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"Led by an Invisible Hand" | Adam Smith Complete Philosophy For Sleep

3 h 27 min · 26 jun 2026
aflevering "Led by an Invisible Hand" | Adam Smith Complete Philosophy For Sleep artwork

Beschrijving

He wrote the book that built the modern world, then spent his last days making sure most of the rest was burned. Adam Smith was the gentle, absent-minded son of a Scottish customs official, and he became the most misread thinker in the history of economics. This episode follows the whole arc: the quiet port town of Kirkcaldy and the mother he never left, the miserable years at Oxford, the Glasgow lecture rooms where he was happiest, and the long silent decade by the sea in which he wrote the Wealth of Nations. Before the economics comes the moral philosophy the world forgot, the theory of sympathy and the mirror of society, the impartial spectator and the man within the breast, the little finger and the earthquake, the parable of the poor man's son who chases wealth and finds it empty. Then the great book itself, read slowly and in context, the pin factory, the butcher and the brewer, the invisible hand in all three places Smith actually used it, the merchants conspiring against the public, the critique of empire and slavery, and the duties he assigned to the state. Along the way come Hutcheson and Hume, the French economists in their Paris salons, the bank that collapsed while he wrote, the public letter on Hume's death that cost him more abuse than his attack on the whole commercial system, and the man of system who moves human beings like pieces on a board. Serious philosophy, told slowly and clearly, for listeners who want real ideas as they drift off. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. SUPPORT THE SHOW Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote Becoming a member keeps these episodes coming and unlocks the members only library of exclusive book summary episodes, a growing shelf of great books read closely and explained in plain language. Subscribe: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe (0:00:00) The Man Who Burned His Papers (0:13:08) Wonder and the Imagination (0:19:26) A Nation of Improvers (0:28:18) The Mirror of Society (0:39:50) The Faculty of Speech (0:45:29) The Man Within the Breast (0:58:50) The Little Finger and the Earthquake (1:04:32) The Corruption of Our Moral Sentiments (1:14:38) The Poor Man's Son (1:20:51) Justice, the Main Pillar (1:29:42) Among the Economists (1:41:38) The Year the Banks Fell (1:48:02) The Pin Factory (2:01:55) The Butcher's Self-Love (2:12:03) The Invisible Hand (2:24:11) A Conspiracy Against the Public (2:29:46) The Golden Dream (2:40:07) The Linen Shirt (2:46:14) The Duties of the Sovereign (2:59:54) The Death of David Hume (3:08:03) The Man of System (3:13:44) The Uses of Adam Smith Sleepy Philosophy Radio makes longform, carefully researched philosophy written as a serious essay and paced for rest. All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.

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aflevering The Librarian Who Wrote the Unspeakable | Georges Bataille Complete Philosophy For Sleep artwork

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Vote on what comes next: ⁠https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote⁠ [https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote] Becoming a member keeps these episodes coming and unlocks the members only library of exclusive book summary episodes, a growing shelf of great books read closely and explained in plain language. Subscribe: ⁠https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe⁠ [https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe] By day a mild librarian, by night the philosopher of excess, eroticism, and the sacred where reason ends. Georges Bataille kept one of the strangest double lives in modern thought. For decades he was a quiet librarian in Paris, courteous and unremarkable, while in private he wrote some of the most extreme and original books of his century. This episode follows him from a childhood shaped by a blind and dying father, through a lost faith and a notorious first novel, into the feuds and secret societies of the years between the wars. It traces the ideas that made him a hidden source for a whole later generation, the economy of loss and useless expenditure, the sun that gives without return, the sacred glimpsed in transgression, a mysticism with no God at the end of it, and eroticism understood as the meeting place of desire and death. Along the way it restores the man behind the scandal, the gentle scholar drawn to everything orderly thought leaves out. Told as a serious essay and paced for rest. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. 00:00:00 The Blind Father 00:12:59 The Eye and the Egg 00:22:42 The Excremental Philosopher 00:29:12 The Low and the Formless 00:39:22 The Economy of Loss 00:46:20 Hegel's Wound and Nietzsche's Laughter 00:56:34 The Headless God 01:03:36 The Return of the Sacred 01:13:42 Laure and the Silence 01:20:00 A Mysticism Without God 01:33:08 A Theology Turned Inside Out 01:42:03 God in the Brothel 01:48:07 Love Among the Graves 01:56:30 The Sun That Gives Without Return 02:11:27 The Sovereign Moment 02:20:13 Desire All the Way to Death 02:34:31 Literature Is Not Innocent 02:44:02 The Community of Those Who Have Nothing 02:50:24 The Tears of Eros 02:58:01 The Mild Librarian 03:04:24 The Uses of Georges Bataille Sleepy Philosophy Radio makes longform, carefully researched philosophy written as a serious essay and paced for rest. All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.

16 jul 20263 h 13 min
aflevering Best of All Is Never to Be Born | Antinatalism, a Complete Philosophy for Sleep artwork

Best of All Is Never to Be Born | Antinatalism, a Complete Philosophy for Sleep

The oldest, strangest verdict in philosophy, that it might be better never to have been born. Long before the word existed, the wisest voices of the ancient world kept arriving at the same strange verdict, that it might be better never to have been born at all. This episode follows that thought across the centuries, from a captured satyr and the chorus of a Greek tragedy to the systematic pessimism of Schopenhauer, who made suffering the ground note of existence. From there it moves through the strangest corners of the tradition, a philosopher who imagined a God who chose to die, a Norwegian who called consciousness an evolutionary mistake, and a sleepless Romanian who turned despair into aphorism. At its center stands the modern argument that made the idea respectable again, David Benatar's claim that coming into existence is always a harm, with the questions of consent, suffering, and the harm we do woven around it. Along the way it gives the other side a full hearing, including its greatest adversary, the thinker who answered the ancient verdict by daring to love his fate. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. SUPPORT THE SHOW Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote [https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote] Becoming a member keeps these episodes coming and unlocks the members only library of exclusive book summary episodes, a growing shelf of great books read closely and explained in plain language. Subscribe: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe [https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe] 00:00:00 The Wisdom of Silenus 00:11:46 A Word for the Position 00:17:51 The Wheel of Rebirth 00:26:10 The Best of All Possible Worlds 00:32:41 The Philosopher of the Will 00:44:05 Better Not to Be 00:51:50 The God Who Died 00:58:16 The Last Messiah 01:07:36 The Trouble with Being Born 01:14:19 The Asymmetry 01:27:26 The Pollyanna in the Mind 01:32:57 The Question No One Was Asked 01:42:05 The Sum of Suffering 01:53:37 The Harm We Do 02:02:29 Consciousness, the Malignant Gift 02:08:36 A Line of Poets 02:17:31 The Man Who Said Yes 02:28:48 Why Not Simply Die 02:34:43 The Case Against 02:43:18 The Silence We Choose 02:50:03 The Compassion Core 02:58:35 The Verdict Returns Sleepy Philosophy Radio makes longform, carefully researched philosophy written as a serious essay and paced for rest. All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.

8 jul 20263 h 10 min
aflevering Heidegger Betrayed Him. Arendt Never Left. | Karl Jaspers Complete Philosophy for Sleep artwork

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A boy told he would die by thirty built a philosophy of openness that outlived two death sentences. Karl Jaspers trained as a doctor under the shadow of an early death, reinvented the study of the troubled mind, and then crossed quietly into philosophy to ask the largest questions a person can face. This episode follows his whole arc, from the cold northern coast where he was born, through the Heidelberg years and the marriage that shaped everything, to the ideas that made him one of the deepest thinkers of his century. We trace the situations no one escapes, the self that is never finished, the truth that lives only between two people, and the signs of something beyond all knowing. We walk through his shattered friendship with another great philosopher, the years he and his wife lived under threat, and his emergence after the war as a moral conscience who asked a ruined nation to think clearly about its guilt. It is the story of a mind that refused, against everything, to close. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote Becoming a member keeps these episodes coming and unlocks the members only library of exclusive book summary episodes, a growing shelf of great books read closely and explained in plain language. Subscribe: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe (0:00:00) The Boy Given Thirty Years (0:12:03) The Doctor Who Listened (0:20:41) The Man at Full Stretch (0:26:21) The Situations We Cannot Escape (0:36:18) The Two Who Woke Him (0:44:07) The Book Built to Stay Open (0:49:59) The Self That Is Never Finished (0:58:10) The Loving Struggle (1:04:11) The Horizon Behind Every Horizon (1:12:25) The Cipher and the Shipwreck (1:23:07) Reason Against the Fever (1:29:27) The Friend Who Crossed Over (1:36:17) The Poison and the Liberation (1:45:49) Four Kinds of Guilt (1:53:28) The Friendship That Held (1:59:42) A Faith Without Dogma (2:06:46) The Axis of History (2:16:42) The Long Conversation (2:22:56) The Bomb and the Conscience (2:30:40) The Philosopher of the Open Sleepy Philosophy Radio makes longform, carefully researched philosophy written as a serious essay and paced for rest. All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.

3 jul 20262 h 39 min
aflevering The Philosophy of Numbers | Pythagoras and the Ancient Belief That Reality Is Mathematical artwork

The Philosophy of Numbers | Pythagoras and the Ancient Belief That Reality Is Mathematical

Around 600 BCE, on the island of Samos, a man declared something that sounded almost absurd: that everything in the universe, every object, every force, every living creature, is ultimately a number. Not described by number. Not measured by number. But number itself. This three-hour exploration follows Pythagoras from his mysterious origins on Samos through his travels to Egypt and Babylon, the secret community he founded in southern Italy, and the mathematical discoveries that would reshape how humanity understands reality. We examine the sacred tetractys, the theorem that bears his name, the discovery that musical harmony is built from simple ratios, and the doctrine that the cosmos itself produces an inaudible symphony. We trace the belief that the soul travels through countless bodies across lifetimes, the persecution that burned his school to the ground, and the ideas that survived to shape Plato, medieval cosmology, and modern science. Pythagoras left almost no writings. What remains was assembled centuries after his death, layered with legend and myth. But beneath that mystery sits a radical idea: that reality has a structure, that structure is mathematical, and that human beings can learn to read it. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. Chapters (00:00:00)Pythagoras of Samos and the Birth of Mathematical Philosophy(00:18:30)The Pythagorean Way of Life and the Sacred Community(00:43:06)All Is Number, The Fundamental Principle of Reality(01:01:22)The Tetractys and Sacred Geometry(01:19:05)Mathematical Discoveries and the Birth of Proof(01:36:27)Musical Harmony and Mathematical Proportion(01:52:02)The Music of the Spheres and Cosmic Order(02:09:01)The Soul, Metempsychosis, and the Kinship of All Life(02:25:47)Ethics, Politics, and the Pythagorean Persecution(02:41:47)The Legacy of Pythagoreanism in Western Thought Support the channel: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe [https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe]

1 jul 20263 h 4 min
aflevering "Led by an Invisible Hand" | Adam Smith Complete Philosophy For Sleep artwork

"Led by an Invisible Hand" | Adam Smith Complete Philosophy For Sleep

He wrote the book that built the modern world, then spent his last days making sure most of the rest was burned. Adam Smith was the gentle, absent-minded son of a Scottish customs official, and he became the most misread thinker in the history of economics. This episode follows the whole arc: the quiet port town of Kirkcaldy and the mother he never left, the miserable years at Oxford, the Glasgow lecture rooms where he was happiest, and the long silent decade by the sea in which he wrote the Wealth of Nations. Before the economics comes the moral philosophy the world forgot, the theory of sympathy and the mirror of society, the impartial spectator and the man within the breast, the little finger and the earthquake, the parable of the poor man's son who chases wealth and finds it empty. Then the great book itself, read slowly and in context, the pin factory, the butcher and the brewer, the invisible hand in all three places Smith actually used it, the merchants conspiring against the public, the critique of empire and slavery, and the duties he assigned to the state. Along the way come Hutcheson and Hume, the French economists in their Paris salons, the bank that collapsed while he wrote, the public letter on Hume's death that cost him more abuse than his attack on the whole commercial system, and the man of system who moves human beings like pieces on a board. Serious philosophy, told slowly and clearly, for listeners who want real ideas as they drift off. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts. SUPPORT THE SHOW Vote on what comes next: https://www.sleepyphilosophyradio.com/vote Becoming a member keeps these episodes coming and unlocks the members only library of exclusive book summary episodes, a growing shelf of great books read closely and explained in plain language. Subscribe: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/sleepyphilo/subscribe (0:00:00) The Man Who Burned His Papers (0:13:08) Wonder and the Imagination (0:19:26) A Nation of Improvers (0:28:18) The Mirror of Society (0:39:50) The Faculty of Speech (0:45:29) The Man Within the Breast (0:58:50) The Little Finger and the Earthquake (1:04:32) The Corruption of Our Moral Sentiments (1:14:38) The Poor Man's Son (1:20:51) Justice, the Main Pillar (1:29:42) Among the Economists (1:41:38) The Year the Banks Fell (1:48:02) The Pin Factory (2:01:55) The Butcher's Self-Love (2:12:03) The Invisible Hand (2:24:11) A Conspiracy Against the Public (2:29:46) The Golden Dream (2:40:07) The Linen Shirt (2:46:14) The Duties of the Sovereign (2:59:54) The Death of David Hume (3:08:03) The Man of System (3:13:44) The Uses of Adam Smith Sleepy Philosophy Radio makes longform, carefully researched philosophy written as a serious essay and paced for rest. All research and writing is done personally. Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.

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