The Philosophy Junkie

Tanishq Khurana
The Philosophy Junkie

Ever had an existential crisis in the middle of the night or during your afternoon work routine? Well, I am here to help you out with it. With answering interesting questions like 'Why do we exist', 'What's my purpose in Life', 'Am I a good human being' and many more, this podcast is for anyone even remotely interested in Philosophy. Here, we breakdown critical thinkers and present you with a simple yet reliable explanation!

Épisodes

  1. 31/10/2020

    Immanuel Kant's Racism and Sexism with Professors Lucy Allais and Helga Varden

    Immanuel Kant has been one of the biggest influences in the field of Philosophy, probably the biggest during the age of enlightenment. His contributions in the realm of ethics, philosophy of knowledge, and political philosophy. However much his theories might seem ethical and pure, history often ignores the ugly truth. Kant, a phenomenal thinker and philosopher, was a racist and a sexist. In this episode, we have Professor Lucy Allais and Professor Helga Varden discussing a comprehensive outlook on Kant. From his views on different genders, his blatant and open sexist remarks, his theory of the races, and the reality of libertarian views, they unveil how Kant might be a brilliant thinker but her wasn't exactly the most politically correct person. It also brings up an interesting topic: can you separate the art from the artist? Do you allow the great thinkers of your time to have an opinion that doesn't quite resonate with whatever may be politically correct in the given time period?  Music Credits: https://www.instagram.com/flace_music/ Professor Helga Varden: https://philosophy.illinois.edu/directory/profile/hvarden https://experts.illinois.edu/en/persons/helga-varden Professor Lucy Allais: https://profiles.ucsd.edu/lucy.allais https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=vjlzh1QAAAAJ&hl=en Artwork Credits: https://www.instagram.com/mercuryprobe/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thephilosophyjunkie/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThePhilJunkie?s=21 Website: https://www.thephilosophyjunkie.com Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/thephilosophyjunkie

    1 h 6 min
  2. Plato vs. Pandemic

    07/07/2020

    Plato vs. Pandemic

    The COVID-19 Pandemic has captured all the attention. Every sphere of society has been affected by it and the effect is mostly negative. However, the Pandemic hasn't been the only problem with this, supposedly worst ever, year. It feels like a war from multiple directions; a war with the potential of making the society more wise, courageous, moderate and just. This episode marks the beginning of a series of concept episodes where I dive into various nuances of philosophy and make it more interesting than just reading a book and analysing the philosophies within it. We explore the definitions of Justice given by Polemarchus, Thrasymachus, Glaucon, Adeimantus and Cephalus. They all intended to provide us with a ubiquitous definition of Justice. However, they ended up providing us with fragmented definitions of Justice: Cephalus gave us the definition of Financial Justice, Polemarchus gave us the definition of Interpersonal Justice, Thrasymachus gave us the definition of Political Justice, and Glaucon and Adeimantus gave us the definition of Social Justice. Let's explore the relevance of these definitions in a time when every political system is slipping into anarchy. Let us allow Plato to fight our war for us.  Music Credits: https://www.instagram.com/flace_music/ Artwork Credits: Medha Trivedi and https://www.instagram.com/mercuryprobe/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thephilosophyjunkie/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThePhilJunkie Website: https://www.thephilosophyjunkie.com Support the show (https://patreon.com/thephilosophyjunkie)

    22 min
  3. 14/05/2020

    Plato and Socrates Part 3: The Republic (I-II)

    We're done with Plato's early dialogues and now we will explore the most important and popular philosophical text of all time: The Republic. This episode will also mark the beginning of a series of episodes on The Republic by Plato. Some people even call it the seed out of which Philosophy grew. Some call it the Bible of philosophy. In a way, every philosophical book written after the Republic is either a critique, a comment or a rebuttal to the thoughts present in the Republic. In the span of the next couple of episodes, we will cover topics like wisdom, politics, democracy, justice, dictatorship, epistemology, knowledge, feminism, soul, truth, education and a lot more. In today's episode, we will take a closer look at justice, censorship, knowledge and education. The Republic is the first book that marks an evolution in Plato's political beliefs along with his philosophical pursuits.  DISCLAIMER: This episode contains information about a particular religion but is all based on facts and is not endorsing any sort of discrimination or promoting any manner of hostility against that religion.  Music Credits: https://www.instagram.com/prodbypappiii/ Artwork Credits: Medha Trivedi and https://www.instagram.com/mercuryprobe/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thephilosophyjunkie/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThePhilJunkie Website: https://www.thephilosophyjunkie.com Support the show (https://patreon.com/thephilosophyjunkie)

    32 min

À propos

Ever had an existential crisis in the middle of the night or during your afternoon work routine? Well, I am here to help you out with it. With answering interesting questions like 'Why do we exist', 'What's my purpose in Life', 'Am I a good human being' and many more, this podcast is for anyone even remotely interested in Philosophy. Here, we breakdown critical thinkers and present you with a simple yet reliable explanation!

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