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Occasionally Philosophical

Podkast av Mark

engelsk

Historie & religion

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Les mer Occasionally Philosophical

Occasionally Philosophical is what happens when a father and son (Doug and Mark) sit down with microphones and way too many questions about life. We’re not professors, we’re not gurus — we’re just two curious people who enjoy overthinking the world out loud. Some weeks we’re talking books and big ideas, other weeks it’s tech, society, or whatever strange thought popped into our heads over coffee. Expect a mix of laughs, thoughtful tangents, and the kind of conversations that might actually make you rethink things… or at least give you something to argue about on your next car ride. If you like big questions, bad jokes, and the occasional mind-bending insight, welcome to the family.

Alle episoder

35 Episoder

episode Why History Never Feels the Same When You Lived Through It cover

Why History Never Feels the Same When You Lived Through It

In this episode of Occasionally Philosophical, Mark and Doug talk about what happens when people try to explain history after the fact — and why those explanations often feel wrong to the people who actually lived through it. The conversation starts with the 2016 election and the way media coverage shaped the rise of Donald Trump, especially the endless attention given to empty podiums, rallies, tweets, and spectacle. From there, we get into Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Obama, immigration narratives, Fox News, misogyny, racism, political tribalism, and the temptation to reduce complicated events into one clean explanation. But like most Occasionally Philosophical conversations, we don’t stay in one lane for long. We also talk about pseudo-events, YouTube commentary culture, how media creates stories just to talk about them, and why living through a moment gives you a different kind of knowledge than reading about it later. Somehow, this also turns into a Kobe Bryant vs. LeBron James GOAT discussion — because apparently basketball history has the same problem as political history: stats don’t always capture the experience of watching it happen. The big question: Are we actually learning from history, or are we just creating cleaner stories after the fact?

15. mai 2026 - 1 h 0 min
episode AI, Cognitive Overload, and the Cost of Convenience cover

AI, Cognitive Overload, and the Cost of Convenience

In this episode of Occasionally Philosophical, Doug and Mark talk about algorithmic curation, AI overload, cognitive load, and what happens when the tools meant to help us start shaping the way we think. The conversation begins with a correction to a Bertrand Russell quote about philosophy, then moves into the way algorithms narrow our attention. Whether it is YouTube recommending the same type of video over and over, Google feeding us endless AI doom stories, or social media amplifying political outrage, we ask a bigger question: are we still choosing what we think about, or are our feeds choosing for us? We also get into the complicated role of AI. It can help us summarize, organize, and understand information faster, but what do we lose when we skip the struggle of learning something ourselves? Does convenience come at the cost of deeper understanding? And when people are lonely, overwhelmed, depressed, or vulnerable, what happens when AI becomes more than just a tool? From cognitive overload and mental shortcuts to media framing, political outrage, wealth, power, and the simple act of helping one person at a time, this episode is about trying to stay human in a world that keeps asking us to process more than we were built to handle. Occasionally Philosophical is a father-son podcast where we overthink the world out loud, one conversation at a time. Listen / follow here: https://occasionallyphilosophical.riverside.com/ [https://occasionallyphilosophical.riverside.com/]

10. mai 2026 - 1 h 3 min
episode Do You Actually “Know” Anything… Or Just Know Where to Look? cover

Do You Actually “Know” Anything… Or Just Know Where to Look?

In this episode of Occasionally Philosophical, Mark and Doug explore a deceptively simple question: What does it actually mean to “know” something? It starts with a story about a grocery list… but quickly turns into a deep dive into: Whether knowing where information is = actually knowing it How technology (like GPS and smartphones) might be reshaping our thinking Why explaining something simply might be the true test of understanding The rise of AI—and whether we’re trusting it too much How online discourse has shifted from conversation to tribal signaling Why “Google it” isn’t the slam-dunk argument people think it is Along the way, we touch on ideas connected to thinkers like Hilary Putnam, Bertrand Russell, Noam Chomsky, and even Douglas Adams. This episode is really about one thing: 👉 In a world where information is everywhere… how do we know what’s actually true?

5. mai 2026 - 1 h 3 min
episode Your Reality Isn’t Real… It’s Algorithmically Designed cover

Your Reality Isn’t Real… It’s Algorithmically Designed

In this episode of Occasionally Philosophical, Mark and Doug dive into something most of us feel… but don’t fully understand: 👉 How algorithms quietly shape what we see, think, and even believe. What starts as a simple conversation about TikTok feeds and targeted ads turns into a deeper exploration of epistemic bubbles, the attention economy, and the subtle ways our reality gets curated for us. If everything you see is personalized… are you actually seeing the world as it is? Or just the version designed to keep you engaged? 🧠 What we explore: Why your feed feels “right” (and why that’s dangerous) How algorithms reinforce your beliefs without you noticing The concept of epistemic bubbles and digital echo chambers AI, content loops, and the rise of “AI vs AI” information Why outrage, fear, and division get amplified online The tension between staying informed and staying sane Why real life (your immediate world) might matter more than the global feed At the core, this episode asks a simple but uncomfortable question: Are you thinking for yourself… or being gently guided there? If you made it this far, you’re our people 💚 Drop a comment — where do you notice the algorithm shaping your world?

29. april 2026 - 1 h 3 min
episode Are We Solving Problems… or Just Creating New Ones? cover

Are We Solving Problems… or Just Creating New Ones?

In this episode of Occasionally Philosophical, Mark and Doug take on one of the biggest assumptions of modern life: What if technology doesn’t actually solve our problems… but just changes them? From cars and climate change to social media, misinformation, and AI, we explore the idea that every “solution” might come with unintended consequences—and sometimes creates entirely new problems. We talk about: Why we treat technology like a form of salvation The cycle of problem → solution → new problem Social media, loneliness, and misinformation AI, control, and the illusion of progress Why “fixing the world” might not work the way we think The deeper cultural beliefs (Mother Culture 👀) driving all of this This isn’t an anti-technology rant—it’s a conversation about how we use it… and whether we actually understand the systems we’re building. If you’ve ever wondered whether we’re moving forward—or just moving faster—this one’s for you.

20. april 2026 - 1 h 7 min
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