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Jeff McMahan on Killing in War Jeff McMahan of Rutgers University discusses the morality of killing in war with Nigel Warburton in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Richard Bradley on Understanding DecisionsWhat is involved in understanding a decision? Richard Bradley of the LSE addresses this question in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast. As a decision theorist, he views decisions as gambles involving weightings of beliefs and desires. Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Tony Coady on Dirty Hands in PoliticsThis episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast focuses on the question of whether politicians need ever act immorally. Tony Coady (aka C.A.J. Coady), author of Messy Morality is in conversation with Nigel Warburton. Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | John Campbell on Berkeley's PuzzleJohn Campbell explores Bishop Berkeley's puzzle about what our experience is of in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Brian Leiter on Nietzsche MythsFriedrich Nietzsche has been seen as the philosopher of the Overman, an anti-semite, and a precursor of postmodernist views about truth. But was he any of these? Brian Leiter explores these questions in conversation with Nigel Warburton in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | John Armstrong on What You Can Do With PhilosophyWhat can you do with Philosophy? Not very much, according to some people. John Armstrong disagrees. Find out why in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcastListen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Walter Sinnott-Armstrong on Morality Without GodWalter Sinnott-Armstrong argues that God isn't necessary for morality in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Sabine Doring on EmotionWhat is an emotion? How do emotions differ from moods? What part should the emotions play in our lives and in our understanding of what it is to be human? Sabine DÃring addresses these questions in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Ben Rogers on Pascal's PenséesBlaise Pascal's PensÃes is the subject of this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast. Few philosophers know the PensÃes well, apart from the passage in which Pascal set forth his famous 'wager' - the idea that agnostics should gamble on God existing. Here Ben Rogers explains who Pascal was, and why his book is worth reading.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Marilyn McCord Adams on EvilThe Problem of Evil is usually presented as a problem for believers. In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Marilyn McCord Adams suggests that it is a problem for optimistic non-believers. Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Luciano Floridi on the Fourth RevolutionNew technology is changing our relationship to reality and in the process what we are, argues Luciano Floridi, in this episode of the philosophy podcast Philosophy Bites. This is the fourth revolution.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Paul Snowdon on Persons and AnimalsWhat is a person and what makes me the same person over time despite change? John Locke emphasized that continuity of memory makes us the same person over time. In contrast Paul Snowdon argues that we should see persons as animals.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Michael Sandel on What Shouldn't Be Sold Michael Sandel. 2009 Reith Lecturer, discusses the moral limits of markets. You can follow Nigel Warburton discussing Sandel's first Reith lecture on Twitter on www.twitter.com/philosophybites from 10.15 p.m UK time on the 13th June as this lecture is broadcast on BBC Radio 4. Add '#goodradio' or '#Reith2009' to any comments you make on Twitter.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Allen Buchanan on EnhancementPhilosophy Bites looks at ethical questions raised by enhancement. Technological developments have opened up many new opportunities for intervening in biological processes to improve ourselves. Allen Buchanan of Duke University discusses some of these and their implications in conversation with Nigel Warburton.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Walter Sinnott-Armstrong on Moral PsychologyMoral psychology is the empirical study of how people make moral judgements. In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Walter Sinnott-Armstrong discusses the relevance of psychological research to moral philosophy.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Thomas Hurka on PleasurePleasure is something we all want. But is it, and should it be the only
thing that we want? Is pleasure all the same kind of thing? Philosopher
Thomas Hurka explores the concept of pleasure in conversation with
Nigel Warburton in this episode of the podcast Philosophy Bites.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Terence Irwin on Aristotle's EthicsThis episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast focuses on Aristotle's Ethics. In conversation with Nigel Warburton, Terence Irwin of Oxford University explains the key features of this influential work.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Raymond Tallis on Assisted DyingAssisted dying, providing a patient with the means to kill themselves, is a highly controversial issue. For this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Raymond Tallis, who is both an eminent gerontologist and philosopher, discusses this topic and some of the moral issues surrounding it with interviewer Nigel Warburton.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Julian Savulescu on the 'Yuk' FactorShould we base our morality on our emotional reactions of disgust? We all have a sense of 'yuk' at some activities or situations. Julian Savulescu of Oxford University discusses the relevance of revulsion to our moral judgements in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Sebastian Gardner on Sartre on Bad FaithJean-Paul Sartre's notion of Bad Faith lies at the core of his existentialist classic Being and Nothingness. In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Sebastian Gardner explains what Sartre meant by Bad Faith.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Keith Ward on Idealism in Eastern and Western PhilosophyQuestions about the nature of reality are at the heart of all philosophy in both Western and Eastern traditions. Keith Ward gives an overview of the idealist tradition in some Indian philosophy and draws parallels between this tradition and some Western thinkers.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | David Papineau on Scientific RealismScientists talk about sub-atomic particles which are invisible to the eye. Do such particles really exist? Or are they simply convenient fictions that, for the moment at least, explain the observable phenomena? David Papineau discusses and defends scientific realism in this episode of Philosophy Bites.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Kate Soper on Alternative HedonismKate Soper believes that we need to rethink how we live in the light of impending environmental catastrophe. She maintains that alternative ways of living can be more enjoyable than consumerism. Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Chandran Kukathas on GenocideGenocide is, at first glance, a straightforward term. We understand what it is and why it is such an evil. But, as Chandran Kukathas of the London School of Economics argues in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast, perhaps the received definition of this term needs refinement.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | M.M. McCabe on the Paradox of InquiryHow do we learn anything? This isn't a puzzle until you start thinking hard about it. In his dialogue The Meno, Plato presented an apparent paradox about inquiry. M.M. McCabe discusses this paradox and its continuing relevance.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Raymond Tallis on ParmenidesParmenides was one of the most important pre-Socratic philosophers. Raymond Tallis discusses his ideas and influence in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Don Cupitt on Non-Realism about GodDon Cupitt, a controversial theologian and philosopher, whose BBC television series and book The Sea of Faith was extremely influential, giving birth to a theological movement, believes that most religion is too anthropomorphic. In this interview for the Philosophy Bites podcast he explains his non-realist approach to God.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Wendy Brown on ToleranceTolerance is usually thought of as the great virtue of democratic societies. Wendy Brown of UC Berkeley asks some sceptical questions about the concept of tolerance and how it can be used to express power relationships in this interview for Philosophy Bites.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Anne Phillips on Political RepresentationPolitical representation in a democracy doesn't necessarily reflect the variety of people within a society. Most noticeably, there is a much lower percentage of women acting as representatives than there is in the wider population. Does this matter? Anne Phillips believes it does. She explains why in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Anthony Grayling on Bombing Civilians in WartimeAnthony Grayling argues that bombing civilians in Dresden and other German cities in the Second World War was morally wrong.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Christopher Shields on Personal IdentityWhat makes anyone the same person over time? In this interview for Philosophy Bites Christopher Shields addresses this question of personal identity, one which, as he points out, has perplexed philosophers since antiquity.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Alexander Nehamas on FriendshipAlexander Nehamas explores the value of friendship in this interview with Nigel Warburton for the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Raymond Geuss on Real PoliticsRaymond Geuss wants political philosophers to focus on real politics rather than abstract notions. In this interview with Nigel Warburton for Philosophy Bites he explains why he believes philosophers such as Robert Nozick and John Rawls were fundamentally misguided in the way they approached political philosophy.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Roger Crisp on VirtueRoger Crisp discusses the nature of virtue in this interview with Nigel Warburton for the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Anthony Appiah on Experiments in EthicsAnthony Appiah makes the case for the relevance of psychological experiments to our ethical reasoning in this interview for the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Christopher Janaway on Nietzsche on MoralityFriedrich Nietzsche's The Genealogy of Morality provides a radical view of the origins of our values. Nigel Warburton interviews Christopher Janaway about this important book in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Peter Cave on ParadoxesPhilosophers have been fascinated by paradoxes since ancient times. In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Nigel Warburton interviews Peter Cave about paradoxes and their relevance to philosophy.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Adrian Moore on Kant's MetaphysicsImmanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason is a notoriously difficult work. In this interview for Philosophy Bites A.W. Moore of Oxford University gives a succinct account of this complex and influential attempt to clarify the limits of human understanding.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Barry C. Smith on NeurosciencePhilosophers of mind have traditionally introspected sitting alone in their rooms. Now new developments in neuroscience are producing surprising results, some of which are relevant to philosophy. Phenomena such as blind sight and mirror neurones suggest that we would be foolish to decide what is possible a priori. Barry C. Smith gives an insight in to this intriguing area in this episode of Philosophy Bites.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Ray Monk on Philosophy and BiographyRay Monk discusses the relationship between philosophy and biography in this interview with Nigel Warburton for the Philosophy Bites podcast. Can an understanding the life of a philosopher help us understand that philosopher's work? Is there anything that philosophers can learn from biography? Monk as author of biographies of Ludwig Wittgenstein and Bertrand Russell, two very different personalities, is well-placed to address these questions.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | M.M. McCabe on Socratic MethodPhilosophy began in earnest with Socrates. He asked impertinent questions. In this interview with M.M. McCabe, Philosophy Bites explores the nature of Socratic Method and Socrates' claim that the unexamined life is not worth living.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Aaron Ridley on Nietzsche on Art and TruthFriedrich Nietzsche's ideas about art and truth run through much of his philosophical writing, but are most apparent in his first book, The Birth of Tragedy. In this episode of Philosophy Bites Nigel Warburton interviews Aaron Ridley about this topic.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Clare Carlisle on Kierkegaard's Fear and TremblingSoren Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling retells and interprets the story of Abraham and Isaac. In Kierkegaard's hands the story becomes a model for the human predicament. In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Clare Carlisle provides an interesting overview of some of Kierkegaard's themes in this book.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Alex Neill - the Paradox of TragedyHow can we enjoy watching tragedy when it is a genre that deals with suffering and pain? In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Alex Neill explains what the paradox of tragedy is, and shows how he thinks it can be dissolved. He also relates this discussion to related questions about our experience of horror movies.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Quentin Skinner on Machiavelli's The Prince Niccolo Machiavelli's The Prince is one of the most notorious works of political philosophy ever written. Quentin Skinner sets it in its historical context and explains its key themes in this episode of Philosophy Bites.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Peter Adamson on Plotinus on EvilPlotinus, who lived in the 3rd Century A.D., was the founder of neo-platonism. In this episode of Philosophy Bites Peter Adamson explains what Plotinus had to say about evil. Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Matthew Kramer on Legal RightsWhat precisely is a legal right? Matthew Kramer discusses this question with Nigel Warburton in this episode of Philosophy Bites.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | Melissa Lane on Rousseau on CivilizationCivilization is for most people synonymous with progress. Not for the eighteenth century thinker Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Rousseau believed that civilization corrupts us in certain ways. Melissa Lane explains Rousseau's views on progress in this episode of Philosophy Bites.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | John Broome on Weighing LivesHow do we weigh lives one against another? Governments frequently have to make life and death decisions that take in to account such issues as the quality of life compared to the length of a life. In this episode of Philosophy Bites John Broome presents his view of how such decisions should be taken.Listen | Listen in your iPhone | Download | View full cache | |