7 episodes

Philosophy considered from a personal perspective in bite sized portions.

Philosopher Brain Philosopher Brain

    • Society & Culture

Philosophy considered from a personal perspective in bite sized portions.

    S1 E5: Plato's Allegory of the Cave

    S1 E5: Plato's Allegory of the Cave

    Imagine a cave.
    Inside there are people chained in place, unable to move even the slightest. The people have been chained in those positions, facing a wall in front of them, since the beginning of their existence.
    Out of sight behind them, there is a fire.
    There are various things moving between the prisoners and the fire, casting shadows on the wall that the prisoners are forced to watch.
    Since the prisoners know nothing other than the shadows on the wall, they believe the shadows to be existence.
    They name the shadows just as people named objects in the ‘real’ world.
    The prisoners spend their existence watching the shadows on the wall, believing it to be all there is to their lives.

    Imagine that one of the prisoners is freed from their chains.
    The person turns around and views the rest of the cave for the first time.
    They realize that what they ‘knew’ to be the world (shadows on the wall) is not all there is to existence.
    The person sees the flame, the objects, and even the other people in the cave.
    The other people explain that what the prisoner thought was the world were only shadows on a wall, meaningless.
    The freed person examines the cave until eventually they leave the cave.
    The light from the Sun hurts their eyes.
    Once their eyes adjust, they see the outside.
    They see plants, water, the sky, the sun.
    They feel the warmth of the light, the coolness of the water, the change of the wind.
    The person returns to the cave to explain the things that they’ve learned since becoming free.
    The other prisoners likely resist this new information.
    They refuse to accept anything other than the shadows on the wall
    If they were free, they might even attempt to kill the person in order to maintain the status quo of the wall.

    • 15 min
    S1 E4 Ethics

    S1 E4 Ethics

    What is right? What is wrong?

    A brief look at some of the influential thoughts on Philosophical Ethics.

    • 15 min
    S1 E3 The Watch on The Beach, W. Paley

    S1 E3 The Watch on The Beach, W. Paley

    What do I question? What don't I question?
    Philosopher Brain describes William Paley's argument and explains how it relates to acceptance of the unknown.

    • 18 min
    Introduction to Philosopher Brain

    Introduction to Philosopher Brain

    I am a philosophy student sharing my thoughts on different philosophical ideas I've studied, and their impact on my thoughts about the world.

    Logo by @BattlemindStudios

    • 3 min
    S1 E1 The Trolley Problem

    S1 E1 The Trolley Problem

    How would you handle a decision of extreme consequences?

    • 11 min
    S1 E2 Heap of Sand / Color Inversion

    S1 E2 Heap of Sand / Color Inversion

    What is a heap of sand? / Can we communicate everything?

    • 17 min

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