Jeremy Braddock on "Firesign: The Electromagnetic History of Everything as Told on Nine Comedy Albums"

Jeremy Braddock on "Firesign: The Electromagn...

Suivant

Robert Endres, "The Unreasonable Likelihood of Being: Origin of Life, Terraforming, and AI" (arXiv, 2025)

In this episode we discuss the paper "The Unreasonable Likelihood of Being: Origin of Life, Terraforming, and AI" (arXiv, 2025) with Robert Endres. Paper Abstract: The origin of life on Earth via the spontaneous emergence of a protocell prior to Darwinian evolution remains a fun ...  Afficher plus

Ellen Clarke, "The Units of Life: Kinds of Individual in Biology" (Oxford UP, 2025)

While we tend to think of biological individuals in terms of paradigmic cases – a dog, a starfish, a bacterium – our ordinary criteria for distinguishing one individual from another are inadequate for making these distinctions in general. If a starfish can literally split itself ...  Afficher plus

Épisodes Recommandés

Iris Berent on the Innate in Human Nature
Social Science Bites

How much of our understanding of the world comes built-in? More than you'd expect.

That's the conclusion that <a href= "https://cos.northeastern.edu/pe ...

  Afficher plus

Mariana Craciun, "From Skepticism to Competence: How American Psychiatrists Learn Psychotherapy" (U Chicago Press, 2024)
New Books in Sociology

From Skepticism to Competence: How American Psychiatrists Learn Psychotherapy (U Chicago Press, 2024) offers an examination of how novice psychiatrists come to understand the workings of the mind - and the nature of medical expertise - as they are trained in psychotherapy. While ...  Afficher plus

How to DEBUNK DECEPTIVE EMOTIONS | Kristen Lindquist - BIGTHINK
dash

Your emotions do not reflect an irrefutable truth. Psychologist Kristen Lindquist explains how important that is for connecting across cultures.When it comes to obtaining an objective understanding of the world around us, emotions may not be as reliable as we think, explains Kris ...  Afficher plus

Jane G. Goldberg, "Wired for Why: How We Think, Feel, and Make Meaning" (2025)
New Books in Psychoanalysis

WIRED FOR WHY: How We Think, Feel and Make Meaning. (Self-Published 2025) spans eighteen chapters exploring everything from how we manage to stay alive against all odds, to why language separates us from other species, to whether death might be a metaphor. It's a journey through ...  Afficher plus