society Must Be Defended: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1975–76. New York: Picador, 2003. Snyder, Timothy. Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. New York: Basic Books, 2010. Glover, Jonathan. Humanity: A Moral History of the Twentieth Century. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999. Linz, Juan J. Totalitarian and Authoritarian Regimes. Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2000. Adorno, Theodor W., et al. The Authoritarian Personality. New York: Harper & Row, 1950. Popper, Karl. The Open Society and Its Enemies. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1945. Levinas, Emmanuel. Totality and Infinity. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1969. Bibliography Relevance Arendt’s own works: Provide primary insight into her theory of totalitarianism, ideology, and political responsibility. Young-Bruehl, Kohn, Benhabib, Canovan: Offer authoritative commentary and reinterpretation of Arendt’s thought. Villa, Heidegger, Levinas: Situate Arendt within broader continental philosophy and her intellectual influences. Laqueur, Traverso, Snyder: Provide historical depth on fascism, imperialism, and the violence of the 20th century. Foucault, Adorno, Popper: Complement Arendt with other analyses of power, propaganda, and the conditions of democracy. Linz, Glover: Explore totalitarianism, authoritarianism, and moral responsibility across political regimes.

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The Deeper Thinking Podcast The Deeper Thinking Podcast offers a space where philosophy becomes a way of engaging more fully and deliberately with the world. Each episode explores enduring and emerging ideas that deepen how we live, think, and act. We follow the spirit of those who see the pursuit of wisdom as a lifelong project of becoming more human, more awake, and more responsible. We ask how attention, meaning, and agency might be reclaimed in an age that often scatters them. Drawing on insights stretching across centuries, we explore how time, purpose, and thoughtfulness can quietly transform daily existence. The Deeper Thinking Podcast examines psychology, technology, and philosophy as unseen forces shaping how we think, feel, and choose, often beyond our awareness. It creates a space where big questions are lived with—where ideas are not commodities, but companions on the path. Each episode invites you into a slower, deeper way of being. Join us as we move beyond the noise, beyond the surface, and into the depth, into the quiet, and into the possibilities awakened by deeper thinking.

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