The Examined Year: 2018

Sunday, December 30, 2018

What Is It

A new year offers an opportunity to reflect on the significant events of the previous year. So what happened over the past twelve months that challenged our assumptions and made us think about things in new ways? Join the Philosophers as they celebrate the examined year with a philosophical look back at the year that was 2018.

  • The Year in Climate Consciousness with Greg Dalton, Founder and Host of Climate One at the Commonwealth Club
  • The Year in Demagoguery and Propaganda with Yale philosopher Jason Stanley, author ofHow Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them

Plus a philosophical roundtable featuring all four hosts, including host emeritus John Perry and new Dean of Stanford Humanities and Sciences Debra Satz.

Listening Notes

Ken and Josh introduce 2018’s edition of The Examined Year, Philosophy Talk’s annual episode that looks back on the philosophical significance of events and ideas that have shaped the past year. This year the hosts are reflecting on two worrying trends: demagoguery and propaganda in politics and the impending climate crisis.

Greg Dalton, founder and host of the climate-focused radio show and podcast Climate One, joins Ken and Josh to discuss the year in climate consciousness. Greg and the hosts debate whether climate change can be treated as a faceless, indiscernible enemy that cannot be stopped by or blamed on anyone in particular, or if framing around pernicious actors and activist heroes best mobilizes the masses. Next, Ken and Josh welcome previous hosts John Perry and Debra Satz for a philosopher’s roundtable focused on major philosophical problems of modernity. They debate whether technology like Artificial Intelligence will be a cancerous or benign force in society in the future. Yale Professor of Philosophy Jason Stanley joins the show afterward to lament the rise of ultra-nationalist and authoritarian politics. While Ken sees the virtue and illiberalism of populist movements on the left and right, Jason argues that far-right nationalist movements in America and Europe most closely resemble 20th century fascism.

在最后一个环节,肯、乔什和杰森寻找对来年充满希望的理由。尽管自然和政治存在危险的不确定性,但东道主同意杰森的观点,即面对挑战的和平主义不是解决问题的答案。相反,个人有责任团结起来采取行动。即使在过去最黑暗的时期,人类也坚持了下来,这给了乔什对未来的希望。

  • Roving Philosophical Report (seek to 2:48):Holly J. McDede walks us through the major weather and climate moments of 2018, including an ominous UN Report on Climate Change, unprecedented temperatures in Britain, Pakistan, and The North Pole, and natural disasters from Indonesia to Southern California.
  • Sixty-Second Philosopher (seek to 47:20):Ian Shoales迅速回顾了商业、科技和流行文化的一年,发现也许唯一的共同点是自恋,以自私的年终清单为例。

Transcript

Comments(1)


Harold G. Neuman's picture

Harold G. Neuman

Thursday, December 13, 2018 -- 12:54 PM

It is our nature to do this

It is our nature to do this soul-searching, year-to-year. I am working on a piece regarding our fuzzy notions about infinity and whether it means anything, and, am coming to conclude it does not, yet we still think about it, while wringing our figurative hands over a previous year. I suppose, as the Baha'i used to say, and probably still do: perfection is in perfecting. However, if we can never hope to 'get there', does any of that really matter? I just don't think so.