Latest Episodes
Blog Posts
Comments
- 463. Doctors without Borders: the Republic of Letters
Posted on
How scholars around Europe created an international network of intellectual exchange. As examples we consider the activities of Mersenne, Peiresc, Leibniz, Calvet, and Hartlib.
For my interview with Michael Carhart about Leibniz's correspondence go to the first of the bonus series of ten episodes on German philosophy and the world under Bonus Episodes!
- 23. Amy Olberding on Confucian Ethics
Posted on
In our final episode on classical Confucianism, our interview guest tells us about the surprising moral depth of the concept of "etiquette".
- 462. Freedom to Philosophize: Introduction to Early Modern Philosophy
Posted on
What is Enlightenment, anyway?
- 22. Inside Job: Women in Confucianism
Posted on
Can classical Confucianism be redeemed from its reputation for rigidly hierarchical thinking when it comes to the relationship between men and women?
- 461. Eileen Reeves on Galileo and the Telescope
Posted on
We finish our look at philosophy in the Reformation era with an interview about Galileo's use of a revolutionary technology: the telescope.
- 21. Sor-Hoon Tan on Confucian Democracy
Posted on
Can classical Confucian ideas be adapted to produce a theory of democracy fit for today's world?
- 460. Trial and Error: Galileo and the Inquisition
Posted on
The philosophical issues at the heart of the notorious condemnation of Galileo and Copernican astronomy.
- 20. Heaven Can Wait: Ritual and Religion in Confucianism
Posted on
Were Confucian ideas about Heaven, ritual, and fate driven by a religious attitude, or a naturalistic one?
- 459. Cardinal Rule: Robert Bellarmine
Posted on
Though most famous for his role in persecuting Galileo, Robert Bellarmine was a central figure of the Counter-Reformation, especially in his political thought.
- 19. The Kingly Way: Confucian Political Philosophy
Posted on
Mengzi and Xunzi show that a Confucian political theory need not be idealistic.
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Posted on
- Da Costa2 hours agoWhat to expect when you're expecting early modern French and Dutch philosophy
- Ibn Khaldun2 hours 13 minutes agoOnline talk for Istanbul
- I think uriel da costa…4 hours 46 minutes agoWhat to expect when you're expecting early modern French and Dutch philosophy
- Absence of d'alembert…4 hours 46 minutes agoWhat to expect when you're expecting early modern French and Dutch philosophy
- I am surprised. That…4 hours 46 minutes agoOnline talk for Istanbul
- Moral judgment1 day ago48 - Constitutional Conventions: Aristotle's Political Philosophy
- moral judgment1 day ago48 - Constitutional Conventions: Aristotle's Political Philosophy
- 3 European + 1 Non European Philosophy1 day 16 hours ago462. Freedom to Philosophize: Introduction to Early Modern Philosophy
- Kant5 days 13 hours ago462. Freedom to Philosophize: Introduction to Early Modern Philosophy
- Kant's esotericism, Maimonides, Strauss5 days 13 hours ago462. Freedom to Philosophize: Introduction to Early Modern Philosophy
Overview
Peter Adamson, Professor of Philosophy at the LMU in Munich and at King's College London, takes listeners through the history of philosophy, "without any gaps." The series looks at the ideas, lives and historical context of the major philosophers as well as the lesser-known figures of the tradition.
The latest episodes are listed on the left, or you can view the list of all episodes published so far
Series of podcast episodes (MP3 files) are grouped together as RSS feeds (requiring an RSS reader such as Feedly or a podcatcher), zip files (requring a zip tool such as 7-zip to unzip the downloaded file).
You can leave a comment on any of the individual podcasts, on the website as a whole or on Peter's blog.