33 集

Whether we think about them or not, the people and institutions around us impact every aspect of our lives. In our workplaces, families, churches, or simply walking down the street every day, there are hidden influences on our behavior and outcomes. Brian Lowery is a professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, and a social psychologist by training. Join Brian for Know What You See, where he talks to people from a wide range of backgrounds and perspectives about their experiences with the social forces framing our world.

Know What You See with Brian Lowery Brian S. Lowery

    • 科學

Whether we think about them or not, the people and institutions around us impact every aspect of our lives. In our workplaces, families, churches, or simply walking down the street every day, there are hidden influences on our behavior and outcomes. Brian Lowery is a professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, and a social psychologist by training. Join Brian for Know What You See, where he talks to people from a wide range of backgrounds and perspectives about their experiences with the social forces framing our world.

    Transforming Life Through Death

    Transforming Life Through Death

    We’ve been looking at the forces in our lives that shape who we are and who we can be: our relationships, our social identities, our ability to choose. But all of this exists in the shadow of the knowledge that we will all die. This is so terrifying that most of us try to avoid thinking or talking about it. But what would change if we were better prepared for death and dying? How would it transform our lives right now?

    Guest: Adriana Prosser, Death Doula
    For more about Brian Lowery go to knowwhatyousee.com.

    • 32 分鐘
    Awe: a Pathway to Meaning

    Awe: a Pathway to Meaning

    In the day-to-day of our lives, how often do we feel truly moved? Many of us think we have to get away from our daily reality to experience awe--the feeling that something is so wondrous and mysterious it's a little scary. It can feel like only extraordinary encounters with say art or majestic experiences of nature evoke awe, and we are left with too little of it. But maybe we can learn to cultivate awe and by doing so bring greater meaning to our lives.


    Guest:

    Dacher Keltner, Professor of Psychology at UC Berkeley, founder and director of the Greater Good Science Center, and host of the podcast The Science of Happiness.

    • 29 分鐘
    Is Free Will Real?

    Is Free Will Real?

    We like to believe that we are masters of our own fate, that we are the cause of our choices and actions. But what if that's not true? Imagine that all of our choices and actions are simply the product of history—whether that goes back one minute or 1000 years—and biological and environmental forces that we often don’t even understand. In this episode we're exploring the question of whether free will exists and whether we should even want it to.

    Brian’s guest is Robert Sapolsky: Professor of Biology, Neurology, Neurological Sciences, and Neurosurgery at Stanford University and author of Determined: A Science of Life without Free Will.

    • 36 分鐘
    Blurring the Boundaries of Race

    Blurring the Boundaries of Race

    Race and gender are thought by many to be immutable features of our biology. In some places and spaces, we see significant challenges to this way of thinking about gender, but the biological view of race has proved more durable. How do we understand racial identity from individual and community perspectives? What’s changing about how we define race and how that shapes our interactions with the world around us?

    Our guest:

    Rebecca Tuvel: Associate Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Rhodes College.

    • 39 分鐘
    Society, Self and Gender

    Society, Self and Gender

    For many of us, gender is an important part of how we understand ourselves. It affects everything, from the way we present ourselves physically, to how we make sense of others' interactions with us. But what determines our gender? The answer to this question is more complicated than we might think. The way we understand gender can reveal a lot about who we are and who we can be.

    Our guests:

    Schuyler Bailer: author, educator, American swimmer and advocate for LGBTQ+ rights.

    Rebecca Tuvel: Associate Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Rhodes College.

    • 36 分鐘
    Watching Work…from Home

    Watching Work…from Home

    With so many of us now working at home or on a hybrid schedule, the line between our employment and our personal lives has been blurring. What does work/life balance mean when the boundaries keep shifting? What does our nostalgia for pre-pandemic workplace comedies like The Office say about who we are and who we used to be? And is the dystopian drama series Severance a warning, or a kind of wish fulfillment?

    Guests:

    Dr. Pamela Rutledge, Director of the Media Psychology Research Center, Fielding Graduate University

    Katie Glasser, production intern

    For more about host Brian Lowery, go to knowwhatyousee.com.

    • 26 分鐘

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