Philosophy for Lunch

Episode #009 - The Philosophy of Love: What Are You Actually Looking For?

30 min · Gestern
Episode Episode #009 - The Philosophy of Love: What Are You Actually Looking For? Cover

Beschreibung

Most people approach love with a list. Values they want shared, a lifestyle that fits, a feeling that arrives and confirms they have found the right person. Philosophy has a different question: what if the list is the wrong tool entirely? In this episode, Shawn and Claire take one of the most personal and least examined questions in everyday life and bring the full weight of philosophical tradition to bear on it — not to make love abstract, but to make it clearer. What is it that you are actually tracking when you feel drawn to someone? Is love something that happens to you, or something you develop? And what does it mean that the person you choose is not just a companion for the self you already have — but partly constitutive of the self you will become? They move through the major philosophical accounts: Plato's Symposium and the idea that love is a recognition of something real, not just a projection; Hume's correction that what you are tracking is partly a response in you, not just a property in them; and Erich Fromm's underread argument that contemporary culture has love almost entirely backwards — treating it as something to find rather than a capacity to develop, a skill that requires discipline, knowledge, and practice. The episode lands on a concept the pop-psychology conversation around relationships almost never reaches: philosophical compatibility. Not values alignment — something deeper. How does this person think? How do they handle not knowing? Who do they become under pressure? Those are the questions that predict whether a relationship can sustain a life, and they take longer to answer than any profile or first conversation allows. This episode also sets up next week's deep dive into Simone de Beauvoir — because if the self is always a project rather than a fixed thing, then choosing who you build a life with is not peripheral to the question of who you become. It is one of the most consequential philosophical decisions you will ever make. Shawn and Claire together. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * Plato. (1989). Symposium (A. Nehamas & P. Woodruff, Trans.). Hackett Publishing. (Original work written c. 385–370 BCE) * Hume, D. (1985). Of the standard of taste. In Essays: Moral, Political, and Literary (E. F. Miller, Ed.). Liberty Fund. (Original work published 1757) * Kant, I. (2000). Critique of the Power of Judgment (P. Guyer & E. Matthews, Trans.). Cambridge University Press. (Original work published 1790) Works Referenced in This Episode * Nozick, R. (1989). Love's bond. In The Examined Life: Philosophical Meditations (pp. 68–86). Simon & Schuster. * Fromm, E. (1956). The Art of Loving. Harper & Row. (Short, quietly radical, and still one of the best things written on this subject.) Accessible Starting Points * Singer, I. (1984). The Nature of Love, Vol. 1: Plato to Luther. University of Chicago Press. * Scruton, R. (1986). Sexual Desire: A Moral Philosophy of the Erotic. Free Press. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

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Episode Episode #009 - The Philosophy of Love: What Are You Actually Looking For? Cover

Episode #009 - The Philosophy of Love: What Are You Actually Looking For?

Most people approach love with a list. Values they want shared, a lifestyle that fits, a feeling that arrives and confirms they have found the right person. Philosophy has a different question: what if the list is the wrong tool entirely? In this episode, Shawn and Claire take one of the most personal and least examined questions in everyday life and bring the full weight of philosophical tradition to bear on it — not to make love abstract, but to make it clearer. What is it that you are actually tracking when you feel drawn to someone? Is love something that happens to you, or something you develop? And what does it mean that the person you choose is not just a companion for the self you already have — but partly constitutive of the self you will become? They move through the major philosophical accounts: Plato's Symposium and the idea that love is a recognition of something real, not just a projection; Hume's correction that what you are tracking is partly a response in you, not just a property in them; and Erich Fromm's underread argument that contemporary culture has love almost entirely backwards — treating it as something to find rather than a capacity to develop, a skill that requires discipline, knowledge, and practice. The episode lands on a concept the pop-psychology conversation around relationships almost never reaches: philosophical compatibility. Not values alignment — something deeper. How does this person think? How do they handle not knowing? Who do they become under pressure? Those are the questions that predict whether a relationship can sustain a life, and they take longer to answer than any profile or first conversation allows. This episode also sets up next week's deep dive into Simone de Beauvoir — because if the self is always a project rather than a fixed thing, then choosing who you build a life with is not peripheral to the question of who you become. It is one of the most consequential philosophical decisions you will ever make. Shawn and Claire together. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * Plato. (1989). Symposium (A. Nehamas & P. Woodruff, Trans.). Hackett Publishing. (Original work written c. 385–370 BCE) * Hume, D. (1985). Of the standard of taste. In Essays: Moral, Political, and Literary (E. F. Miller, Ed.). Liberty Fund. (Original work published 1757) * Kant, I. (2000). Critique of the Power of Judgment (P. Guyer & E. Matthews, Trans.). Cambridge University Press. (Original work published 1790) Works Referenced in This Episode * Nozick, R. (1989). Love's bond. In The Examined Life: Philosophical Meditations (pp. 68–86). Simon & Schuster. * Fromm, E. (1956). The Art of Loving. Harper & Row. (Short, quietly radical, and still one of the best things written on this subject.) Accessible Starting Points * Singer, I. (1984). The Nature of Love, Vol. 1: Plato to Luther. University of Chicago Press. * Scruton, R. (1986). Sexual Desire: A Moral Philosophy of the Erotic. Free Press. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

Gestern30 min
Episode Episode #008 - Cognitive Bias: The Philosophy Behind the Shortcuts Cover

Episode #008 - Cognitive Bias: The Philosophy Behind the Shortcuts

You think you know why you believe what you believe. You probably do not. Not because you are careless or unintelligent—but because the part of your mind doing most of the work is fast, automatic, and largely invisible to you. It forms judgments before you are aware of them, fills in gaps with whatever is most available, and produces confident outputs without flagging what it missed. And here is the uncomfortable part: learning about this does not reliably fix it. In this episode, Shawn and Claire open Block Two — How We Think — with the most practically disruptive idea in modern psychology. Drawing on Daniel Kahneman's and Amos Tversky's decades of research, they walk through the architecture of System 1 and System 2 thinking—not as a memorizable list of named errors, but as a philosophical framework for understanding why the mind works the way it does and what that means for how we should live. This episode goes further than the popular Kahneman summary. It asks the questions that the pop-psychology version leaves out: If our moral judgments about other people are shaped by biases we cannot see — by race, by attractiveness, by how a question is framed — what does that mean for ethics? If knowing about a bias does not protect you from it, what actually helps? And is there something right about the shortcuts, or are they simply errors in a system that should know better? They also cover the philosophical tension at the heart of nudge theory—the insight that you can improve decisions not by educating people but by changing the architecture of their choices and why that approach is both effective and deeply uncomfortable from the standpoint of human autonomy. The examined life is still the goal. But this episode shows just how much there is left to examine. Shawn and Claire together. No prior knowledge required. SHOW NOTES Primary Works * Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. * Tversky, A., & Kahneman, D. (1974). Judgment under uncertainty: Heuristics and biases. Science, 185(4157), 1124–1131. * Kahneman, D., & Tversky, A. (1979). Prospect theory: An analysis of decision under risk. Econometrica, 47(2), 263–291. Works Referenced in This Episode * Gigerenzer, G. (2007). Gut Feelings: The Intelligence of the Unconscious. Viking. * Mercier, H., & Sperber, D. (2017). The Enigma of Reason. Harvard University Press. * Thaler, R. H., & Sunstein, C. R. (2008). Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness. Yale University Press. * Greenwald, A. G., McGhee, D. E., & Schwartz, J. L. K. (1998). Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 74(6), 1464–1480. * Wason, P. C. (1968). Reasoning about a rule. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 20(3), 273–281. Accessible Starting Points * Lewis, M. (2017). The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds. Norton. (The story of Kahneman and Tversky's collaboration — reads like a thriller.) * Ariely, D. (2008). Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions. HarperCollins. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

31. Mai 202632 min
Episode Episode #007 - Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem: The Proof That Broke Mathematics Cover

Episode #007 - Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem: The Proof That Broke Mathematics

Most of us were raised on an implicit promise: that if you think carefully enough, gather enough evidence, and reason rigorously enough, you can in principle get to the bottom of any question. Science will eventually explain everything. Logic will eventually resolve every contradiction. Reason, given enough time, is sufficient. Kurt Gödel proved that promise was false. Not in a vague, philosophical hand-waving way — but with a formal mathematical proof that no one has ever refuted, and no one ever will. In this episode, Shawn and Claire take one of the most profound and least understood results in intellectual history and make it genuinely accessible — not as a mathematical curiosity, but as a philosophical reckoning. Because what Gödel discovered is not just about arithmetic. It is about the nature of knowledge itself: that every system of thought, no matter how rigorous, contains truths it cannot reach from the inside. That reason has a ceiling. And that the ceiling is not a failure — it is a feature of what it means to think at all. They also go back further, to Georg Cantor's discovery that infinity is not one thing but many — that some infinities are measurably larger than others — and why that discovery, which his contemporaries denounced as dangerous, turned out to be one of the most beautiful results in the history of human thought. This episode asks the questions that connect the mathematics to lived experience: What does it mean to accept that some truths are permanently beyond proof? How should that change the confidence with which we hold our own frameworks? And what does it say about the human mind that we can somehow perceive truths that no formal system can verify? This is the episode for anyone who has ever suspected that reality is stranger — and richer — than the explanations on offer. It is. Shawn and Claire together. No prior mathematics required. SHOW NOTES Primary Mathematical Texts * Cantor, G. (1915). Contributions to the Founding of the Theory of Transfinite Numbers (P. E. B. Jourdain, Trans.). Open Court. (Original work published 1895–1897) * Gödel, K. (1992). On Formally Undecidable Propositions of Principia Mathematica and Related Systems (B. Meltzer, Trans.). Dover. (Original work published 1931) Biographical & Contextual * Dauben, J. W. (1979). Georg Cantor: His Mathematics and Philosophy of the Infinite. Harvard University Press. * Goldstein, R. (2005). Incompleteness: The Proof and Paradox of Kurt Gödel. Norton. (The best accessible biography and intellectual history of Gödel — highly recommended as a follow-up.) Philosophy of Mathematics * Benacerraf, P., & Putnam, H. (Eds.). (1983). Philosophy of Mathematics: Selected Readings (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. * Penrose, R. (1989). The Emperor's New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics. Oxford University Press. * Wigner, E. P. (1960). The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences. Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, 13(1), 1–14. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

24. Mai 202633 min
Episode Episode #006 - Aristotle's Happiness: Why Feeling Good Is Not the Same as Living Well Cover

Episode #006 - Aristotle's Happiness: Why Feeling Good Is Not the Same as Living Well

There is a question most people do not ask out loud but almost everyone thinks about. Not "am I happy right now" — that one changes by the hour. The harder question is: is this a good life? Is the life I am building one that, at the end, I will look back on and think — yes, that was it? Aristotle thought that was the right question. And he thought most of the answers people give to it are wrong. In this episode, Shawn and Claire unpack Aristotle's concept of eudaimonia — usually translated as happiness, almost never meaning what that word implies. Eudaimonia is not a feeling. It is not a state you achieve and then maintain. It is something you do, and keep doing, over the course of an entire life. It is closer to flourishing — the full, excellent exercise of what you are genuinely capable of. They cover why Aristotle draws such a sharp line between pleasure and the good life (and why he is not saying pleasure is unimportant), the function argument and what it means that human beings have a characteristic excellence to develop, why virtue for Aristotle means something closer to skill than piety, how the research on psychological flow maps almost exactly onto what Aristotle described 2,400 years ago, and why Aristotle insists — in a way that many modern self-help frameworks quietly evade — that you cannot flourish alone. Deep friendship and a functioning community are not optional extras. They are structural requirements. This episode also looks honestly at where Aristotle's framework is demanding, where it runs into trouble, and what it means that every choice you make is quietly building — or failing to build — the character that makes a good life possible. Shawn and Claire together. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * Aristotle. (1999). Nicomachean Ethics (T. Irwin, Trans., 2nd ed.). Hackett Publishing. (Original work written c. 350 BCE) (The essential text — Irwin's translation is rigorous and readable.) * Aristotle. (1998). Politics (C. D. C. Reeve, Trans.). Hackett Publishing. (Original work written c. 350 BCE) Works Referenced in This Episode * Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1990). Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. Harper & Row. (The empirical research that maps most closely onto Aristotle's account of eudaimonia.) * Seligman, M. E. P. (2011). Flourish: A Visionary New Understanding of Happiness and Well-Being. Free Press. (The PERMA model as a contemporary translation of Aristotelian flourishing.) * Nussbaum, M. C. (1986). The Fragility of Goodness: Luck and Ethics in Greek Tragedy and Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. * Hursthouse, R. (1999). On Virtue Ethics. Oxford University Press. * Bellah, R. N., et al. (1985). Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life. University of California Press. Accessible Starting Points * MacIntyre, A. (1981). After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory. University of Notre Dame Press. (The best modern case for why Aristotelian ethics still matters.) * Sandel, M. J. (2009). Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do? Farrar, Straus and Giroux. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

17. Mai 202636 min
Episode Episode #005 - The Philosophy of Grief: What the Best Thinkers Actually Said About Loss Cover

Episode #005 - The Philosophy of Grief: What the Best Thinkers Actually Said About Loss

Grief is not a stage you pass through. It is not a staircase with acceptance waiting at the top. And the five-stage model you probably learned—denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance—was never actually based on bereaved people at all. In this solo episode, Shawn comes to the philosophy of grief the way most people come to it: because he needed it. He lost his brother not long ago. And what he found in philosophy was not a fix or a framework but something rarer—honesty. Thinkers who sat with exactly what loss feels like, without flinching, and wrote about it with precision. This episode covers what grief actually is—not sadness, but a reorganization of the self around an absence—and why the Kübler-Ross stage model fails the people it is supposed to help. It draws on C.S. Lewis writing in raw grief after losing his wife, Joan Didion, on the way grief distorts cognition; Boethius writing The Consolation of Philosophy while awaiting his own execution; and Camus on how to live honestly in a world that does not offer the comfort we want. Shawn also addresses the thing our culture gets most wrong about grief: the expectation that it should fade, resolve, and eventually end. What changes over time is not the love and not exactly the loss—but your relationship to both. You carry it differently. It does not go away, and the pressure to be over it after some culturally specified period is one of the crueler things we do to each other around death. This episode is for anyone in the middle of it. And for anyone who wants to be better company to someone who is. Shawn solo. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * Boethius. (2008). The Consolation of Philosophy (N. Watts, Trans.). Penguin Classics. (Original work written c. 524 CE) * Camus, A. (1991). The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays (J. O'Brien, Trans.). Vintage. (Original work published 1942) * Camus, A. (1989). The Stranger (M. Ward, Trans.). Vintage. (Original work published 1942) * Lewis, C. S. (1961). A Grief Observed. Faber & Faber. Contemporary Philosophy of Grief * Cholbi, M. (2021). Grief: A Philosophical Guide. Princeton University Press. * Kübler-Ross, E. (1969). On Death and Dying. Macmillan. * Freud, S. (1957). Mourning and melancholia. In The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud (Vol. 14, pp. 243–258). Hogarth Press. (Original work published 1917) Accessible Starting Points * Didion, J. (2005). The Year of Magical Thinking. Knopf. * Wolterstorff, N. (1987). Lament for a Son. Eerdmans. (Quiet, profound, and unlike anything else written about grief.) If you are currently in crisis or need support, the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7 by call or text: dial or text 988. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

10. Mai 202624 min