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THE ALIEN SPACESHIP

Podcast af Trevor Gear, Emmy Hikins

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The Alien Spaceship is a talkshow podcast by Emmy Hikins and Trevor Gear both seasoned Singers and songwriters respectively. The talkshow podcast is an alternative to a stand-up comedy, no topic is off limits. Conversations range from everyday idiosyncrasy to anything silly and informative or educative in a lighthearted fun and entertaining. The show is a family show in all respects in that you can listen even with your five year old child in the back seat driving about or doing the daily house chores or even at work.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support.

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episode S110E1: If I Say This To You, "Everything I Say Is A Lie" - Trevor Gear Introduces Paradoxes And Freewill cover

S110E1: If I Say This To You, "Everything I Say Is A Lie" - Trevor Gear Introduces Paradoxes And Freewill

This is the Season 109 of The Alien Spaceship with dRem TGI (Emmy Hikins) and Trevor Gear on Deepstuff TV and Deepstuff Radio of Deepstuff records. All Episodes conducted by Legendary Singer-Songwriter and Musician Trevor Gear and TV and Radio presenter Emmy Hikins (dRem TGI) and also a Singer-Songwriter and a music producer of Deepstuff records LTD.  Joined by System Analyst Jerome John This is a Comedy Talkshow and a Podcast    In this season:  Paradoxes and Free Will Paradoxes Discussion Trevor introduced the liar's paradox: "Everything I say is a lie" 32. He explained that if this statement is true, it contradicts itself (because the statement itself would be a lie). If false, it also contradicts the statement 3334. The paradox demonstrates statements that are simultaneously true if false, and false if true 34. Trevor then presented the crocodile paradox: A crocodile grabs a boy and tells the mother it will return the child if she correctly predicts whether the crocodile will keep or return him 34. When the mother says "You'll keep the boy," the crocodile faces an impossible dilemma—if he keeps the boy, the mother was right so he should return him; if he returns the boy, the mother was wrong so he should have kept him 35. Other paradoxical statements discussed included "The word impossible is not in my vocabulary" (which uses the word it claims doesn't exist) and "The only rule is that there are no rules" (a rule declaring no rules exist) 36. Truth and "My Truth" When asked what people mean by "my truth," Emmy interpreted it as "this is what I believe" or "this is my take on it" 3637. Jerome described it as **"saying your side of the story"**—recognizing that multiple people involved in an incident each have their own perspective 3738. Trevor agreed, noting that "my truth" recognizes how all humans live in their own minds—the world exists only from our individual perspectives because everything we perceive is filtered through our consciousness 3839. This can be therapeutic and acknowledge vulnerability in how we see the world 39.  Free Will Debate Emmy initially argued humans do have free will, though it's limited by the laws of nature like gravity 3940. He clarified he meant free will to do "whatever we want to do without a second thought," including involuntary actions 4041. Jerome countered that free will is limited because you must consider laws of the land—rights like free speech are constrained by libel, slander, and sedition laws 4142. He concluded we have rights to live and breathe, but free will is restricted 42. Trevor argued that practical free will is severely limited by factors including childhood environment, upbringing, family influences, and developmental forces 43. He challenged whether anyone is truly "capable of anything" good or bad, noting most people would never commit crimes like mugging, stealing, or murder—suggesting they lack practical free will to do such things even if theoretically possible 434445. Exceptions to Limited Free Will Trevor identified two exceptions where people might act outside their normal constraints: 1. Desperation: Parents unable to feed children might steal food with justification 46 2. Mental incapacitation: Alcohol or drugs enable behavior people would never do sober, such as drunk driving or airplane incidents 474849 Emmy used drunk driving as an example: someone chooses to drink, chooses to get behind the wheel, and chooses to drive recklessly—demonstrating free will in those decisions even if alcohol corrupts judgment 4748. Neuroscience Perspective Trevor cited Einstein as a staunch determinist who believed free will is an illusion—human actions are dictated by prior causes including nature, nurture, and physics laws, meaning we cannot control desires or actions but merely act on them 49. Scientific experiments show the brain makes choices before we're conscious of them 50. Trevor estimated 95% of daily decisions operate on autopilot—morning routines like having coffee or tea, eating cereal, driving familiar routes happen without conscious decision-making 5051. Thought Control Trevor posed a challenging question: Can we control what our next thought will be? 52 When not focused on specific tasks, thoughts simply arise without our direction 5253. Jerome responded that while you cannot control thoughts that arise, you can control the actions you take in response 5354. His example: waking up without milk might trigger a thought to shoplift, but you can decide not to act on that thought 54.  Criminal Accountability Trevor addressed how society can hold criminals accountable if free will is limited. The answer: people who commit crimes have more free will than average because they possess the capacity to say no to criminal impulses but choose not to 555657. Most people lack the freedom to commit acts they would never normally do 57. Intelligence and Free Will Trevor shared that Marilyn Monroe had an IQ of 160, matching Einstein's intelligence 5758. The famous anecdote claims Monroe suggested to Einstein they have a child with his brains and her beauty, to which Einstein replied it might have his beauty and her brains 57. The most intelligent woman ever recorded is Marilyn vos Savant (born 1946), recognized by Guinness Book of Records with an IQ of 228 tested as a child 5960. By age 10, she had read the entire American Encyclopedic range 60. She solved the famous Monty Hall problem in 1990, receiving 10,000 letters (including from PhDs) arguing against her correct answer 6061. Prison Education and Rehabilitation All three participants agreed prisoners should receive education, though Jerome preferred calling it "reorientation" or **"rehabilitation"**—changing mindsets rather than traditional classroom education 6263. People from different backgrounds may not know better and need reorientation to understand life in their current society 62. Trevor noted the revolving door problem: prisoners often lack jobs, CVs, and homes upon release, leading many to reoffend 63. The system tags them as convicts, preventing employment, so without reorientation they return to what they know best 6364. Emmy emphasized everyone needs education, including life skills that prepare people for real-world challenges 64. He compared it to military personnel requiring reintegration into civilian life after being trained solely in combat—they need education on peaceful conflict resolution 6566. 50% of prisoners are functionally illiterate, and 57% have a reading age below 11 years old 67. Trevor knows someone who individually taught prisoners to read, helping double-digit numbers of inmates—a crucial part of rehabilitation 67. The Alien Spaceship is also available in Visual Format on youtube and tiktok and in audio on all major online podcast market like Spotify, Audible/ Amazon Music, Apple Podcast, Deezer, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Podcast Addict, Podchaser, JioSaavn, Spreaker and links on all Social major media platforms. Music: I love Cappuccino by Trevor Gear                         and Love, Joy and Heartbreak by Drem TGI Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss]. The Alien Spaceship is brought to you by deepstuff radio of deepstuff records ltd

13. maj 2026 - 7 min
episode S110E2: Basically If It's True It's False And If It's False It's True - Trevor Gear On Some Contradictions cover

S110E2: Basically If It's True It's False And If It's False It's True - Trevor Gear On Some Contradictions

This is the Season 109 of The Alien Spaceship with dRem TGI (Emmy Hikins) and Trevor Gear on Deepstuff TV and Deepstuff Radio of Deepstuff records. All Episodes conducted by Legendary Singer-Songwriter and Musician Trevor Gear and TV and Radio presenter Emmy Hikins (dRem TGI) and also a Singer-Songwriter and a music producer of Deepstuff records LTD.  Joined by System Analyst Jerome John This is a Comedy Talkshow and a Podcast    In this season:  Paradoxes and Free Will Paradoxes Discussion Trevor introduced the liar's paradox: "Everything I say is a lie" 32. He explained that if this statement is true, it contradicts itself (because the statement itself would be a lie). If false, it also contradicts the statement 3334. The paradox demonstrates statements that are simultaneously true if false, and false if true 34. Trevor then presented the crocodile paradox: A crocodile grabs a boy and tells the mother it will return the child if she correctly predicts whether the crocodile will keep or return him 34. When the mother says "You'll keep the boy," the crocodile faces an impossible dilemma—if he keeps the boy, the mother was right so he should return him; if he returns the boy, the mother was wrong so he should have kept him 35. Other paradoxical statements discussed included "The word impossible is not in my vocabulary" (which uses the word it claims doesn't exist) and "The only rule is that there are no rules" (a rule declaring no rules exist) 36. Truth and "My Truth" When asked what people mean by "my truth," Emmy interpreted it as "this is what I believe" or "this is my take on it" 3637. Jerome described it as **"saying your side of the story"**—recognizing that multiple people involved in an incident each have their own perspective 3738. Trevor agreed, noting that "my truth" recognizes how all humans live in their own minds—the world exists only from our individual perspectives because everything we perceive is filtered through our consciousness 3839. This can be therapeutic and acknowledge vulnerability in how we see the world 39.  Free Will Debate Emmy initially argued humans do have free will, though it's limited by the laws of nature like gravity 3940. He clarified he meant free will to do "whatever we want to do without a second thought," including involuntary actions 4041. Jerome countered that free will is limited because you must consider laws of the land—rights like free speech are constrained by libel, slander, and sedition laws 4142. He concluded we have rights to live and breathe, but free will is restricted 42. Trevor argued that practical free will is severely limited by factors including childhood environment, upbringing, family influences, and developmental forces 43. He challenged whether anyone is truly "capable of anything" good or bad, noting most people would never commit crimes like mugging, stealing, or murder—suggesting they lack practical free will to do such things even if theoretically possible 434445. Exceptions to Limited Free Will Trevor identified two exceptions where people might act outside their normal constraints: 1. Desperation: Parents unable to feed children might steal food with justification 46 2. Mental incapacitation: Alcohol or drugs enable behavior people would never do sober, such as drunk driving or airplane incidents 474849 Emmy used drunk driving as an example: someone chooses to drink, chooses to get behind the wheel, and chooses to drive recklessly—demonstrating free will in those decisions even if alcohol corrupts judgment 4748. Neuroscience Perspective Trevor cited Einstein as a staunch determinist who believed free will is an illusion—human actions are dictated by prior causes including nature, nurture, and physics laws, meaning we cannot control desires or actions but merely act on them 49. Scientific experiments show the brain makes choices before we're conscious of them 50. Trevor estimated 95% of daily decisions operate on autopilot—morning routines like having coffee or tea, eating cereal, driving familiar routes happen without conscious decision-making 5051. Thought Control Trevor posed a challenging question: Can we control what our next thought will be? 52 When not focused on specific tasks, thoughts simply arise without our direction 5253. Jerome responded that while you cannot control thoughts that arise, you can control the actions you take in response 5354. His example: waking up without milk might trigger a thought to shoplift, but you can decide not to act on that thought 54.  Criminal Accountability Trevor addressed how society can hold criminals accountable if free will is limited. The answer: people who commit crimes have more free will than average because they possess the capacity to say no to criminal impulses but choose not to 555657. Most people lack the freedom to commit acts they would never normally do 57. Intelligence and Free Will Trevor shared that Marilyn Monroe had an IQ of 160, matching Einstein's intelligence 5758. The famous anecdote claims Monroe suggested to Einstein they have a child with his brains and her beauty, to which Einstein replied it might have his beauty and her brains 57. The most intelligent woman ever recorded is Marilyn vos Savant (born 1946), recognized by Guinness Book of Records with an IQ of 228 tested as a child 5960. By age 10, she had read the entire American Encyclopedic range 60. She solved the famous Monty Hall problem in 1990, receiving 10,000 letters (including from PhDs) arguing against her correct answer 6061. Prison Education and Rehabilitation All three participants agreed prisoners should receive education, though Jerome preferred calling it "reorientation" or **"rehabilitation"**—changing mindsets rather than traditional classroom education 6263. People from different backgrounds may not know better and need reorientation to understand life in their current society 62. Trevor noted the revolving door problem: prisoners often lack jobs, CVs, and homes upon release, leading many to reoffend 63. The system tags them as convicts, preventing employment, so without reorientation they return to what they know best 6364. Emmy emphasized everyone needs education, including life skills that prepare people for real-world challenges 64. He compared it to military personnel requiring reintegration into civilian life after being trained solely in combat—they need education on peaceful conflict resolution 6566. 50% of prisoners are functionally illiterate, and 57% have a reading age below 11 years old 67. Trevor knows someone who individually taught prisoners to read, helping double-digit numbers of inmates—a crucial part of rehabilitation 67. The Alien Spaceship is also available in Visual Format on youtube and tiktok and in audio on all major online podcast market like Spotify, Audible/ Amazon Music, Apple Podcast, Deezer, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Podcast Addict, Podchaser, JioSaavn, Spreaker and links on all Social major media platforms. Music: I love Cappuccino by Trevor Gear                         and Love, Joy and Heartbreak by Drem TGI Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss]. The Alien Spaceship is brought to you by deepstuff radio of deepstuff records ltd

13. maj 2026 - 7 min
episode S110E3: So I'm Thinking Saying My Truth Is Saying My Side Of The Story - Jerome John Of 2 Sided Story cover

S110E3: So I'm Thinking Saying My Truth Is Saying My Side Of The Story - Jerome John Of 2 Sided Story

This is the Season 109 of The Alien Spaceship with dRem TGI (Emmy Hikins) and Trevor Gear on Deepstuff TV and Deepstuff Radio of Deepstuff records. All Episodes conducted by Legendary Singer-Songwriter and Musician Trevor Gear and TV and Radio presenter Emmy Hikins (dRem TGI) and also a Singer-Songwriter and a music producer of Deepstuff records LTD.  Joined by System Analyst Jerome John This is a Comedy Talkshow and a Podcast    In this season:  Paradoxes and Free Will Paradoxes Discussion Trevor introduced the liar's paradox: "Everything I say is a lie" 32. He explained that if this statement is true, it contradicts itself (because the statement itself would be a lie). If false, it also contradicts the statement 3334. The paradox demonstrates statements that are simultaneously true if false, and false if true 34. Trevor then presented the crocodile paradox: A crocodile grabs a boy and tells the mother it will return the child if she correctly predicts whether the crocodile will keep or return him 34. When the mother says "You'll keep the boy," the crocodile faces an impossible dilemma—if he keeps the boy, the mother was right so he should return him; if he returns the boy, the mother was wrong so he should have kept him 35. Other paradoxical statements discussed included "The word impossible is not in my vocabulary" (which uses the word it claims doesn't exist) and "The only rule is that there are no rules" (a rule declaring no rules exist) 36. Truth and "My Truth" When asked what people mean by "my truth," Emmy interpreted it as "this is what I believe" or "this is my take on it" 3637. Jerome described it as **"saying your side of the story"**—recognizing that multiple people involved in an incident each have their own perspective 3738. Trevor agreed, noting that "my truth" recognizes how all humans live in their own minds—the world exists only from our individual perspectives because everything we perceive is filtered through our consciousness 3839. This can be therapeutic and acknowledge vulnerability in how we see the world 39.  Free Will Debate Emmy initially argued humans do have free will, though it's limited by the laws of nature like gravity 3940. He clarified he meant free will to do "whatever we want to do without a second thought," including involuntary actions 4041. Jerome countered that free will is limited because you must consider laws of the land—rights like free speech are constrained by libel, slander, and sedition laws 4142. He concluded we have rights to live and breathe, but free will is restricted 42. Trevor argued that practical free will is severely limited by factors including childhood environment, upbringing, family influences, and developmental forces 43. He challenged whether anyone is truly "capable of anything" good or bad, noting most people would never commit crimes like mugging, stealing, or murder—suggesting they lack practical free will to do such things even if theoretically possible 434445. Exceptions to Limited Free Will Trevor identified two exceptions where people might act outside their normal constraints: 1. Desperation: Parents unable to feed children might steal food with justification 46 2. Mental incapacitation: Alcohol or drugs enable behavior people would never do sober, such as drunk driving or airplane incidents 474849 Emmy used drunk driving as an example: someone chooses to drink, chooses to get behind the wheel, and chooses to drive recklessly—demonstrating free will in those decisions even if alcohol corrupts judgment 4748. Neuroscience Perspective Trevor cited Einstein as a staunch determinist who believed free will is an illusion—human actions are dictated by prior causes including nature, nurture, and physics laws, meaning we cannot control desires or actions but merely act on them 49. Scientific experiments show the brain makes choices before we're conscious of them 50. Trevor estimated 95% of daily decisions operate on autopilot—morning routines like having coffee or tea, eating cereal, driving familiar routes happen without conscious decision-making 5051. Thought Control Trevor posed a challenging question: Can we control what our next thought will be? 52 When not focused on specific tasks, thoughts simply arise without our direction 5253. Jerome responded that while you cannot control thoughts that arise, you can control the actions you take in response 5354. His example: waking up without milk might trigger a thought to shoplift, but you can decide not to act on that thought 54.  Criminal Accountability Trevor addressed how society can hold criminals accountable if free will is limited. The answer: people who commit crimes have more free will than average because they possess the capacity to say no to criminal impulses but choose not to 555657. Most people lack the freedom to commit acts they would never normally do 57. Intelligence and Free Will Trevor shared that Marilyn Monroe had an IQ of 160, matching Einstein's intelligence 5758. The famous anecdote claims Monroe suggested to Einstein they have a child with his brains and her beauty, to which Einstein replied it might have his beauty and her brains 57. The most intelligent woman ever recorded is Marilyn vos Savant (born 1946), recognized by Guinness Book of Records with an IQ of 228 tested as a child 5960. By age 10, she had read the entire American Encyclopedic range 60. She solved the famous Monty Hall problem in 1990, receiving 10,000 letters (including from PhDs) arguing against her correct answer 6061. Prison Education and Rehabilitation All three participants agreed prisoners should receive education, though Jerome preferred calling it "reorientation" or **"rehabilitation"**—changing mindsets rather than traditional classroom education 6263. People from different backgrounds may not know better and need reorientation to understand life in their current society 62. Trevor noted the revolving door problem: prisoners often lack jobs, CVs, and homes upon release, leading many to reoffend 63. The system tags them as convicts, preventing employment, so without reorientation they return to what they know best 6364. Emmy emphasized everyone needs education, including life skills that prepare people for real-world challenges 64. He compared it to military personnel requiring reintegration into civilian life after being trained solely in combat—they need education on peaceful conflict resolution 6566. 50% of prisoners are functionally illiterate, and 57% have a reading age below 11 years old 67. Trevor knows someone who individually taught prisoners to read, helping double-digit numbers of inmates—a crucial part of rehabilitation 67. The Alien Spaceship is also available in Visual Format on youtube and tiktok and in audio on all major online podcast market like Spotify, Audible/ Amazon Music, Apple Podcast, Deezer, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Podcast Addict, Podchaser, JioSaavn, Spreaker and links on all Social major media platforms. Music: I love Cappuccino by Trevor Gear                         and Love, Joy and Heartbreak by Drem TGI Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss]. The Alien Spaceship is brought to you by deepstuff radio of deepstuff records ltd

13. maj 2026 - 7 min
episode S110E4: Nah Am I Confusing Myself Right Now - Jerome John On Explaining Freewill As A Concept cover

S110E4: Nah Am I Confusing Myself Right Now - Jerome John On Explaining Freewill As A Concept

This is the Season 109 of The Alien Spaceship with dRem TGI (Emmy Hikins) and Trevor Gear on Deepstuff TV and Deepstuff Radio of Deepstuff records. All Episodes conducted by Legendary Singer-Songwriter and Musician Trevor Gear and TV and Radio presenter Emmy Hikins (dRem TGI) and also a Singer-Songwriter and a music producer of Deepstuff records LTD.  Joined by System Analyst Jerome John This is a Comedy Talkshow and a Podcast    In this season:  Paradoxes and Free Will Paradoxes Discussion Trevor introduced the liar's paradox: "Everything I say is a lie" 32. He explained that if this statement is true, it contradicts itself (because the statement itself would be a lie). If false, it also contradicts the statement 3334. The paradox demonstrates statements that are simultaneously true if false, and false if true 34. Trevor then presented the crocodile paradox: A crocodile grabs a boy and tells the mother it will return the child if she correctly predicts whether the crocodile will keep or return him 34. When the mother says "You'll keep the boy," the crocodile faces an impossible dilemma—if he keeps the boy, the mother was right so he should return him; if he returns the boy, the mother was wrong so he should have kept him 35. Other paradoxical statements discussed included "The word impossible is not in my vocabulary" (which uses the word it claims doesn't exist) and "The only rule is that there are no rules" (a rule declaring no rules exist) 36. Truth and "My Truth" When asked what people mean by "my truth," Emmy interpreted it as "this is what I believe" or "this is my take on it" 3637. Jerome described it as **"saying your side of the story"**—recognizing that multiple people involved in an incident each have their own perspective 3738. Trevor agreed, noting that "my truth" recognizes how all humans live in their own minds—the world exists only from our individual perspectives because everything we perceive is filtered through our consciousness 3839. This can be therapeutic and acknowledge vulnerability in how we see the world 39.  Free Will Debate Emmy initially argued humans do have free will, though it's limited by the laws of nature like gravity 3940. He clarified he meant free will to do "whatever we want to do without a second thought," including involuntary actions 4041. Jerome countered that free will is limited because you must consider laws of the land—rights like free speech are constrained by libel, slander, and sedition laws 4142. He concluded we have rights to live and breathe, but free will is restricted 42. Trevor argued that practical free will is severely limited by factors including childhood environment, upbringing, family influences, and developmental forces 43. He challenged whether anyone is truly "capable of anything" good or bad, noting most people would never commit crimes like mugging, stealing, or murder—suggesting they lack practical free will to do such things even if theoretically possible 434445. Exceptions to Limited Free Will Trevor identified two exceptions where people might act outside their normal constraints: 1. Desperation: Parents unable to feed children might steal food with justification 46 2. Mental incapacitation: Alcohol or drugs enable behavior people would never do sober, such as drunk driving or airplane incidents 474849 Emmy used drunk driving as an example: someone chooses to drink, chooses to get behind the wheel, and chooses to drive recklessly—demonstrating free will in those decisions even if alcohol corrupts judgment 4748. Neuroscience Perspective Trevor cited Einstein as a staunch determinist who believed free will is an illusion—human actions are dictated by prior causes including nature, nurture, and physics laws, meaning we cannot control desires or actions but merely act on them 49. Scientific experiments show the brain makes choices before we're conscious of them 50. Trevor estimated 95% of daily decisions operate on autopilot—morning routines like having coffee or tea, eating cereal, driving familiar routes happen without conscious decision-making 5051. Thought Control Trevor posed a challenging question: Can we control what our next thought will be? 52 When not focused on specific tasks, thoughts simply arise without our direction 5253. Jerome responded that while you cannot control thoughts that arise, you can control the actions you take in response 5354. His example: waking up without milk might trigger a thought to shoplift, but you can decide not to act on that thought 54.  Criminal Accountability Trevor addressed how society can hold criminals accountable if free will is limited. The answer: people who commit crimes have more free will than average because they possess the capacity to say no to criminal impulses but choose not to 555657. Most people lack the freedom to commit acts they would never normally do 57. Intelligence and Free Will Trevor shared that Marilyn Monroe had an IQ of 160, matching Einstein's intelligence 5758. The famous anecdote claims Monroe suggested to Einstein they have a child with his brains and her beauty, to which Einstein replied it might have his beauty and her brains 57. The most intelligent woman ever recorded is Marilyn vos Savant (born 1946), recognized by Guinness Book of Records with an IQ of 228 tested as a child 5960. By age 10, she had read the entire American Encyclopedic range 60. She solved the famous Monty Hall problem in 1990, receiving 10,000 letters (including from PhDs) arguing against her correct answer 6061. Prison Education and Rehabilitation All three participants agreed prisoners should receive education, though Jerome preferred calling it "reorientation" or **"rehabilitation"**—changing mindsets rather than traditional classroom education 6263. People from different backgrounds may not know better and need reorientation to understand life in their current society 62. Trevor noted the revolving door problem: prisoners often lack jobs, CVs, and homes upon release, leading many to reoffend 63. The system tags them as convicts, preventing employment, so without reorientation they return to what they know best 6364. Emmy emphasized everyone needs education, including life skills that prepare people for real-world challenges 64. He compared it to military personnel requiring reintegration into civilian life after being trained solely in combat—they need education on peaceful conflict resolution 6566. 50% of prisoners are functionally illiterate, and 57% have a reading age below 11 years old 67. Trevor knows someone who individually taught prisoners to read, helping double-digit numbers of inmates—a crucial part of rehabilitation 67. The Alien Spaceship is also available in Visual Format on youtube and tiktok and in audio on all major online podcast market like Spotify, Audible/ Amazon Music, Apple Podcast, Deezer, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Podcast Addict, Podchaser, JioSaavn, Spreaker and links on all Social major media platforms. Music: I love Cappuccino by Trevor Gear                         and Love, Joy and Heartbreak by Drem TGI Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss]. The Alien Spaceship is brought to you by deepstuff radio of deepstuff records ltd

13. maj 2026 - 7 min
episode S110E5: Do You Really Have Freewill To Go And Do Whatever You Want? - Trevor Gear On Freewill cover

S110E5: Do You Really Have Freewill To Go And Do Whatever You Want? - Trevor Gear On Freewill

This is the Season 109 of The Alien Spaceship with dRem TGI (Emmy Hikins) and Trevor Gear on Deepstuff TV and Deepstuff Radio of Deepstuff records. All Episodes conducted by Legendary Singer-Songwriter and Musician Trevor Gear and TV and Radio presenter Emmy Hikins (dRem TGI) and also a Singer-Songwriter and a music producer of Deepstuff records LTD.  Joined by System Analyst Jerome John This is a Comedy Talkshow and a Podcast    In this season:  Paradoxes and Free Will Paradoxes Discussion Trevor introduced the liar's paradox: "Everything I say is a lie" 32. He explained that if this statement is true, it contradicts itself (because the statement itself would be a lie). If false, it also contradicts the statement 3334. The paradox demonstrates statements that are simultaneously true if false, and false if true 34. Trevor then presented the crocodile paradox: A crocodile grabs a boy and tells the mother it will return the child if she correctly predicts whether the crocodile will keep or return him 34. When the mother says "You'll keep the boy," the crocodile faces an impossible dilemma—if he keeps the boy, the mother was right so he should return him; if he returns the boy, the mother was wrong so he should have kept him 35. Other paradoxical statements discussed included "The word impossible is not in my vocabulary" (which uses the word it claims doesn't exist) and "The only rule is that there are no rules" (a rule declaring no rules exist) 36. Truth and "My Truth" When asked what people mean by "my truth," Emmy interpreted it as "this is what I believe" or "this is my take on it" 3637. Jerome described it as **"saying your side of the story"**—recognizing that multiple people involved in an incident each have their own perspective 3738. Trevor agreed, noting that "my truth" recognizes how all humans live in their own minds—the world exists only from our individual perspectives because everything we perceive is filtered through our consciousness 3839. This can be therapeutic and acknowledge vulnerability in how we see the world 39.  Free Will Debate Emmy initially argued humans do have free will, though it's limited by the laws of nature like gravity 3940. He clarified he meant free will to do "whatever we want to do without a second thought," including involuntary actions 4041. Jerome countered that free will is limited because you must consider laws of the land—rights like free speech are constrained by libel, slander, and sedition laws 4142. He concluded we have rights to live and breathe, but free will is restricted 42. Trevor argued that practical free will is severely limited by factors including childhood environment, upbringing, family influences, and developmental forces 43. He challenged whether anyone is truly "capable of anything" good or bad, noting most people would never commit crimes like mugging, stealing, or murder—suggesting they lack practical free will to do such things even if theoretically possible 434445. Exceptions to Limited Free Will Trevor identified two exceptions where people might act outside their normal constraints: 1. Desperation: Parents unable to feed children might steal food with justification 46 2. Mental incapacitation: Alcohol or drugs enable behavior people would never do sober, such as drunk driving or airplane incidents 474849 Emmy used drunk driving as an example: someone chooses to drink, chooses to get behind the wheel, and chooses to drive recklessly—demonstrating free will in those decisions even if alcohol corrupts judgment 4748. Neuroscience Perspective Trevor cited Einstein as a staunch determinist who believed free will is an illusion—human actions are dictated by prior causes including nature, nurture, and physics laws, meaning we cannot control desires or actions but merely act on them 49. Scientific experiments show the brain makes choices before we're conscious of them 50. Trevor estimated 95% of daily decisions operate on autopilot—morning routines like having coffee or tea, eating cereal, driving familiar routes happen without conscious decision-making 5051. Thought Control Trevor posed a challenging question: Can we control what our next thought will be? 52 When not focused on specific tasks, thoughts simply arise without our direction 5253. Jerome responded that while you cannot control thoughts that arise, you can control the actions you take in response 5354. His example: waking up without milk might trigger a thought to shoplift, but you can decide not to act on that thought 54.  Criminal Accountability Trevor addressed how society can hold criminals accountable if free will is limited. The answer: people who commit crimes have more free will than average because they possess the capacity to say no to criminal impulses but choose not to 555657. Most people lack the freedom to commit acts they would never normally do 57. Intelligence and Free Will Trevor shared that Marilyn Monroe had an IQ of 160, matching Einstein's intelligence 5758. The famous anecdote claims Monroe suggested to Einstein they have a child with his brains and her beauty, to which Einstein replied it might have his beauty and her brains 57. The most intelligent woman ever recorded is Marilyn vos Savant (born 1946), recognized by Guinness Book of Records with an IQ of 228 tested as a child 5960. By age 10, she had read the entire American Encyclopedic range 60. She solved the famous Monty Hall problem in 1990, receiving 10,000 letters (including from PhDs) arguing against her correct answer 6061. Prison Education and Rehabilitation All three participants agreed prisoners should receive education, though Jerome preferred calling it "reorientation" or **"rehabilitation"**—changing mindsets rather than traditional classroom education 6263. People from different backgrounds may not know better and need reorientation to understand life in their current society 62. Trevor noted the revolving door problem: prisoners often lack jobs, CVs, and homes upon release, leading many to reoffend 63. The system tags them as convicts, preventing employment, so without reorientation they return to what they know best 6364. Emmy emphasized everyone needs education, including life skills that prepare people for real-world challenges 64. He compared it to military personnel requiring reintegration into civilian life after being trained solely in combat—they need education on peaceful conflict resolution 6566. 50% of prisoners are functionally illiterate, and 57% have a reading age below 11 years old 67. Trevor knows someone who individually taught prisoners to read, helping double-digit numbers of inmates—a crucial part of rehabilitation 67. The Alien Spaceship is also available in Visual Format on youtube and tiktok and in audio on all major online podcast market like Spotify, Audible/ Amazon Music, Apple Podcast, Deezer, iHeartRadio, Castbox, Podcast Addict, Podchaser, JioSaavn, Spreaker and links on all Social major media platforms. Music: I love Cappuccino by Trevor Gear                         and Love, Joy and Heartbreak by Drem TGI Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-alien-spaceship--6109261/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss]. The Alien Spaceship is brought to you by deepstuff radio of deepstuff records ltd

13. maj 2026 - 7 min
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En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
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