72 episodes

The Living Philosophy is all about the exploration of philosophy's big ideas and big characters from the Ancients to the Postmoderns with a side of Psychology and seasoned with a dash of Integral.

The Living Philosophy The Living Philosophy

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 9 Ratings

The Living Philosophy is all about the exploration of philosophy's big ideas and big characters from the Ancients to the Postmoderns with a side of Psychology and seasoned with a dash of Integral.

    The Edge of the Inside — How to Change the Superstructure

    The Edge of the Inside — How to Change the Superstructure

    Why it Matters is back (kind of). This video revisits the Prophet archetype with a bit more passion and a little less bookishness. It is great to have the previous video as a foundation but as with the old Why it Matters videos the point of this video is to get into why I care so much about this topic and why I think you should as well.

    We're going to be looking at the Prophet through the lens of Richard Rohr's description of the Prophet's position as being at "the edge of the inside" and we are going to look at some examples of this Prophetic archetype like Karl Marx, Jordan Peterson, Contrapoints and Donald Trump.

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    📚 Further Learning:

    - The original video on the Prophet archetype: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnaYn6WpwuA
    - Jonas Ceika/Cuck philosophy video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHtvTGaPzF4
    - Szakolczai Á (2003) _The Genesis of Modernity_. Routledge studies in social and political thought 36. London ; New York: Routledge.
    ________________
    ⭐ Support the channel (thank you!)

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    💬 More from The Living Philosophy

    ▶ 📨 Subscribe with email: https://thelivingphilosophy.substack.com/
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    🎼 Media Used:

    1. Allegro  — Emmit Fenn
    2. Anguish — Kevin MacLeod
    3. Alone With My Thoughts — Esther Abrami
    4. Dark Times — Kevin MacLeod

    Subscribe to Kevin MacLeod https://www.youtube.com/user/kmmusic

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    ⌛ Timestamps:
    0:00 Introduction
    1:14 What is a prophet?
    5:27 Ad spot
    7:21 The Marx example
    10:17 Jordan Peterson
    10:42 Derrick Bell
    12:30 Reflection
    15:57 Personal reflection

    • 18 min
    Subconscious vs. Unconscious

    Subconscious vs. Unconscious

    In approaching the underworld there are a couple of terms that people use. Sometimes it can get a bit confusing who's using what and what we should be using. In this episode we look at the term subconscious vs unconscious and what the meaning and background is of each. As we'll see it wasn't always so clear cut — the French psychological heritage from Pierre Janet started with one term then with Freud it bounced to another and Jung and Adler followed in their direction now using unconscious instead of subconscious.



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    📚 Further Reading:

    - Freud, S., 1969. _Questions Of Lay Analysis_. WW Norton & Company.



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    ⭐ Support the channel (thank you!)



    ▶ Patreon: https://patreon.com/thelivingphilosophy

    ▶ Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/thelivingphilosophy

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    💬 More from The Living Philosophy



    ▶ Discord https://discord.gg/XNd4gTpfu9

    ▶ 📨 Subscribe with email: https://thelivingphilosophy.substack.com/

    ________________

    🎼 Media Used:



    1. Overture  — Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    2. Fresh Air — Kevin MacLeod

    3. Dreams Become Real — Kevin MacLeod

    4. Juniper — Kevin MacLeod



    Subscribe to Kevin MacLeod https://www.youtube.com/user/kmmusic



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    ⌛ Timestamps:

    0:00 Introduction

    0:51 The Origins: Janet and Freud

    4:03 A Tale of Two Usages

    8:41 Which one is right?

    • 10 min
    Reality vs Archetype — The Two Types of Romcom

    Reality vs Archetype — The Two Types of Romcom

    In this palette cleanser we are going to talk about the philosophy of romcoms for a change. I reckon this should remove any accusations of important work being done on The Living Philosophy. We'll be looking at two romcoms — the classic Norah Ephron When Harry Met Sally and the lesser known Just Like Heaven starring Reese Wetherspoon and Mark Ruffalo.

    One is reflective of a type of art that strives for psychological accuracy (Dostoevsky, When Harry Met Sally) category — while the second category (Just Like Heaven, Alexander Dumas's The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo) dispense with reality and works at the hyperreal level of the archetypal underworld.

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    Damien's YouTube channel: "Science Fiction with Damien Walter": https://www.youtube.com/@DamienWalterPatreon interview with Damien Walter:

    ***

    📚 Learning Resources:


    When Harry Met Sally. (1989). [Movie] USA: Columbia Pictures.
    Just Like Heaven. (2005). [Movie] USA: DreamWorks Pictures.
    Dumas A (2014) The Three Musketeers. United States: Shine Classics.
    Dumas A (2004) The Count of Monte Cristo. New York: Barnes & Noble Classics.
    Dostoyevsky (1993) Notes from Underground. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

    ***

    ⭐ Support the channel (thank you!)

    ▶ Patreon: https://patreon.com/thelivingphilosophy▶ Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/thelivingphilosophy

    ***

    💬 More from The Living Philosophy

    ▶ 📨 Subscribe with email: https://thelivingphilosophy.substack.com/

    ***

    🎼 Media Used:


    Anguish — Kevin MacLeod
    Juniper — Kevin MacLeod
    Overture — Pyotr Ilyich tchaikovsky
    Fresh Air — Kevin MacLeod

    Subscribe to Kevin MacLeod https://www.youtube.com/user/kmmusic

    ***

    ⌛ Timestamps:0:00 Introduction2:30 The True vs the Fantastic3:15 Just Like Heaven3:56 When Harry Met Sally6:12 The Unrealistic Just Like Heaven7:31 The Fantastic As Archetypal Dynamism10:52 The Power of Archetypal Storytelling

    • 13 min
    An (Ancient) New Theory of Happiness

    An (Ancient) New Theory of Happiness

    You can get "Become Who You Are" here: http://designingthemind.org/becoming

    It's rare that you encounter a fresh take on a path as well-trodden as happiness. I've read a lot of books on the topic and I have to say that Ryan Bush's take is fresh and yet simultaneously ancient. I think this is part of the reason I'm so enthusiastic about it: it integrates a trend in academic philosophy that I've yet to see anyone else talk about: Virtue Ethics. This is an ethical approach to philosophy that goes all the way back to the ancients especially Socrates, Aristotle and the Stoics. Bush integrates this old esteemed tradition with very 21st century fields like Cognitive Science and neuroscience to produce a thought-provoking map of the good life that I can't recommend highly enough. 

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    📚 Further Reading:

    - Pan W, Liu C, Yang Q, et al. (2016) The neural basis of trait self-esteem revealed by the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations and resting state functional connectivity. _Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience_ 11(3): 367–376.

    - Bush R. (2023) _Become Who You Are_. USA: DTM Press

    - Davey CG, Pujol J and Harrison BJ (2016) Mapping the self in the brain’s default mode network. _NeuroImage_ 132: 390–397.

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    🎼 Media Used:

    1. Letting Go  — Kevin MacLeod

    2. Juniper — Kevin MacLeod

    3. Dreams Become Real — Kevin MacLeod

    6. Anguish — Kevin MacLeod



    Subscribe to Kevin MacLeod https://www.youtube.com/user/kmmusic

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    ⌛ Timestamps:

    0:00 Gain and Loss 

    2:45 The Third Dimension of the Good Life

    4:00 How to Eudaimonia

    5:21 The Spiritual Path

    7:06 The Neuroscience of Self-Esteem

    9:43 Virtue: the Royal Road to Eudaimonia

    • 14 min
    The Lost Art of Leisure

    The Lost Art of Leisure

    We modern serfs have forgotten something: we've forgotten how to live. You don't question the meaning of life when leisure is the heart of life rather than work. But with the rise of modern urban life, the intrinsic mode of living has died at the hands of the instrumental mode of life. Our entire lives have been colonised by "utility". We don't relax or rest for their own sake anymore — now we rest so that we are more productive. In this episode we explore these two relationships with time: the leisurely intrinsic mode and the future-oriented instrumental mode.

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    📚 Further Reading:


    Burkeman O (2021) Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals. First edition. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
    Burnham, B. (2021) Inside. Los Angeles, CA: Netflix. Available at: https://www.netflix.com/browse?jbv=81289483.
    De Botton A (2005) Status Anxiety. First Vintage International edition. New York: Vintage International.
    Seligman MEP (2013) Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment. Atria paperback edition. New York London Toronto Sydney New Delhi: Atria Paperback.

    _________________

    ⭐ Support The Living Philosophy (thank you!)

    ▶ Patreon: https://patreon.com/thelivingphilosophy ▶ Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/thelivingphilosophy

    _________________

    💬 More from The Living Philosophy



    ▶ 📨 Subscribe with email: https://thelivingphilosophy.substack.com/

    _________________

    🎼 Media Used:


    Anguish — Kevin MacLeod
    Dark Times — Kevin MacLeod
    Mozart's String Quartet No. 15 in D minor, MOVEMENT II, K. 421 — WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
    Letting Go Ambient Background music

    Subscribe to Kevin MacLeod: https://www.youtube.com/user/kmmusic



    ⌛ Timestamps:

    0:00 Introduction

    01:27 Modern Times

    03:51 The Other Story

    10:46 Conclusion

    • 12 min
    The Prophet — the Archetype of Societal Renaissance

    The Prophet — the Archetype of Societal Renaissance

    Before the Axial Age the religious archetypes were those of the Priest and the Magician. But with the increased complexity and evolution of society a new archetype emerged: that of the Prophet. This is the archetype of liminal transformation in the midst of a society paralysed by its own success. The Prophet comes in from the edge of inside and shows the society where it has lost its way.



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    📚 Further Reading:



    - Szakolczai Á (2003) _The Genesis of Modernity_. Routledge studies in social and political thought 36. London ; New York: Routledge.



    ________________



    ⭐ Support the channel (thank you!)



    ▶ Patreon: https://patreon.com/thelivingphilosophy

    ▶ Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/thelivingphilosophy

    _________________

    💬 More from The Living Philosophy



    ▶ Discord https://discord.gg/XNd4gTpfu9

    ▶ 📨 Subscribe with email: https://thelivingphilosophy.substack.com/

    ________________

    🎼 Media Used:



    1. Anguish  — Kevin MacLeod

    2. Density & Time — Ether Real

    3. Mind Scrape — Kevin MacLeod

    4. Alone With My Thoughts — Esther Abrami

    5. Shores of Avalon — Kevin MacLeod

    6. Disquiet — Kevin MacLeod

    7. Letting Go — Kevin MacLeod

    8. Allegro — Emmit Fenn

    9. Evening Fall Harp  — Kevin MacLeod



    Subscribe to Kevin MacLeod https://www.youtube.com/user/kmmusic



    Subscribe to Emmit Fenn https://www.youtube.com/c/emmitfenn



    _________________



    ⌛ Timestamps:

    0:00 Introduction

    01:14 Priests and Magicians

    03:33 Prophets

    04:13 Power and the Priest

    06:11 Refusal of the Call

    08:19 Personal Aspect and Revelation

    09:16 Exemplary and Ethical Prophecy

    11:31 Elitist Exemplarys

    12:34 Conclusion

    • 14 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
9 Ratings

9 Ratings

LincolnWestcott ,

Excellent show!

I love watching these videos on YouTube, and I’m happy to see there’s a podcast version! Well researched and explained. Thanks for making difficult ideas more accessible.

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