Embrace The Void
En podkast av Embrace The Void
316 Episoder
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EV - 228 Philosophers on Consciousness with Jack Symes
Publisert: 6.2.2022 -
EV - 227 Techno-epistemic crisis with Philipp Markolin
Publisert: 28.1.2022 -
EV - 226 Sowell's History of Slavery with Charles Boyd
Publisert: 21.1.2022 -
EV - 225 Reconsidering Reparations with Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
Publisert: 14.1.2022 -
EV - 224 Teaching During a Moral Panic with Heather Redmond Leise
Publisert: 31.12.2021 -
EV - 223 Stoic Activism with Kai Whiting
Publisert: 24.12.2021 -
EV - 222 American Shade with Brittany Talissa King
Publisert: 17.12.2021 -
EV - 221 Better Know Sowell with Brandon Bradford
Publisert: 10.12.2021 -
EV - 220 Addressing Moral Panics with Rod Graham
Publisert: 3.12.2021 -
EV - 219 Online Shaming with Krista Thomason
Publisert: 26.11.2021 -
EV - 218 Addiction and Cancelation with Chris boutté
Publisert: 19.11.2021 -
EV - 216 Freedom with Toby Buckle
Publisert: 5.11.2021 -
EV - 215 Detransition Research with Jesse Singal
Publisert: 25.10.2021 -
EV - 214 Liberal Currents with Adam Gurri
Publisert: 22.10.2021 -
EV - 213 Warspeak with Michael Grenke
Publisert: 15.10.2021 -
EV - 212 The Conspiracy Handbook with John Cook
Publisert: 8.10.2021 -
EV - 211 Applied Effective Altruism with Alex Arnett
Publisert: 30.9.2021 -
EV - 210 Naturalness with Alan Levinovitz Pt2
Publisert: 24.9.2021 -
EV - 209 Naturalness with Alan Levinovitz Pt1
Publisert: 17.9.2021 -
EV - 208 White Christian Nationalism with Philip Gorski
Publisert: 10.9.2021
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.
