Philosophical Trials

Tedy Nenu

My name is Tedy Nenu and I am the host of the 'Philosophical Trials' podcast. This is a place where philosophers, mathematicians, linguists and other bright individuals share with us fascinating aspects of their work. Whether you are interested in the nature of mathematical reality or how language works, there will be an episode here that caters to your interests.

  1. 05/09/2023

    Noam Chomsky on Language Evolution and Semantic Internalism | Episode 14

    Noam Chomsky has been described as "the father of modern linguistics". He is one of the leading public intellectuals of the world, having authored over 100 books. Chomsky has made seminal contributions to multiple fields, including Linguistics, Philosophy, and Cognitive Science. At the moment, he is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Conversation Outline:  00:00 Intro  00:37 How did you manage to be so productive?  01:07 What got you introduced to Linguistics and Philosophy?  02:47 What were courses like Syntax back in the day before you revolutionised the field?  04:42 What makes human languages different than other animal communication systems?  08:12 The difference between your view on the evolution of language and Steven Pinker’s view 15:50 The human language faculty 20:18 Truth-Conditional Semantics 30:49 Semantic Internalism versus Externalism 36:08 Truth, Public Languages, and I-Languages 38:55 What is truth?  40:18 Paradoxes of truth and vagueness 41:44 Zeno’s Paradox 45:31 Vagueness and The Sorites Paradox 50:47 The cognitive relationships between mathematical and linguistic abilities Enjoy!  Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/tedynenu/ Twitter:  https://twitter.com/tedynenu Apple Podcasts:  https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/philosophical-trials/id1513707135 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3Sz88leU8tmeKe3MAZ9i10 Google Podcasts:  https://podcasts.google.com/search/philosophical%20trials

    53 min
  2. 07/02/2022

    A.C. Grayling on Atheism and The Frontiers of Knowledge | Episode 13

    Professor A.C. Grayling is one of the most prolific philosophers and public intellectuals. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, the Master of the New College of the Humanities and a Supernumerary Fellow of St. Anne’s College, Oxford. He made important contributions to Analytic Philosophy, primarily in Epistemology, Metaphysics and Philosophical Logic. Prof. Grayling wrote more than 40 books, including The God Argument, The History of Philosophy and The Frontiers of Knowledge.  Conversation Outline:  00:00 Introduction 00:46 How did you get into Philosophy? 03:23 What was your PhD Thesis on? Thoughts on Skepticism and Knowledge 08:11 What are the interesting epistemological advancements (and problems) of our time?  12:27 On interdisciplinarity and higher education 15:10 Different models of education and advice for high-school students that want to go to university 19:04 STEM, Arts and public perception 21:45 Traditional epistemology and why certainty and absolute truth are not essential 27:44 Is the situation different for Mathematics? What about Theology?  35:02 Why do people take Religion to be a source of certain truths?  41:00 New Atheism 46:50 Discussing some of the main theistic arguments  59:30 God and Morality Enjoy!  Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/tedynenu/ Twitter:  https://twitter.com/tedynenu Apple Podcasts:  https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/philosophical-trials/id1513707135 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3Sz88leU8tmeKe3MAZ9i10 Google Podcasts:  https://podcasts.google.com/search/philosophical%20trials

    1h 6m
  3. 05/28/2022

    William Lane Craig on Christianity and Philosophy of Religion | Episode 12

    Professor William Lane Craig is a world-renowned theologian and philosopher of religion. He authored dozens of books on these topics, including The Kalām Cosmological Argument (1979), God Over All (2016), The Atonement (2018), In Quest of the Historical Adam (2021) and many others. Besides his academic scholarship, Professor Craig is internationally known for his debates with various academic and popular atheists such as Christopher Hitchens, Lawrence Krauss, Sam Harris, Peter Millican, Arif Ahmed and many others. You can find more details about Prof. Craig’s works on his public website: https://www.reasonablefaith.org/  Conversation Outline:  00:00 Guest Introduction 01:19 William Lane Craig’s Debating Career 03:03 Best opponent 05:26 How is the winner usually determined?  06:15 Having a PhD in both Theology and Philosophy 07:56 Who has the burden of proof: theists or atheists?  10:30 Species of atheism 15:50 Theology versus Philosophy of Religion 20:14 Why is theism not so popular amongst mainstream philosophers?  22:40 What is the view that you defend?  24:26 Do arguments for the existence of God distract attention from God?  26:40 What about divine hiddenness?  30:48 The Kalam Cosmological Argument 32:58 Why does the Cosmological Argument prove that a personal creator? 34:38 Why does the Cosmological Argument point towards an unembodied mind?  42:42 The universe began to exist: an argument based on Infinity 45:55 Hilbert’s Hotel 51:23 Proving that the Christian God exists after proving that the God of the Philosophers exists Enjoy!  You can find me here:  Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/tedynenu/ Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/philosophical-trials/id1513707135 Spotify:  https://open.spotify.com/show/3Sz88leU8tmeKe3MAZ9i10 Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/?q=philosophical%20trials

    54 min
  4. 06/08/2021

    Vicky Neale on 'Why Study Mathematics?' and the Twin Prime Conjecture | Episode 11

    Dr Vicky Neale is the Whitehead Lecturer at the Mathematical Institute and Balliol College at the University of Oxford. She is also a Supernumerary Fellow at Balliol and the author of two great books aimed at general audiences, namely ‘Closing the Gap’ and ‘Why Study Mathematics?’.  Vicky Neale is a great communicator of Mathematics. She was given an MPLS Teaching Award in 2016 and she also won an award for being the Most Acclaimed Lecturer in MPLS in the student-led Oxford University Student Union Teaching Awards 2015. Follow her on Twitter: @VickyMaths1729  For some clear proofs of a selection of mathematical theorems, check out her YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBGhXXBCAzbzQV65JZoGhjw and her blog https://theoremoftheweek.wordpress.com/  Conversation Outline:  00:00 Guest Introduction 01:05 Vicky’s mathematical background 04:13 Motivations for writing a book on reasons to study mathematics 07:11 Are good reasons for studying Mathematics timeless? Would this book have more or less the same contents, had it been written many years ago?  10:10 Is the job of pure mathematicians safe from AI developments? 12:13 What are the benefits (for the non-mathematician) of knowing about mathematical notions such as integrals, derivatives, matrices and so on?  15:39 Are some people more mathematically talented than others?  18:45 Does the discussion of talent change when we are talking about research-level Mathematics? Douglas Hofstadter’s experience. 22:45 Aesthetics of Mathematics 25:00 Is Number Theory more beautiful than other mathematical subfields?  25:52 A mathematician’s view of the metaphysics of numbers 27:58 Fermat’s Last Theorem, Andrew Wiles and finding meaning in Mathematics 29:26 FLT and the Twin Prime Conjecture 32:27 Should graduate students tackle famous open problems? 33:41 Closing the Gap: significant progress towards solving the Twin Prime Conjecture 35:10 Polymath: an example of collaborative Mathematics 39:40 Do we have reasons to believe that the Twin Prime Conjecture is actually true? Enjoy! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/philosophical-trials/id1513707135 Spotify:  https://open.spotify.com/show/3Sz88leU8tmeKe3MAZ9i10 Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/?q=philosophical%20trials Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/tedynenu/

    43 min
  5. 02/03/2021

    Peter Koellner on Penrose's New Argument concerning Minds and Machines | Episode 10

    Professor Peter Koellner is a leading Logician and Philosopher based at Harvard University. He has made very important contributions to areas surrounding Mathematical Logic and today he was kind enough to join me for a discussion on Penrose's arguments against the prospects of mechanizing the mind (given Kurt Gödel's work on Incompleteness).  Note: I am sorry for the occasional internet connection problems. I hope the relevant parts can still be understood!  Conversation Outline:  00:00 What are the Incompleteness Theorems? 01:59 Why are Gödel’s results relevant for discussions concerning the mind? 03:28 Connections between Turing Machines and Formal Systems 04:20 When we talk about whether the mind can be mechanized or not, what do we mean?  06:56 Should Cognitive Scientists (or Philosophers of Mind) be interested in this discussion? 09:45 The First Generation of Arguments against The Prospects of Mechanizing the Mind 19:52 Three Versions of The Mechanistic Thesis 21:55 What makes Penrose’s New Argument harder to evaluate in theory EA+T? 22:56 Penrose’s Formulation of The Argument (Quote from his Book) 27:49 What are the explicit assumptions behind Penrose’s New Argument? 32:14 What are the indeterminate statements that Penrose uses in the argument?  36:10 Do you think we’ll ever have an adequate formal theory of type-free truth which settles Gödel’s First Disjunct (the one targeted by Penrose)?  37:18 Do you think your opponent would accept bringing the key notions of relative provability, absolute provability and truth in the setting of effectively formalized theories?  42:25 Why do you think Penrose does not abandon his New Argument, despite resistance from mathematical logicians? 44:35 Unlike Lucas or Penrose, some authors such as Hofstadter use Gödel’s results to illuminate the workings of the mind. Do you think the Incompleteness Theorems have anything worthwhile to say here? Enjoy! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/philosophical-trials/id1513707135 Spotify:  https://open.spotify.com/show/3Sz88leU8tmeKe3MAZ9i10 Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/?q=philosophical%20trials Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/tedynenu/

    47 min
  6. 07/29/2020

    Timothy Williamson on Relativism and Vagueness | Episode 8

    Professor Timothy Williamson is one of the most important philosophers alive. He is the Wykeham Professor of Logic at the University of Oxford, a position that he has been holding since 2000. His groundbreaking work in the areas of philosophical logic, philosophy of language, epistemology and metaphysics has shaped many of the contemporary debates. Today I’m joined by him to discuss Relativism about Truth and the Epistemic account of Vagueness. Enjoy! Conversation outline:  00:00 Introduction: What is Philosophy?  03:11 Can Philosophy help you have a better life? 06:47 What’s the story behind your book “Tetralogue”? A discussion on relativism about truth 12:44 Relativism about matters of taste 20:21 Moral relativism 29:47 Tips for finding out the truth about various issues 35:34 Vagueness and Classical Logic 48:20 Sharp cut-offs 52:40 Epistemicism says that you cannot know these cut-offs: why is that?  56:59 Baldness is not really a function of the number of hairs. Does your account apply to situations which are “non-discrete” situations? 01:01:47 How can a colour predicate (e.g. “_ is red”) latch on to an objective property out there in the world when people may have different perceptions? 01:05:37 If the properties expressed by predicates are person independent, wouldn’t this change the ramifications and implications of the epistemic view? Enjoy! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/philosophical-trials/id1513707135 Spotify:  https://open.spotify.com/show/3Sz88leU8tmeKe3MAZ9i10 Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/?q=philosophical%20trials Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/tedynenu/

    1h 11m

Ratings & Reviews

3.7
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

My name is Tedy Nenu and I am the host of the 'Philosophical Trials' podcast. This is a place where philosophers, mathematicians, linguists and other bright individuals share with us fascinating aspects of their work. Whether you are interested in the nature of mathematical reality or how language works, there will be an episode here that caters to your interests.