Philosophy for Lunch

Episode #012 - Hannah Arendt: Power, Evil, and the Life of the Mind

33 min · 29 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode #012 - Hannah Arendt: Power, Evil, and the Life of the Mind

Descripción

In 1961, a political philosopher traveled to Jerusalem to cover a trial for The New Yorker. The man on trial was Adolf Eichmann — one of the primary administrators of the Holocaust. She expected a monster. What she found was something she described as terrifyingly normal. A bureaucrat. A man who spoke in clichés, followed orders, and never acted out of personal malice. A man who was not evil in the way we usually imagine evil. He was thoughtless. Shallowly, bureaucratically, catastrophically thoughtless. The philosopher was Hannah Arendt. The phrase she coined — the banality of evil — became one of the most important and most debated ideas in twentieth-century political thought. And it is both more specific and more disturbing than the popular shorthand suggests. In this episode, Shawn and Claire take the full measure of Arendt's work — not just the Eichmann trial, but the broader political philosophy that surrounds it. They cover her distinction between power and violence (which are not the same thing and cannot substitute for each other), her analysis of totalitarianism and the conditions that make it possible, and her concept of the public realm — the space in which people appear as genuine individuals, capable of genuine political action, rather than as subjects or consumers. The episode also addresses Arendt's most practically urgent claim: that thinking itself is a political act. The refusal to think — the surrender of independent judgment to role, routine, and institutional compliance — is not just a personal failure. It is one of the primary conditions under which ordinary people participate in extraordinary harm without recognizing it as harm. Her analysis of the conditions that produce political catastrophe was not a description of a unique historical moment. It was a structural one. And the structures she identified are not confined to history. Shawn and Claire together. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * Arendt, H. (1973). The Origins of Totalitarianism (new ed.). Harcourt. (Original work published 1951) * Arendt, H. (1958). The Human Condition. University of Chicago Press. * Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking. * Arendt, H. (1978). The Life of the Mind (2 vols.). Harcourt. Biographical & Contextual * Young-Bruehl, E. (1982). Hannah Arendt: For Love of the World. Yale University Press. * Lipstadt, D. E. (2011). The Eichmann Trial. Schocken Books. Works Referenced in This Episode * Arendt, H. (1972). Crises of the Republic. Harcourt. * Bernstein, R. J. (1996). Hannah Arendt and the Jewish Question. MIT Press. * Villa, D. R. (1996). Arendt and Heidegger: The Fate of the Political. Princeton University Press. Accessible Starting Points * Canovan, M. (1992). Hannah Arendt: A Reinterpretation of Her Political Thought. Cambridge University Press. * Arendt, H. (1994). Essays in Understanding, 1930–1954 (J. Kohn, Ed.). Harcourt. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

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13 episodios

episode Episode #013 - What Does It Mean to Live Philosophically? artwork

Episode #013 - What Does It Mean to Live Philosophically?

Socrates said the unexamined life is not worth living. That sentence is probably the most quoted in the history of philosophy. But the popular interpretation — that you should think more and be more self-aware — is true but thin. What Socrates was describing was something more demanding and more specific than general self-reflection. He was describing a practice. A way of being oriented toward your own life that is different in kind from simply having opinions about it. In this episode, Shawn and Claire step back from individual thinkers and ask the question directly: what does it actually mean to live philosophically? Not to hold philosophical positions, but to practice philosophy as a daily orientation — to let it change something, not just inform something. They draw on the full arc of the season to address this: what Socrates actually meant at his trial, what the Stoic practice of self-examination looks like when it is not reduced to a productivity framework, what Jung's shadow work and Kahneman's cognitive bias research add to the picture of why clear seeing is genuinely hard, and what Arendt contributes when she argues that the refusal to think is not just a personal failure but a political one. The episode also clears away three versions of philosophy that do not work: philosophy as a collection of positions to defend, philosophy as self-improvement packaging, and philosophy as intellectual escape. What is left — the practice that remains when those are stripped away — is harder to describe but more honest. It is the willingness to keep returning to the questions that matter, to let the answers actually change something, and to live with the difficulty that honest thinking produces rather than resolving it prematurely into comfort. The examined life is not a more comfortable life. It is a more real one. Shawn and Claire together. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * Plato. (2002). Five Dialogues: Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Meno, Phaedo (G. M. A. Grube, Trans., 2nd ed.). Hackett Publishing. * Hadot, P. (1995). Philosophy as a Way of Life (A. Davidson, Ed.; M. Chase, Trans.). Blackwell. (The essential text on ancient philosophy as practice rather than doctrine — directly foundational to this episode.) * Marcus Aurelius. (2002). Meditations (G. Hays, Trans.). Modern Library. Works Referenced in This Episode * Nussbaum, M. C. (1994). The Therapy of Desire: Theory and Practice in Hellenistic Ethics. Princeton University Press. * Nehamas, A. (1998). The Art of Living: Socratic Reflections from Plato to Foucault. University of California Press. * Foucault, M. (2005). The Hermeneutics of the Subject: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1981–1982 (F. Gros, Ed.; G. Burchell, Trans.). Palgrave Macmillan. Accessible Starting Points * de Botton, A. (2000). The Consolations of Philosophy. Pantheon. (Accessible and humane — a good companion to this episode for the general reader.) * Irvine, W. B. (2009). A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy. Oxford University Press. New episodes every Monday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

6 de jul de 202630 min
episode Episode #012 - Hannah Arendt: Power, Evil, and the Life of the Mind artwork

Episode #012 - Hannah Arendt: Power, Evil, and the Life of the Mind

In 1961, a political philosopher traveled to Jerusalem to cover a trial for The New Yorker. The man on trial was Adolf Eichmann — one of the primary administrators of the Holocaust. She expected a monster. What she found was something she described as terrifyingly normal. A bureaucrat. A man who spoke in clichés, followed orders, and never acted out of personal malice. A man who was not evil in the way we usually imagine evil. He was thoughtless. Shallowly, bureaucratically, catastrophically thoughtless. The philosopher was Hannah Arendt. The phrase she coined — the banality of evil — became one of the most important and most debated ideas in twentieth-century political thought. And it is both more specific and more disturbing than the popular shorthand suggests. In this episode, Shawn and Claire take the full measure of Arendt's work — not just the Eichmann trial, but the broader political philosophy that surrounds it. They cover her distinction between power and violence (which are not the same thing and cannot substitute for each other), her analysis of totalitarianism and the conditions that make it possible, and her concept of the public realm — the space in which people appear as genuine individuals, capable of genuine political action, rather than as subjects or consumers. The episode also addresses Arendt's most practically urgent claim: that thinking itself is a political act. The refusal to think — the surrender of independent judgment to role, routine, and institutional compliance — is not just a personal failure. It is one of the primary conditions under which ordinary people participate in extraordinary harm without recognizing it as harm. Her analysis of the conditions that produce political catastrophe was not a description of a unique historical moment. It was a structural one. And the structures she identified are not confined to history. Shawn and Claire together. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * Arendt, H. (1973). The Origins of Totalitarianism (new ed.). Harcourt. (Original work published 1951) * Arendt, H. (1958). The Human Condition. University of Chicago Press. * Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking. * Arendt, H. (1978). The Life of the Mind (2 vols.). Harcourt. Biographical & Contextual * Young-Bruehl, E. (1982). Hannah Arendt: For Love of the World. Yale University Press. * Lipstadt, D. E. (2011). The Eichmann Trial. Schocken Books. Works Referenced in This Episode * Arendt, H. (1972). Crises of the Republic. Harcourt. * Bernstein, R. J. (1996). Hannah Arendt and the Jewish Question. MIT Press. * Villa, D. R. (1996). Arendt and Heidegger: The Fate of the Political. Princeton University Press. Accessible Starting Points * Canovan, M. (1992). Hannah Arendt: A Reinterpretation of Her Political Thought. Cambridge University Press. * Arendt, H. (1994). Essays in Understanding, 1930–1954 (J. Kohn, Ed.). Harcourt. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

29 de jun de 202633 min
episode Episode #011 - The Trolley Problem and the Architecture of Moral Thinking artwork

Episode #011 - The Trolley Problem and the Architecture of Moral Thinking

DESCRIPTION You have probably heard the trolley problem. A runaway trolley, five people on the tracks, a lever that will divert it — but kill one person instead. Most people say pull the lever. Then comes the bridge version: same trolley, same five people, but this time you have to push a man off a bridge to stop it. Same arithmetic. Almost everyone says no. That inconsistency is not a failure of reasoning. It is a window into the architecture of how moral thinking actually works. Shawn and Claire take the most famous thought experiment in moral philosophy seriously — not as a puzzle, but as a precise instrument for exposing the genuine conflict at the heart of moral judgment. Why does the same numerical outcome produce completely different verdicts depending on how the harm is caused? What does that reveal about the limits of utilitarian thinking? And what does it mean that brain imaging studies show different neural systems firing in each case — that the conflict is not just philosophical but physiological? The episode works through the two frameworks the trolley problem puts in direct conflict: utilitarianism, which says the right action is whatever produces the best outcomes; and deontological ethics, which says some actions are wrong regardless of consequences — that there are people you cannot use as means to an end, even a good one. Both capture something real. Neither wins cleanly. And why does any of this matter outside a seminar room? The conflict between maximizing outcomes and respecting individuals is not hypothetical. It is present in every serious question we face — in healthcare, in criminal justice, in how we think about future generations. The trolley problem strips the question down so you can see it clearly. The real-world versions are the same question with the complexity turned back up. Shawn and Claire together. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Philosophical Texts * Foot, P. (1967). The problem of abortion and the doctrine of double effect. Oxford Review, 5, 5–15. * Thomson, J. J. (1985). The trolley problem. Yale Law Journal, 94(6), 1395–1415. * Kant, I. (1998). Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals (M. Gregor, Trans.). Cambridge University Press. (Original work published 1785) * Mill, J. S. (1998). Utilitarianism (R. Crisp, Ed.). Oxford University Press. (Original work published 1863) Works Referenced in This Episode * Greene, J. D., Sommerville, R. B., Nystrom, L. E., Darley, J. M., & Cohen, J. D. (2001). An fMRI investigation of emotional engagement in moral judgment. Science, 293(5537), 2105–2108. * Ross, W. D. (1930). The Right and the Good. Oxford University Press. * Rawls, J. (1971). A Theory of Justice. Harvard University Press. * Kamm, F. M. (2007). Intricate Ethics: Rights, Responsibilities, and Permissible Harm. Oxford University Press. Accessible Starting Points * Sandel, M. J. (2009). Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do? Farrar, Straus and Giroux. (The best popular entry point into utilitarian vs. deontological ethics — and the source of the most-watched philosophy lecture in history.) * Singer, P. (1993). Practical Ethics (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. * Greene, J. (2013). Moral Tribes: Emotion, Reason, and the Gap Between Us and Them. Penguin Press. New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

22 de jun de 202630 min
episode Episode #010 - Simone de Beauvoir and the Construction of Self artwork

Episode #010 - Simone de Beauvoir and the Construction of Self

You did not find yourself. You are making yourself. And the conditions under which that making is happening are not neutral. That is the core claim of Simone de Beauvoir's philosophy — and it reaches far beyond the question of gender it is most often associated with. It is a claim about what any self is, how it comes to be, and what it means to take responsibility for who you are becoming when the forces shaping you are largely invisible. In this solo episode, Claire takes the full measure of one of the twentieth century's most important and most underread thinkers. She covers what de Beauvoir's famous sentence — one is not born a woman, one becomes one — is actually arguing beneath the slogan; how de Beauvoir takes Sartre's existentialism and makes it philosophically stronger by insisting that freedom is always situated, always conditioned, never the unconstrained abstraction Sartre sometimes implied; and what the concept of bad faith looks like not as a theoretical failing but as a daily temptation — the comfort of letting your circumstances, your relationships, or your role define you so that you do not have to do the harder work of defining yourself. This episode also takes seriously something the popular reception of de Beauvoir often skips: the way her framework complicates moral judgment. If the self is always shaped by conditions the person did not fully choose, then understanding someone's choices requires attending to the conditions that constrained them — without dissolving personal responsibility entirely. Holding both at once is the philosophical work she is asking you to do. It is harder than either alternative, and more honest. The episode connects directly to last week's conversation on love — because if the self is always a project rather than a finished thing, then 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. Claire solo. No prior philosophy required. SHOW NOTES Primary Sources * de Beauvoir, S. (2011). The Second Sex (C. Borde & S. Malovany-Chevallier, Trans.). Knopf. (Original work published 1949) (The complete translation — dense but essential. Even reading Part One and the Introduction will change how you think.) * de Beauvoir, S. (1948). The Ethics of Ambiguity (B. Frechtman, Trans.). Philosophical Library. (Shorter and more accessible than The Second Sex — the clearest statement of her own philosophical position.) * Sartre, J.-P. (2007). Existentialism Is a Humanism (C. Macomber, Trans.). Yale University Press. (Original work published 1946) (The best short entry point into the existentialist framework de Beauvoir is building on and revising.) Biographical & Contextual * Bair, D. (1990). Simone de Beauvoir: A Biography. Summit Books. * Rowley, H. (2005). Tête-à-Tête: Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre. HarperCollins. Works Referenced in This Episode * Butler, J. (1990). Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. Routledge. * Gilligan, C. (1982). In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women's Development. Harvard University Press. * Hegel, G. W. F. (1977). Phenomenology of Spirit (A. V. Miller, Trans.). Oxford University Press. (Original work published 1807) New episodes every Sunday. Philosophy for Lunch · Big ideas. Human conversations.

14 de jun de 202618 min
episode Episode #009 - The Philosophy of Love: What Are You Actually Looking For? artwork

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.

7 de jun de 202630 min