13分

Death and Immortality A History of the Infinite

    • 科学

In his series on thought about infinity through the centuries, Adrian Moore has considered the topic through the lenses of philosophy, theology and mathematics.
Now, in this penultimate episode, the focus is firmly on us.
Adrian ponders our finite nature and confronts the question of whether, if we could, we really would want to live for ever. He brings us the Czech composer Janacek’s opera, with its eponymous heroine Elina Makropulos. Her father, the court physician, has procured an elixir of life for her but, far from making her eternally happy, her long life has become unbearably tedious.
Some philosophers fully sympathise with Elina Makropulos and celebrate our finite nature. Others lament it. But as Adrian discovers, there is consensus on one point – the fact that one day our life will end doesn’t rob it of meaning.
Indeed, it is our very sense of our own finite nature, argues John Cottingham, Professor Emeritus at Reading University, that produces what St Augustine called ‘the restlessness of the human heart’ - our constant desire to reach out for more.
A Juniper production first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in September 2016.

In his series on thought about infinity through the centuries, Adrian Moore has considered the topic through the lenses of philosophy, theology and mathematics.
Now, in this penultimate episode, the focus is firmly on us.
Adrian ponders our finite nature and confronts the question of whether, if we could, we really would want to live for ever. He brings us the Czech composer Janacek’s opera, with its eponymous heroine Elina Makropulos. Her father, the court physician, has procured an elixir of life for her but, far from making her eternally happy, her long life has become unbearably tedious.
Some philosophers fully sympathise with Elina Makropulos and celebrate our finite nature. Others lament it. But as Adrian discovers, there is consensus on one point – the fact that one day our life will end doesn’t rob it of meaning.
Indeed, it is our very sense of our own finite nature, argues John Cottingham, Professor Emeritus at Reading University, that produces what St Augustine called ‘the restlessness of the human heart’ - our constant desire to reach out for more.
A Juniper production first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in September 2016.

13分

科学のトップPodcast

超リアルな行動心理学
FERMONDO
佐々木亮の宇宙ばなし
佐々木亮
早稲田大学Podcasts 博士一歩前
早稲田大学広報室
科学のラジオ ~Radio Scientia~
ニッポン放送
サイエントーク
研究者レンとOLエマ
a scope ~リベラルアーツで世界を視る目が変わる~
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