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Living Philosophy

Author: Todd Mei

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What is your second-life? Living Philosophy is dedicated to exploring the inspiring second lives of people who have successfully made significant changes to their careers and lives through self-reflection, insight, and practice. Listen also to our Public Philosophy podcasts, which you can find by topic and the bespoke logo artwork. Hosted by Dr Todd S. Mei, former Head of Philosophy at the University of Kent (UK), and founder, consultant, and freelance author at Philosophy2u.com.
41 Episodes
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Believe it or not, the saying “You are what you eat” reveals what we’ve got wrong about our approach to eating and living well. Why? It tends to take an overly narrow focus on ourselves without consideration of other values, histories, and species. Dr. Kelly Donati (William Angliss Institute, Australia) discusses the finer points of gastronomy, its history, its development, and how we can re-think what it means to eat and live well. She reflects in particular on her ethnographic fieldwork with an artisan cheesemaking goat farm.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Kelly Donati (Angliss Institute)“Toward a Ruminant Gastronomy” (Environmental Humanities)Sutton Grange Organic Farm (Website)Deborah Bird Rose (Wikipedia)Susan Parham (LinkedIn)Aboriginal cooking (First Nation Food)Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin (Wikipedia)Music: www.bensound.comLogo Art: Dattura Studios (website)Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Grasping what it means to be disabled is more complex than you might think. But doing so is key to understanding how we might treat people with impairments as equals with respect to justice, rights, and ethics. Prof Chris Riddle (Utica University) specializes in political philosophy, applied ethics, and the philosophy of disability. He has been an expert witness in several prominent legal cases concerning disability rights, and in this podcasts he discusses the historical and philosophical dimensions to understanding disability, as well as his own personal experiences as a scholar and an expert witness.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Chris Riddle (Uttica University)Chris’s personal websiteICF (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health)Tom Shakespeare (Wikipedia)Anita Silvers (Wikipedia)Thomas Scanlon (Wikipedia)Robert Nozick (Wikipedia)Luck egalitarianism (SEP)Martha Nussbaum (Wikipedia)Fragility of Goodness (Good Reads)Eva Kittay (Wikipedia)Jerome Bickenbach (University of Lucerne)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Dattura Studios (website)Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
One of the great insights from the philosophy of technology is that the more our devices become integrated with our lives, the more they reframe our relationships to others, the world, and even our purposes. In other words, technological devices tend to carry us away, for better or for worse. Dominic Smith (Associate Professor, University of Dundee) and Mark Coeckelbergh (Professor, University of Austria) discuss the paradoxical, political, and historical dimensions of our relations to technology.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHermeneutics in Real LifeHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Dominic Smith (University of Dundee)Mark Coeckelbergh (University of Austria, personal website)Martin Heidegger (Wikipedia)Walter Benjamin (Wikipedia)Marshall McLuhan (Wikipedia)Bruno Latour (Wikipedia)Peter-Paul Verbeek (Wikipedia)Robert Rosenberger (Georgia Tech)Stacey Irwin (Millersville)Bernard Stiegler (Wikipedia)Thomas Hobbes (SEP)Jean-Jacques Rousseau (SEP)Aristotle (SEP)Benjamin Bratton, The Revenge of the Real (Verso)Stuart Russell, Human Compatible (Wikipedia)Carole Pateman, The Sexual Contract (Wikipedia)Yuval Noah Harari (Author website)Kaddish (Dominic’s band)Pig Terrorism (Todd’s book)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Dattura Studios (website) Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Valerie Noble is a senior literary agent at the Donaghy Literary Group, where she works primarily within the genre of science fiction. She discusses the challenges she faced while completing a degree in food science, only to find how one of her primary means of escape offered a potential career in working with authors and publishing houses. Along the way, she gives some submission tips for new authors as well as reading suggestions for those looking to find a compelling and immersive narrative world.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Valerie Noble (TLG)Twitter (@NobleValerie)The Donaghy Literary Group (website)Elizabeth Allende (Wikipedia)Gabriel García Márquez (Wikipedia)Cormac McCarthy, The Road (Good Reads)C. A. Fletcher, A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World (Good Reads)Emma Newman, Planet Fall (Good Reads)David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas (Good Reads)Don Miguel Ruiz, The Four Agreements (Good Reads)Photo: Valerie NobleMusic: www.bensound.comLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Is Abortion Constitutional?

Is Abortion Constitutional?

2022-07-1101:11:40

We tend to react to the issue of the right to abortion according to moral, religious, or political convictions. But what we often tend to overlook is that the debate surrounding Roe v. Wade is primarily a legal one. So according to the US constitution, is the US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade legally sound? Prof Jay Mootz (University of the Pacific) and Prof George Taylor (University of Pittsburgh) are legal philosophers who discuss key problems and questions relating to the recent decision.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHermeneutics in Real LifeLinks Related to this Episode:Jay Mootz (University of the Pacific)George Taylor (University of Pittsburgh)Hermeneutics (Philosophy2u Video)Rhetoric (Wikipedia)Paul Ricoeur (SEP)Hans-Georg Gadamer (SEP)Virtue Ethics (SEP)14th Amendment (1868)Alito on Abortion Rights (Reuters)Legal CasesCalder v. Bull (Wikipedia) [1798]Lochner v. New York (Wikipedia) [1905]Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (Wikipedia) [1954]Poe v. Ullman (Wikipedia) [1961]Griswold v. Connecticut (Wikipedia) [1965]Roe v. Wade (Wikipedia) [1973]Planned Parenthood v. Casey (Wikipedia) [1992]Obergefell v. Hodges (Wikipedia) [2015]Dobbs v. Jackson (Wikipedia) [2022]Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Traumatic experiences are those which involve significant and terrible events on emotional, mental, and bodily levels. Their effects can often go unnoticed or can be dismissed as being purely subjective or emotional. A more balanced and holistic approach to understanding trauma examines healing in relation to the mind and body. Dr Anna Westin (St Mellitus College, UK) discusses the fundamental nature of trauma as defined philosophically and psychologically. She also delves into the variety of approaches to healing trauma and restoring how we can relate more ably to others.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Anna Westin (Professional Website)On LinkedInEmbodied Trauma and Healing (Routledge)Lev (Spotify)Somatic Experiencing Therapy (Very Well Mind)Søren Kierkegaard (Wikipedia)Emmanuel Levinas (SEP)Maurice Merleau-Ponty (SEP)Martin Heidegger (Wikipedia)Paul Ricoeur (Wikipedia)Bessel van der Kolk (Professional Website)Peter Levine (Somatic Therapist)Shelly Rambo (Boston University)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Kat Batchelor is a classically trained violinist who transitioned to the fiddle and playing folk music. She shares her insights into life, teaching, and performance that derive from her time spent performing at classical and public venues, busking, and interacting with the public on the city streets of Wales, England, and Scotland.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Kat Batchelor (Facebook and Instagram)Twitter (@KatieBatchelo14)Fiddler’s Elbow (Facebook)Bunny-Eye Ceilidh Band (Facebook)Dewdropper (Facebook)Morris Dancing (Wikipedia)Hillary Klug (website)Photo: Kat BatchelorMusic: www.bensound.comLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
What if the key to respecting and appreciating non-human animals resided in understanding our human selves better? Thinking about animals and our relation to them might then involve trying to grasp the ways in which our current social, economic, and moral systems skew our perceptions and practices. Prof. Alice Crary (The New School for Social Research) and Prof. Lori Gruen (Wesleyan University) delve into the fundamental questions and problems that can help us better understand the crisis affecting animals and how we might then seek resolution through a considered form of resistance.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Alice Crary (The New School)Lori Gruen (Wesleyan University)Animal Crisis (Polity Press)Animal Ethics (SEP, entry by Lori Gruen)Utilitarianism & Animals (Jeff Sebo)Philipa Foot (SEP)Iris Murdoch (SEP)Cora Diamond (Wikipedia)Sarah Ahmed (Wikipedia)Skepticism and Understanding the Minds of Others (SEP)Protest at Standing Rock (NPR)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Do crytpocurrencies and blockchain technology figure substantially in the possibility of financial freedom for those who currently are lacking in wealth? Or does the hype really just indicate that all things crypto are based on a speculative bubble and Ponzi schemes? Prof. Sebastian Purcell (SUNY, Cortland) discusses the legal, technological, and philosophical novelties behind cryptocurrencies that can potentially transform our lives for the better. He also weaves in how Aztec philosophy can help us think through what it means to have a rooted life.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Sebastian Purcell (LinkedIn; Quora)Twitter (@lspurcell)The Art of the Bubble (website)Bitibles (website)Aztec Philosophy (IEP)Aztec and Ancient Greek Philosophy (Aeon)Peter Lynch (Wikipedia)Sparrow Rodgers (bio)Jamie Diamond (Wikipedia)Vitalik Buterin (Wikipedia)DAO (Ethereum)NFT (Verge)Smart contract (IBM)FitFi (website)Adoption curve (Wikipedia)Proof of Work (Investopedia)Proof of Stake (Investopedia)Environmental Impact of Bitcoin (Forbes)Intro to Crypto (Bollocks and the Blockchain)The Promise of Crypto (Quora)Meaningful Work (Philosophy2u)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Is translation really just a problem of finding the right words in one language to fit the words in another language? Or, is there much more than meets the ear? Lisa Foran, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at University College Dublin (Ireland), discusses the ways in which translation can be problematic as well as constructive, not just with the aim of communicating, but also with the aim of improving how we live our lives. She delves into the deeper, ethical significances of what means to find yourself unable to translate something or even someone into familiar terms.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Lisa Foran (UCD)Twitter (@LisaForan10)Emmanuel Levinas (SEP)Jacques Derrida (SEP)Barbara Cassin (Wikipedia)Alasdair MacIntyre (Wikipedia)Ferdinand de Saussure (langue et parole/language as structure and speech)Emily Apter (NYU)Structuralism (Wikipedia)Post-structuralism (Wikipedia)The Myth of Self-Sufficiency (Philosophy2u)Future-tensed and Present-tensed Languages, (The Conversation)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Medicine involves more than science and evidence-based experiments. In today’s health climate—where there seems to be a conflict of interest between health care, on the one hand, and pharmaceutical companies and the privatization of medicine, the other hand—it is easy to overlook a more holistic approach that understands how illness is causally linked to both the mind and body. David Corfield (University of Kent, UK) is Associate Professor of Philosophy, with special interests in the philosophies of mathematics, science, logic, medicine, history, and psychoanalysis. He discusses the importance of the role of the mind in medicine, and more generally, how a well-rounded approach to academic research and investigation provides a much more balanced and informed perspective.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:David Corfield (Wikipedia | University of Kent)Twitter (@DavidCorfield8)Why Do People Get Ill? by Corfield and Leader (Amazon)Modal Homotopy Type Theory: The Prospect of a New Logic for Philosophy (Oxford University Press)Darian Leader (Psychoanalyst)Thomas Kuhn (SEP)Imre Lakatos (SEP)Alasdair MacIntyre (Wikipedia)Albert Lautman (Wikipedia)R. G. Collingwood (SEP)John Ruskin (Wikipedia)Lacanian Psycholanalysis (Wikipedia)Vienna Circle (SEP)Type Theory (SEP)Idiographic vs. Nomothetic Analysis (Wikipedia)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Hillary Hutchinson is a career coach and change strategist at Transitioning Your Life. She has helped professionals understand who they are in order to make significant changes to their careers. She reflects on how events in her own life put her in a place to better understand the nuances and complications of change and how it can affect us in both positive and challenging ways. Do the work! Be the change!Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Hillary Hutchinson (LinkedIn)Transitioning Your Life (website)Scaling the Ivory Tower: Your Academic Job Search Workbook (Goodreads)      The CHANGE-UP System: Your guide to creating fulfillment, balance, and success in your career life (Goodreads)William Bridges, Managing Transitions (Goodreads)Elisabeth Kubler Ross (Wikipedia)Impostor Syndrome (APA)Writing a CV of Failure (Melanie Stefan)Buddhism and Awareness (Wikipedia)Universal Unitarianism (UUA)Karl Jaspers and Limit Situations (SEP)Office Space (IMDB)Photo: Transitioning Your LifeMusic: www.bensound.com Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Arvind Gupta is a genetic engineer and venture capitalist whose approach to investment is driven by trying to better the planet, yet without the use of moral arguments and platforms. Instead, his approach to business draws on his personal experience with mortality and behavioral insights into how people can and cannot be convinced of a need for change. Arvind is also an accomplished rock climber, BASE jumper, and mixed martial artist.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Arvind Gupta (LinkedIn)IndieBioMayfieldAlbert Camus (1913-1960, Wikipedia)Viktor Frankl, Man’s Search for Meaning (Good Reads)Decoding the World, Arvind Gupta & Po Bronson (Good Reads)Uma Valeti (Good Food Institute)Upside FoodsEric Beinhocker, The Origin of Wealth (Good Reads)Photo: IndieBioMusic: www.bensound.comLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
We see it every day—the problem of misunderstanding and misreading meaning and intentions. It can be the cause of frustration, hurt, and even violence. Hermeneutics is the branch of philosophy interested in how the interpretation of language, symbols, texts, and even the nature of existence requires a nuanced and open-minded approach. It can potentially help us to resolve a lot of the problems of miscommunication. Listen to three experts—Andreea Deciu Ritivoi (Carnegie Mellon University, USA), David Utsler (North Central Texas College, USA), and Nicholas Davey (University of Dundee, UK)—reflect on the importance of hermeneutics and why it matters to our everyday lives.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeLinks Related to this Episode:Andreea Deciu Ritivoi (Carnegie Mellon University)David Utsler (Discursive Dialectics)Nicholas Davey (Wikipedia)Intro to Hermeneutics (YouTube)Hans Georg-Gadamer (SEP)Paul Ricoeur (SEP)Wilhelm Dilthey (SEP)Georgia Warnke (PhilPeople)Antigone (Wikipedia)Anthropocentrism (Oxford Bibliographies)Reading Suggestions by the PanelistsHans Weidenfeld, Absolute NothingnessWalter Kempowski, Swangsong 1945Wilhelm Dilthey, Introduction to the Human SciencesClifford Geertz, The Interpretation of CultureWolfgang Iser, The Range of InterpretationGianni Vattimo, Beyond Interpretation: The Meaning of Hermeneutics for PhilosophyMircea Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of ReligionWalter Benjamin, The StorytellerLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Charlie Undershaw (Carlos Marin de Miguel) is a Spanish jazz musician whose recent album “Agora” has been hitting the airwaves in Spain and on Spotify. He shares how Brazilian jazz and philosophy have shaped his life, his academic teaching, and his views on how to weather the obstacles and worries about our mortality.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Charlie Undershaw (Spotify)Carlos Marin de Miguel (Twitter: @undershaw_music)Songs by Charlie Undershaw from AgoraMonte Serra (Spotify)O Tempo Dirá (Spotify)Time Will Tell (Spotify)Antônio Carlos Jobim (Wikipedia)Ricardo Belda (Musician/producer)João Gilberto (Wikipedia)João Donato (Wikipedia)Sakamoto “Song” (recited by Paul Bowles)Decoding the World by Arvind Gupta & Po Bronson (Good Reads)Michael Sandel (BBC)Philosophical Coaching (Philosophy2u)Amartya Sen (Wikipedia)Martha Nussbaum (Wikipedia)Capabilities Approach (Wikipedia)A Brief History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson (Good Reads)Photo: Charlie UndershawMusic: www.bensound.comLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
It seems more than ever that our present era is one of misunderstanding others—their motives, their reasons, their practices, and their beliefs. Is there a quick remedy to this, such as being more objective? Is objectivity even possible, especially given how incomplete our knowledge of others is? Constantine Sandis (University of Hertfordshire, UK) is Professor of Philosophy, with a special interest in ethics, action, and understanding others. He discusses the importance of shared practices and has some surprising thoughts about the role of empathy.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Constantine Sandis (personal website)Akrasia (Weakness of the Will)Argument from Illusion (Wikipedia)“Eyebrows on Fleek Vine by Peaches Monroee” (YouTube)Prejudice and Bias (YouTube)Ludwig Wittgenstein (Wikipedia)Paul Ricoeur (Wikipedia)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Hans Florine is a world-renowned climber, best known for holding the record for the fastest ascent of the Nose on El Capitan (Yosemite) with Alex Honnold in 2012. The record remained until 2018. Hans has spent his life learning from competition and the application of different models of thinking in order to problem solve and be as efficient as possible. Listen to him reflect on the roles of learning how to fail in order to become better, cooperative competition, and his own motivational wisdom and ideas.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Hans Florine (www.hansflorine.com)On LinkedInOn Twitter (@hansflorine)On the Nose (Amazon)On the Nose (Audio Book)Do Hard Things Challenge (www.dhtchallenge.com)Birthday Challenge (http://www.birthdaychallenge.com/whatis.html)Eric Weihenmayer (Wikipedia)Obituary for Steve Edwards, Outside Magazine (by Hans Florine)Brian Tracy (Wikipedia)Photo: Falcon PressMusic: www.bensound.comLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Dr Todd Mei discusses closing thoughts and reflections on the year which explore the prospect of social cohesion through the task of posing questions. Topics discussed:StoicismToleranceHermeneuticsPhilosophical questioningSocial CohesionUnity through differenceSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeMartin Bunzl, author of Thinking while WalkingHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Logo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura StudiosMusic: www.bensound.comLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
Paula Leach is an executive leadership coach and former executive herself, with over 25 years of experience within the public and corporate sectors. She recently made the decision to start her own consultation business, Vantage Points Consulting, with an eye to promoting a new style of leadership training based on traits we normally don’t associate with entrepreneurial leaders—such as empathy, humility, and sustainability. Paula also runs a pro bono foundation to mentor young women entering business. Hear Paula discuss the new challenges and new faces of leadership and how they can be an inspiration to us all.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeMartin Bunzl, author of Thinking while WalkingHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Paula Leach (LinkedIn)Vantage Points Consulting (website) Vantage Points Foundation for Women (website)Vantage Points: How to create a culture where employees thrive (Amazon)ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance)American Icon (Amazon)Photo: KOBU Agency on UnsplashMusic: www.bensound.comLiving Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
We live within time, but apart from it passing or lingering too long, how much do we understand the extent to which it pervades our lives? And what should we make of the claim based on physics that time does not pass, and therefore, that our experience of it doing so is really an illusion? Graeme A. Forbes (University of Kent) is a metaphysician of time (and much more!) who helps us gain some clarity on the human experience of time.Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.Host:Dr Todd MeiSponsors:Philosophy2u.comHillary Hutchinson, Career and Change Coach at Transitioning Your LifeMartin Bunzl, author of Thinking while WalkingHermeneutics in Real LifeGeoffrey Moore, author of The Infinite Staircase     Links Related to this Episode:Graeme A. Forbes (professional website, personal website) Susan Stebbing (SEP)Philosophy and the Physicists (Amazon)Thinking to Some Purpose (Good Reads)Phenomenology (Entry by Paul B. Armstrong)Albert Camus (The Plague)Craig Callendar (Website)E. M. Cioran (Wikipedia)Martin Heidegger (Wikipedia)Maurice Merleau-Ponty (Wikipedia)Wilfrid Sellars (Wikipedia)Music: Earth and the Moon, by KetsaTheme to Doctor Who at the Internet ArchiveLogo Art: Angela Silva, Dattura Studios Living Philosophy is brought to you by Philosophy2u.com.
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