Books that Shaped the World
What if you’ve never actually experienced reality as it truly is? In this episode, we explore Immanuel Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, one of the most challenging and influential works in philosophy. Written during the Enlightenment, Kant’s project was radical: to define the limits of human knowledge and explain how the mind shapes everything we perceive. We unpack his central claim that the world we experience is not reality itself, but reality filtered through the structures of the human mind. Along the way, we explore key ideas like a priori knowledge, the role of space and time, and the distinction between phenomena and the unknowable “thing-in-itself.” More importantly, we connect Kant’s abstract philosophy to modern life, decision-making, leadership, disagreement, and the illusion of objectivity. This is not just a philosophical discussion. It’s an exploration of how human thinking works, where it breaks down, and why that matters in a world shaped by competing perspectives.
25 episodios
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