Embrace The Void
En podkast av Embrace The Void
316 Episoder
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EV - 129 Philosophy of Disability with Elizabeth Barnes
Publisert: 13.2.2020 -
EV - 128 Substantial Selves with Donnchadh O'Conaill
Publisert: 6.2.2020 -
EV - 127 Black Metal Environmentalism with Jesse McWilliams
Publisert: 30.1.2020 -
EV - 126 McMindfulness with Ron Purser
Publisert: 23.1.2020 -
EV - 125 Why Are We Yelling? with Buster Benson
Publisert: 16.1.2020 -
EV - 124 Death Doulas with Brenda Goodman pt2
Publisert: 9.1.2020 -
EV - 123 Death Doulas with Brenda Goodman pt1
Publisert: 2.1.2020 -
EV - 122 Better know Confucius with Bryan Van Norden
Publisert: 27.12.2019 -
EV - 121 Better Know an Aristotle with Aristotle
Publisert: 19.12.2019 -
EV - 120 Debating Scientific Racism with Dr. Mansa Keita
Publisert: 13.12.2019 -
EV - 119 Discordianism with Brian Henriksen
Publisert: 5.12.2019 -
EV - 118 Community Parkour with Kel Glaister
Publisert: 28.11.2019 -
EV - 117 Letters.Wiki with Clyde Rathbone
Publisert: 21.11.2019 -
EV - 116 Zhuangzi and Scientific Realism with Aaron Novick
Publisert: 14.11.2019 -
EV - 115 Automation and Utopia with John Danaher
Publisert: 7.11.2019 -
EV - 114 Neuro-Yogacara with Bryce Huebner
Publisert: 31.10.2019 -
EV - 113 Expressivist Kantianism with Florence Bacus
Publisert: 24.10.2019 -
EV - 112 Leftist Martial Arts with Sam Yang
Publisert: 17.10.2019 -
EV - 111 Plato v Aristotle v Nagel with Fabien-Denis Cayer
Publisert: 11.10.2019 -
EV - 110 Community Atheism with Stephanie Zvan
Publisert: 3.10.2019
Welcome friends, to a podcast for a darker timeline. Maybe the darkest of all timelines. Definitely not one of the good timelines. Maybe it’s always been a dark timeline, maybe the Hadron collider screwed us over. Science may never know. What we do know is that we live in the void. The void, a place where a chittering mass of void crabs can infest a person suit and win the presidency. The void, a place where we're just clever enough to know that climate change is happening, but not quite clever enough to do anything about it. The void seems terrible and cruel, but it loves you, in its own ironic way.