FOUR HOME RUNS in the 1st!
Cade Martin, Noah Boughton, Caleb Webster, and Cade Moore all homer for @TNUBaseball, as it's 7-0 Trevecca in the 2nd against top seed West Alabama!
Watch the GSC Tournament live on @FloCollegeBSB: https://t.co/e87kXQu5jO
#D2Baseball
Episode #237 - The Stoics Are Wrong - Nietzsche, Schopenhauer released yesterday night!
We talk about two famous critiques of Stoicism. One by Friedrich Nietzsche who thought the Stoics weren’t life affirming enough and so rob themselves of some of the best parts of life. The other by Arthur Schopenhauer who thought the Stoics were too life-affirming of worldly things to ever reach a deep understanding of existence. Hope you love it! :)
#philosophy
#nietzsche
#schopenhauer
Anyone interested in a few episodes on Jung? I’d love to spend some serious time understanding him more, but I need validation that you’d be interested as well.
New podcast just dropped on Dostoevsky and Bataille. Episode 233.
We talk about two different theories for why we ritualize self-destructive behavior. We check out a lesser-known work from Dostoevsky called The Gambler. We consider how much we can hold people morally accountable for this kind of stuff. Then we look at the work of Georges Bataille, his book The Accursed Share, and how a hidden underlying economics may be a way we can understand self-destructive behavior from a new angle. Hope you love it and have a great week. :)
#philosophy
#dostoevsky
#bataille
Last night an episode of Philosophize This! was released on love in The Brothers Karamazov. We talk about Dostoevsky’s existential, tragic form of Christianity. Family as a microcosm of society. Active love as an experiential framing. The Grand Inquisitor. Hope you enjoy it and have a great rest of your week, my friends. :)
Brand new episode of the podcast just dropped. Of the five great novels from Dostoevsky this is number four: The Idiot. Hope you love it and have a great week. :)
In the episode: we talk about the curse of sainthood. The connection between beauty and morality via his moral-aesthetic spectrum. Realism vs. Idealism. And how beauty can save the world.
Fastest Meteorologist in Atlanta Blooper of the BRVS Weather Station reporting live from Truist Park.
Looks like we’ve got about 4” of snow on the ground (huge), downfall is slowing but stay off the roads as they are icier than my wrist at a Yung Gravy concert.
Another year of the podcast in the books. Seriously, thank you everyone for making it possible in all the ways you support. New episode dropped last night #219 on the philosophical themes of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment.
We talk about Russian Nihilism and its consequences. Rational Utilitarianism and Egoism. A common misunderstanding of Raskolnikov as an embodiment of Nietzsche's work. Confession. Guilt. Affirming life through consent. And much more.
Hope you all enjoy your respective holidays! Be well. :)
Dostoevsky - Notes From Underground episode of the podcast dropped last night. Such a privilege to make these podcasts for all of you. Seriously, thanks. 🙏
Description: We talk about contemplative inertia, the “stone wall” of rationality, utopian socialism, the tension between love and freedom in the modern world, self-loathing as a defense mechanism, and much more.
https://t.co/SdsYJgMhj5
While we may not have reached the heights we worked towards, we are incredibly proud of the perseverance and fight that the team displayed each and every day to get us to our seventh consecutive Postseason.
We fought all the way to the end.
To our fans — thank you for your continued support. Whether it’s traveling to Truist Park from all across the Southeast and beyond, or repping the A in your hometown with pride, you continue to demonstrate the power of #BravesCountry
William Nordhaus estimates that our Paleolithic ancestors had to work for 58 hours to create 1,000 lumen-hours of light.
In 1800, it took 5.4 hours, in 1900, 13 minutes, and by 1992, just half a second of labor.