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"The Banality of Evil" | Hannah Arendt's Complete Philosophy For Sleep

2 h 46 min · 11 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio "The Banality of Evil" | Hannah Arendt's Complete Philosophy For Sleep

Descripción

Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote What if the worst evil in history was committed not by monsters, but by ordinary people who simply stopped thinking? Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Hannah Arendt. In this episode, we trace the full arc of Arendt's life and ideas. We begin with a young Jewish philosopher in Königsberg, studying under Heidegger and Jaspers, and follow her flight from Nazi Germany, her internment in a French camp, and her arrival in New York in nineteen forty-one with nothing but her intellect and a question: how had this been possible? What follows is one of the most extraordinary intellectual careers of the twentieth century. We work through her monumental account of totalitarianism, her philosophical defense of the public realm and political action, her controversial reporting on the Eichmann trial in Jerusalem, and her final unfinished inquiry into thinking, willing, and judgment. Along the way we encounter the phrase that made her famous and infamous at once, a careful examination of how bureaucratic participation in mass murder can occur without conventional evil motivation, and a sustained argument that what the modern age has lost is something genuinely irreplaceable: the space in which human beings, in all their plurality, can act together and begin something new. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. (0:00:00) Biography and Formation (0:20:20) The Origins of Totalitarianism, Part One (0:37:21) The Origins of Totalitarianism, Part Two (0:53:10) The Human Condition, Part One (1:08:56) The Human Condition, Part Two (1:24:34) Eichmann in Jerusalem: The Trial (1:40:12) The Banality of Evil (1:56:40) On Revolution (2:12:37) The Life of the Mind (2:29:07) Influence and Legacy All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License. If this helped you rest, consider following Sleepy Philosophy Radio for more gentle, longform philosophy.

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44 episodios

episode Blaise Pascal | The Mathematician Who Found God artwork

Blaise Pascal | The Mathematician Who Found God

Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote The man who proved that nature does not abhor a vacuum, and then wrote the most honest account ever given of why the universe terrifies us. Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Blaise Pascal. Blaise Pascal lived only thirty-nine years, and in those years he changed mathematics, physics, probability theory, and the history of Western prose. But at the center of his life was a night in November of 1654 that he could never describe, only remember. After that night he turned from the world of scientific triumph toward a book he would never finish, a book about what it means to be a human being suspended between two infinites, looking for a God who chooses to remain hidden. This episode follows Pascal from the Paris household where he taught himself geometry in secret as a child to the small room in which he died at thirty-nine with the record of his conversion sewn into the lining of his coat. Three hours of gentle narration for deep rest. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. (0:00:00) The Prodigy (0:17:02) The Calculator and the Vacuum (0:33:53) Probability and the Gambler (0:51:15) The Night of Fire (1:08:33) Port-Royal and the Jansenists (1:26:04) The Provincial Letters (1:43:42) The Pensees Take Shape (2:00:48) The Hidden God and the Wager (2:17:29) Reason and the Heart (2:34:12) The Thinking Reed SUGGESTED READING Blaise Pascal, Pensees, translated by A. J. Krailsheimer, Penguin Classics: https://amzn.to/4mQcqcE The Provincial Letters of Blaise Pascal: https://amzn.to/4sThlew These are affiliate links. At no extra cost to you, I earn a small commission if you purchase through them. All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License. If this helped you rest, consider following Sleepy Philosophy Radio for more gentle, longform philosophy.

31 de may de 20262 h 51 min
episode We Should Never Have Been Born | Cioran's Darkest Philosophy for Sleep artwork

We Should Never Have Been Born | Cioran's Darkest Philosophy for Sleep

Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Emil Cioran. Some nights the thought you cannot chase away is the one you most need a voice to name. Emil Cioran wrote for sixty years about the pointlessness of existence, and lived for eighty four years. The gap between what he argued and how he lived is the honest center of his work. This long quiet episode follows him from a Carpathian village where a priest's son ran barefoot among graves, through the cafes of interwar Bucharest, through a dark political period he spent the rest of his life working against, through the small Paris attic he shared with Simone Boue for over fifty years, and into the final afternoons in the Luxembourg Gardens. A calm unhurried portrait of the most rigorous stylist of despair in twentieth century literature, and of the quiet stubborn survival that was his truest answer to his own philosophy. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. (0:00:00) The Attic on the Rue de l'Odeon (0:14:07) The Village and the Boy Who Was Happy (0:27:37) Bucharest and the Young Generation (0:42:22) The Dark Years (0:58:05) Paris, and the Decision Not to Sleep (1:12:49) A Short History of Decay (1:27:50) The Trouble with Being Born (1:41:53) The God He Could Not Quite Lose (1:56:41) Style as Salvation (2:10:22) The Old Man in the Luxembourg Gardens

28 de may de 20262 h 24 min
episode The Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels | Book Summary artwork

The Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels | Book Summary

In the winter of eighteen forty-seven, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels were commissioned by a small revolutionary organization to write a statement of communist principles. What they produced in a matter of weeks was something different and more ambitious: a compressed analysis of how capitalism works, why it produces the inequalities it does, and where the logic of its own development was leading. This episode moves through the Manifesto in full. We begin with Marx and Engels themselves, the world they came from and the intellectual formation that brought them together. We follow their argument through the history of class conflict, the extraordinary and self-defeating power of the bourgeoisie, the condition of the industrial working class, the communist program and the replies to its critics, and the sustained polemic against other socialisms of the era. We end with the life the Manifesto has lived since eighteen forty-eight, the movements it inspired, the states that claimed it, and the questions it posed that the world it described has not yet answered. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. (0:00:00) Marx, Engels, and the World of Eighteen Forty-Eight (0:10:32) The History of All Hitherto Existing Society (0:19:21) The Revolutionary Bourgeoisie (0:27:31) The Proletariat and Its Condition (0:36:49) The Communist Program (0:45:41) Against the Other Socialisms (0:56:37) Reception and Legacy Thank you for listening. Book summary episodes like this one are released every week for members. Joining supports the channel and unlocks the full member library: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe

24 de may de 20261 h 7 min
episode Niccolo Machiavelli | The Most Misunderstood Philosopher in History artwork

Niccolo Machiavelli | The Most Misunderstood Philosopher in History

Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote The world does not reward good intentions. Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Niccolo Machiavelli. In this episode, we trace the full arc of Machiavelli's life and ideas, beginning with a young diplomat watching power operate in the courts and camps of Renaissance Italy and ending with a philosophical vision that five centuries of enemies have not been able to destroy. We explore his years as a servant of the Florentine Republic, his arrest, torture, and exile, and the desperate circumstances in which he wrote The Prince. We unpack his central argument: that anyone who wants to understand politics must begin with the world as it is, not as it ought to be. We examine his concepts of virtu and fortuna, the fox and the lion, cruelty well used and cruelty badly used. We enter the Discourses on Livy and discover a passionate republican behind the supposed teacher of tyrants. We confront the problem of dirty hands, the question of whether a good person can govern effectively. And we ask the question Machiavelli leaves behind: what does it cost to see the world without illusions? Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. (0:00:00) The Servant of Florence (0:15:50) The Fall (0:30:44) The Truth About Princes (0:45:44) The Fox and the Lion (1:00:53) Virtu and Fortuna (1:16:56) Cruelty Well Used (1:33:03) The Discourses (1:49:01) The Problem of Dirty Hands (2:05:08) Five Centuries of Enemies (2:21:41) The World Does Not Reward Good Intentions SUGGESTED READING Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince, translated by Harvey Mansfield, University of Chicago Press: https://amzn.to/4cL7Esx Niccolo Machiavelli, Discourses on Livy, translated by Harvey Mansfield and Nathan Tarcov, University of Chicago Press: https://amzn.to/4u9OEen These are affiliate links. At no extra cost to you, I earn a small commission if you purchase through them. All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License. If this helped you rest, consider following Sleepy Philosophy Radio for more gentle, longform philosophy.

23 de may de 20262 h 36 min
episode There Is A Book That Contains Your Death | Borges's Complete Philosophy For Sleep artwork

There Is A Book That Contains Your Death | Borges's Complete Philosophy For Sleep

Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote Somewhere in an infinite library, there is a book that contains the date of your death. Tonight, fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Jorge Luis Borges. Tonight we step inside the mind of the blind Argentine librarian who thought in fictions and dreamed in paradoxes. Jorge Luis Borges was not a philosopher who wrote systematic treatises. He was a storyteller who turned philosophical problems into fables so precise and beautiful that physicists, neuroscientists, and literary theorists are still catching up to him. Over the next three hours, we walk through twenty chapters of his life and work, from the childhood library in Palermo to the quiet grave in Geneva, from Funes the Memorious to The Library of Babel to the Aleph in a Buenos Aires basement. These are stories about memory, infinity, identity, dreams, and the suspicion that the universe itself might be a text we are only partially able to read. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. (0:00:00) The Boy in the Library (0:08:25) A Child Between Languages (0:16:45) Geneva and the War Years (0:25:19) Return to Buenos Aires (0:34:29) The Man Who Could Not Forget (0:43:37) The Library of Babel (0:52:42) Pierre Menard's Quixote (1:00:42) Tlon, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius (1:09:26) The Garden of Forking Paths (1:18:44) The Circular Ruins (1:27:22) The Aleph (1:35:53) The Immortal (1:44:26) The Blindness (1:53:14) Death and the Compass (2:02:17) Borges and I (2:11:04) The Sand and the Forking (2:19:19) The Political Wounds (2:28:36) Borges Among the Philosophers (2:37:36) Geneva, Again (2:45:42) The Labyrinth Remains Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License. All research and writing is done personally. If this helped you rest, consider following Sleepy Philosophy Radio for more gentle, longform philosophy.

16 de may de 20262 h 54 min