Crisis in Perception

Crisis in Perception

Crisis in Perception is a long-form educational podcast examining how we misunderstand the world around us. Using books as entry points, each episode explores history, psychology, economics, science, and power structures to reveal how systems actually work—and why our perceptions so often fail. Clear, evidence-based, and non-tribal. Crisis in Perception uses AI-assisted tools for narration and synthesis in service of long-form educational analysis.

  1. 8 hr ago

    Brain Fart — Why the Mind Chooses Comfort Over Accuracy

    The decisions that feel most independent may sometimes be the ones most shaped by hidden cognitive and environmental pressures. Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Using Brain Fart. Discover Your Flawed Logic, Failures in Common Sense and Intuition, and Irrational Behavior - How to Think Less Stupid by Peter Hollins as an entry point, this episode investigates why irrational behavior is often produced by ordinary mental processes rather than exceptional foolishness. Hollins argues that cognition repeatedly favors speed, belonging, control, confidence, and emotional protection over careful accuracy. The Deep Dive traces how conformity, authority, persuasion, anchoring, priming, reconstructed memory, confirmation bias, cognitive dissonance, and attentional autopilot interact to shape judgments that still feel completely personal. The central systems include cognitive shortcuts, social influence, memory reconstruction, identity protection, and choice architecture. At the center of the investigation is a recurring tension: accuracy versus efficiency, and autonomy versus context. 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/NXciTuk8VoM ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrisisinPerception/posts/brain-fart-why-163921859?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    Brain Fart — Why the Mind Chooses Comfort Over Accuracy
  2. 8 hr ago

    Nailed: Ten Christian Myths That Show Jesus Never Existed at All — How Certainty Is Built

    How does an inherited tradition become accepted history? Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Using Nailed: Ten Christian Myths That Show Jesus Never Existed at All by David Fitzgerald as our lens, this investigation examines the evidentiary system surrounding the historical Jesus. Fitzgerald advances a mythicist argument built around contemporary silence, disputed passages in Josephus, anonymous and textually dependent Gospels, contradictory narratives, and the scarcity of ordinary biographical information in Paul’s letters. The episode presents that argument fairly while examining a broader question: how do repetition, canon formation, institutional preservation, and scholarly path dependence influence what later generations experience as historical certainty? The central systems include textual transmission, source dependence, institutional memory, evidentiary standards, religious identity, and the feedback loop between inherited consensus and reduced scrutiny. 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/B4T1LZ425s0 ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrisisinPerception/posts/nailed-ten-myths-163921279?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    Nailed: Ten Christian Myths That Show Jesus Never Existed at All — How Certainty Is Built
  3. 8 hr ago

    Bart Ehrman and the Quest of the Historical Jesus of Nazareth — How Consensus Becomes Certainty

    When surviving evidence is fragmentary and disputed, how does a scholarly consensus become historical certainty? Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Bart Ehrman and the Quest of the Historical Jesus of Nazareth: An Evaluation of Ehrman’s Did Jesus Exist?, edited by Frank R. Zindler and Robert M. Price, gathers a diverse group of Mythicist writers responding to Bart Ehrman’s defense of Jesus’ historicity. Contributors including Richard Carrier, Earl Doherty, René Salm, D. M. Murdock, David Fitzgerald, Price, and Zindler challenge Ehrman’s methods, factual claims, treatment of opposing scholarship, and reliance on academic consensus. Their arguments do not form one unified theory, and weaknesses in Ehrman’s case would not by themselves demonstrate that Jesus never existed. The deeper system examined here is institutional knowledge certification: the process through which expertise, credentials, accepted methods, professional communities, and repeated citation transform uncertain interpretations into established historical knowledge. The episode traces the tension between quality control and gatekeeping, examines contested criteria of historicity and hypothetical sources, explores debates over Nazareth and comparative religion, and asks whether consensus is evidence—or a signal that evidence has already been evaluated elsewhere. 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/J46L7w1nG78 ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrisisinPerception/posts/bart-ehrman-and-163920636?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    Bart Ehrman and the Quest of the Historical Jesus of Nazareth — How Consensus Becomes Certainty
  4. 19 hr ago

    Trade Wars Are Class Wars — How Inequality Becomes a Global Imbalance

    What looks like a trade conflict between nations may originate in the distribution of income within them. Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Using Trade Wars Are Class Wars: How Rising Inequality Distorts the Global Economy and Threatens International Peace by Matthew C. Klein and Michael Pettis as our lens, this investigation examines how domestic wealth transfers can create international economic instability. Klein and Pettis argue that when workers and retirees receive too little of the income generated by an economy, household consumption falls below production. Wealthier households and corporations save the difference, producing excess capital and goods that must move abroad. The receiving economies are then pressured to absorb these flows through debt, asset bubbles, reduced production, unemployment, or higher consumption financed by borrowing. The episode traces this mechanism through China, Germany, and the United States while exploring the tension between export competitiveness and domestic purchasing power. It also examines savings gluts, balance-of-payments constraints, global finance, institutional persistence, and the political feedback loop that redirects frustration toward foreign nations rather than the internal distributional systems producing the imbalance. 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/HupSnvV_uvA ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrisisinPerception/posts/trade-wars-are-163870635?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    Trade Wars Are Class Wars — How Inequality Becomes a Global Imbalance
  5. 19 hr ago

    Of Education, Fishbowls, and Rabbit Holes — The Academic Fishbowl

    What if students are not failing to learn, but institutions are teaching from a model that misunderstands how learning works? Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Using Of Education, Fishbowls, and Rabbit Holes: Rethinking Teaching and Liberal Education for an Interconnected World by Jane Fried, with Peter Troiano, this episode investigates the hidden assumptions built into modern higher education. Fried challenges the academic fishbowl of objectivity, autonomy, disciplinary separation, and the Cartesian split between mind and body. Viewed structurally, the episode explores how institutions can define legitimate learning so narrowly that they separate knowledge from meaning, cognition from emotion, and classroom instruction from student development. The central systems include institutional epistemology, self-authorship, cultural models of learning, general education, assessment culture, and the incentive structures that reward coverage, efficiency, and measurement even when deeper learning requires reflection, relationship, and personal meaning. 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/BeF2mSXOTXo ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrisisinPerception/posts/of-education-and-163870224?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    Of Education, Fishbowls, and Rabbit Holes — The Academic Fishbowl
  6. 19 hr ago

    Uncounted: The Crisis of Voter Suppression in the United States — How Voting Rules Preserve Power

    The right to vote can exist in law while accumulating barriers make it increasingly difficult to exercise. Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Using Uncounted: The Crisis of Voter Suppression in the United States by Gilda R. Daniels as its lens, this investigation traces the historical and institutional evolution of voter suppression—from Reconstruction and Jim Crow to voter identification requirements, registration purges, deceptive election practices, felon disenfranchisement, and weakened federal oversight. Daniels argues that these measures are connected by more than their unequal effects. They form a recurring political system in which expanded participation can threaten existing power, restrictions can narrow participation, and retained power can produce further restrictions. The episode examines the tension between election integrity and equal access, the transfer of administrative costs from institutions to individual voters, the replacement of preventive oversight with expensive after-the-fact litigation, and the feedback loops that allow exclusionary systems to survive even as their methods change. 📺 Watch on YouTube: [ADD DEEP DIVE LINK] ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: [ADD PATREON POST LINK] If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    Uncounted: The Crisis of Voter Suppression in the United States — How Voting Rules Preserve Power
  7. 1 day ago

    Money, Lies, and God: Inside the Movement to Destroy American Democracy — Networks Behind the Anger

    Political anger may look spontaneous. Katherine Stewart’s reporting asks us to examine the organized infrastructure that selects, finances, and directs it. Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Using Money, Lies, and God: Inside the Movement to Destroy American Democracy by Katherine Stewart as our lens, this investigation explores the network Stewart describes as the Funders, Thinkers, Sergeants, Infantry, and Power Players of America’s antidemocratic movement. Stewart argues that the movement is leadership-driven rather than merely grassroots. Concentrated wealth finances think tanks, legal organizations, media operations, religious networks, and local mobilization. These institutions then translate inequality, cultural anxiety, and distrust into political identity and institutional power. The episode traces the tension between anti-elite rhetoric and billionaire financing, religious liberty and sectarian control, small-government language and coercive authority, and genuine social frustration and the organizations that redirect it. Central systems include dark-money networks, Christian nationalism, reactionary nihilism, public-school conflict, election denial, institutional capture, information bubbles, and the feedback loop connecting inequality to grievance and grievance to concentrated power. 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/Ge1LRErP3JI ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrisisinPerception/posts/money-lies-and-163765688?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    Money, Lies, and God: Inside the Movement to Destroy American Democracy — Networks Behind the Anger
  8. 1 day ago

    The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism — How Networks Build Power

    What appears to be a collection of separate religious controversies may actually be the surface expression of a coordinated political system. Welcome to Crisis in Perception, where we examine the systems shaping our world. Using The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism by Katherine Stewart as our lens, this episode investigates how Christian nationalism converts religious identity, institutional trust, donor funding, political messaging, and legal advocacy into durable political power. Stewart argues that the movement is neither representative of Christianity as a whole nor merely a grassroots response to changing cultural values. Its direction, she contends, comes from an interconnected infrastructure of movement leaders, churches, media organizations, data operations, legal groups, political allies, and wealthy funders. The investigation traces the tension between pluralistic participation and identity-based authority; between sincere personal belief and elite political strategy; and between the language of religious liberty and the material pursuit of funding, access, and institutional control. It also examines the feedback loop through which perceived persecution generates urgency, turnout, donations, and loyalty—producing victories that expand the network’s ability to circulate new threats and mobilize again. Central systems and mechanisms include church-based voter mobilization, donor networks, public subsidies, education privatization, model legislation, judicial strategy, information asymmetry, path dependence, and reinforcing persecution narratives. 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/OOQHblubBEc ❤️ Support / Episode Post on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrisisinPerception/posts/power-inside-of-163764967?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link If these ideas resonate, consider reading the work yourself or borrowing it from your local library. Supporting authors and libraries helps keep critical inquiry accessible. If you value systems-level analysis like this, please follow, rate, and share the project. This content was created using AI-assisted tools for research synthesis, structuring, and narration support. All analysis, framing, and editorial decisions are guided by human judgment as part of the Crisis in Perception project.

    The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism — How Networks Build Power

About

Crisis in Perception is a long-form educational podcast examining how we misunderstand the world around us. Using books as entry points, each episode explores history, psychology, economics, science, and power structures to reveal how systems actually work—and why our perceptions so often fail. Clear, evidence-based, and non-tribal. Crisis in Perception uses AI-assisted tools for narration and synthesis in service of long-form educational analysis.

You Might Also Like