105 episodes

Deep Fried Neurons was started as a storytelling podcast, but now we talk about how we live in a society. While stories are a large chunk of the content shared on the podcast, it also takes deep dives and tries to create conversations that introduce or educate people about known topics, mostly in philosophy - but philosophy learned through history, epistimiology, mythology and lingual studies.

Deep Fried Neurons Podcast DeepFriedNeurons

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 1 Rating

Deep Fried Neurons was started as a storytelling podcast, but now we talk about how we live in a society. While stories are a large chunk of the content shared on the podcast, it also takes deep dives and tries to create conversations that introduce or educate people about known topics, mostly in philosophy - but philosophy learned through history, epistimiology, mythology and lingual studies.

    #106 - Overthinking Interactions on A Hinge Date (Ft. Jean Paul Sartre)

    #106 - Overthinking Interactions on A Hinge Date (Ft. Jean Paul Sartre)

    The Following episode makes sense of one of the 20th century's most prolific, impactful and original existentialist writers: Jean-Paul Sartre. We explore 3 pieces of Literature by Sartre, and how the represent his vehement contention that man is condemned to be free in light of his take on phenomenology. The book explores Sartre's impact on the literary world, his political ideology, and the time of peril that was the two world wars - which deeply impacted him. We also discuss his post war politics and it causing bitter disagreements with erstwhile friends and visits to certain South American islands.



    Suggested Reads:

    Nausea by Jean Paul Sartre

    https://www.amazon.in/Nausea-Penguin-Modern-Classics-Jean-Paul/dp/014118549X



    No Exit by Jean Paul Sartre

    https://www.amazon.in/Three-Other-Plays-Vintage-International/dp/0679725164/ref=sr_1_2?crid=4X2QBK0656VI&keywords=no+exit&qid=1702693504&s=books&sprefix=no+exi%2Cstripbooks%2C268&sr=1-2



    The Age of Reason by Jean Paul Sartre

    https://www.amazon.in/Modern-Classics-Age-Reason-Penguin/dp/0141185287/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3DADHR3ZI17NX&keywords=the+age+of+reason+jean+paul+sartre&qid=1702693536&s=books&sprefix=The+Age+of+Reason%2Cstripbooks%2C213&sr=1-1



    What is Literature? by Jean Paul Sartre

    https://www.amazon.in/What-Literature-134-Routledge-Classics/dp/0415254043/ref=sr_1_1?crid=WVQYLIV8TC9K&keywords=what+is+literature+by+sartre&qid=1702693560&s=books&sprefix=What+is+literature+%2Cstripbooks%2C245&sr=1-1

    • 43 min
    #105 - Perception and Language

    #105 - Perception and Language

    Lugwig Van Wittgenstein wrote Tactatus Logico Philosophicus and Philosophical Investigations centred around a central question: Is language a competent tool to compare expereinces of reality to the end of demystifying it. This episode talks about foundational language in learning psychology, the growth of children in terms of cognitive abilities and how that relates to an operative person cognitively conveying intention. We look at the barrier of language resulting in a sea of context, that causes for Witgenstein's "language game" to have implications in real life governance, and legal procedure.

    Recommended reading:
    Tractatus Logico Philosophicus, Ludwig Wittgenstein
    Philosophical Investigations, Ludwig Wittgenstein
    Psychology - Cicarelli
    Developmental Psychology - Harlow
    K. Puttaswamy V. Union of India
    Criminal Law - Ratan Lal and Dheeraj Lal


    Music: @triggerfish.wut,
    Logo by @edgy.ajji on instagram

    Support me on Patreon!

    https://www.patreon.com/deepfriedneurons

    Or buy me a coffee at: www.buymeacoffee.com/deepfriedneuron

    Follow me on social media:

    www.instagram.com/deepfriedneurons

    • 45 min
    #104 - Blasphemy

    #104 - Blasphemy

    Blasphemy, according to a quick google search is "Actions or speech that is done in irreverence or dismissal of God". To no one's surprise there are laws in place even today in more than a comfortable number of countries to punish blasphemy as a crime. In this episode, we briefly discuss the origin of this phenomenon, and see why is it that the state chooses to use it's monopoly of violence over speech and literature against God. In continuation of the discussion, we discuss the rationale given by the Supreme Court of India, as the justification for the constitutional validity of the blasphemy law in the Democratic Republic of India. Additionally, we discuss the the largest incident of blasphemy in the 20th century - the fatwa against Salman Rushdie and the complexities of having geographical granted autonomy to write and say something, while another geographical and cultural taboo to the extent of demanding death of the blasphemer across jurisdictions. In addition to the Fatwa, we also talk about incidents of "Blasphemy" and how it defines the identity of a culture and location. The end of this episode discusses India and the choice as a culture we stand to make, whether the State should penalise the blasphemer on behalf of religions over the fear of violence. 

    Music: @triggerfish.wut, logo by @poorwow on instagram

    Recommented Reading:
    Any and all religious texts you can find - specially pertaining to Islam, Christianity and Hinduism (Ones I have glossed over are Bhagwat Gita, Quran and the Bible across commentaries)
    The Portable Atheist - Christopher Hitchens
    Satanic Verses - Salman Rushdie (if it is legal in your country)
    The Satanic Verses Affair (2009) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilbNgCWgnwE
    Ramji Lal Modi V. the State of Uttar Pradesh 1957 AIR 620
    Superintendent, Central Prison, Fatehgarh V. Ram Manohar Lohia 1960 AIR 633
    The letter provided by Bangalore Police to Munawar Fariqui's organisers is attached in an article by the wire at:
    https://thewire.in/rights/bengaluru-police-make-organisers-cancel-comedian-munawar-faruquis-show


    Support me on Patreon!

    https://www.patreon.com/deepfriedneurons

    Or buy me a coffee at: www.buymeacoffee.com/deepfriedneuron



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    • 43 min
    #103 - Law

    #103 - Law

    This episode of deep-fried neurons deals with the societal concept of Law and its placement at the center of society as a guide to the operating checkpoint of autonomy. In this episode, we discuss the necessity of law and how the law came to be in human civilization, Along with which, we also focus on how once the law was changed from the command of the sovereign; it would become a collective human sanction in favor of truth, the moral good and reason. We also discover the philosophical arguments advanced that suggest this pursuit is cloaked by a  will to exert power. 

    After we go through the philosophical literature, we look at the Legislative battle for the rights of the LGBTQIA+ individuals in India to decriminalize same-sex relations previously classified as "unnatural" under the law, and how our studies in jurisprudence show the vertical limits of our courtrooms and reading of our legislation when it comes to actually protect justice.

    Literature Reviewed / Recommended for this episode

    - Jurisprudence and Legal Theory (EBC Publishers)
    Atchutan Pillai

    - Beyond Good and Evil
     Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

    - A Hero of Two Worlds
     Mike Duncan

    - The World of the Homosexual
     Shakuntala Devi



    Cases read and referred for this episode 

    KeshavNanda Bharti V. State of Kerela AIR 1973 1461

    Naz Foundation V. Government of NCT Delhi 2010 CrLJ 94 (Del.)

    Suresh Kumar Koushal V. Naz Foundation and Ors. MANU/SC/1278/2013

    Navtej Singh Johar V. Union Of India (2014) 5 SCC 438



    Please consider supporting the podcast by buying me a coffee

    at www.buymeacoffee.com/deepfriedneuron



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    • 51 min
    #102 - Money (ft. Dheeraj Shah)

    #102 - Money (ft. Dheeraj Shah)

    This episode deals with the logistical solutions that human society had to come up with to effectively share resources and quantify value: money. In this episode, after understanding the anthropological necessity for money, we understand how the transference of money evolved. Dheeraj Shah helps me understand why currency or money was agreed upon to be rare metals like gold, and then how and why we shifted to cash transactions equivalent to gold, and finally how money came to have its own value and generated through our current debt systems. Dheeraj Specifically helps us with understanding what Decentralised Finance is and how bitcoin in specific is the ultimate experience in decentralized finance.

    Books reviewed for this episode:

    Treaties on Civil Government - John Locke

    The Problem with Indian Rupee, and its Solution - B.R. Ambedkar

    Simulacra and Simulation - Jean Baudrillard

    History of Weimar Republic - Charles River Editors

    Gold Standard in Theory and History - Richard Eichengreen

    Other Content reviewed/suggested:

    Cold Fusion - How is money created?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzoX7zEZ6h4

    Adam Mckay(dir.) - The Big Short
    (available on Netflix)

    Dylan Mohan Gray - Bad Boy Billionaires India  
    (available on Netflix)

    Support me on Patreon!

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    DFN merch:

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    • 1 hr 4 min
    #101 - Rebellion

    #101 - Rebellion

    This episode discusses the philosophical history of rebellion from the age of enlightenment to the contemporary times in a literary review for 'the rebel' by Albert Camus and Animal Farm by George Orwell. The object of the episode is to understand what is rebellion, and what is it that causes rebellion to be meaningful or desirable to society. We discuss egocentrism, profiteering, and messianism along with desperation leading means to be justified by the ends of rebellion as demerits of this political occurrence, and how deeply cultural or societal the phenomenon of rebellion really is.

    Books reviewed for this episode:
    The Rebel - Albert Camus
    The Emma Goldman Collection - Emma Goldman
    On Anarchism - Noam Chomsky
    Like a Thief in Broad Daylight - Slavoj Zizek
    The Second Sex - Simone De Beauvoire

    Ancillary references to:
    Thus Spake Zarathustra - Freidreich Neitzsche
    Animal Farm - George Orwell
    Inglorious Empire - Sashi Tharoor
    Hero Of Two Worlds - Mike Duncan


    Some of the Media Sources used for the creation of the episode
    Mike Duncan's Revolution (season 3): https://open.spotify.com/show/05lvdf9T77KE6y4gyMGEsD?si=VycBTHN4Q4K-ZAoK1dkNag
    Over-Simplified: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qRZcXIODNU

    Isha's Movie I mentioned for no reason at all:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDv1T2NCPfg

    Support me on Patreon!
    https://www.patreon.com/deepfriedneurons

    DFN merch:
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    Follow me on social media:
    www.instagram.com/deepfriedneurons
    https://www.facebook.com/DeepFriedNeu...

    • 1 hr 4 min

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