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Episode 293: Who Is the Dreamer? (Borges' "The Circular Ruins")

Very Bad Wizards

Release Date: 09/24/2024

Episode 311: The Way to Dusty Death (Shakespeare's Episode 311: The Way to Dusty Death (Shakespeare's "Macbeth")

Very Bad Wizards

David and Tamler screw their courage to the sticking place and talk about their first Shakespeare play – The Tragedy of Macbeth. Plus we select 16 topics for our first VBW topic tournament suggested and voted by our beloved Patreon patrons.

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Episode 310: Bayes, Brains, and Buddhists show art Episode 310: Bayes, Brains, and Buddhists

Very Bad Wizards

David and Tamler try to wrap their heads around the predictive processing theory of the mind and brain function and talk about a paper that applies the framework to meditation practices. But first a new Psychological Science article expresses skepticism about the existence of people who have no inner voice. So is David a new kind of human or is he just making up this condition to get attention? Assistant Editor’s note: When Tamler says he doesn’t talk to his dog “weirdly often,” he is lying.   Lind, A. (2024). Are There Really People With No Inner Voice? Commentary on Nedergaard...

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Episode 309: Dissolving Into the One show art Episode 309: Dissolving Into the One

Very Bad Wizards

David and Tamler heed the call to journey into the realm of Joseph Campbell. What are the unifying elements shared by myths and religions across time and culture? Does myth give us a portal into the hidden cosmic forces of the universe? Can it take us into depths of our unconscious and the nature of our own being? What is the legacy of Campbell’s thought today? Plus, three brave scholars of fascism at Yale flee the country to form in a center of resistance at…The University of Toronto.

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Bonus Episode: Va Va Boom (Robert Aldrich's Bonus Episode: Va Va Boom (Robert Aldrich's "Kiss Me Deadly")

Very Bad Wizards

We kick off our Bonus "Noir Summer" series with Robert Aldrich's "Kiss Me Deadly" (1956). While the rest of the bonus series will be for Patreon subscribers only, the first is free to all. 

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Episode 308: The Gray Man who Dreamed (Borges' Episode 308: The Gray Man who Dreamed (Borges' "Shakespeare's Memory")

Very Bad Wizards

David and Tamler return to their happy place and talk about two pieces by JL Borges – the story “Shakespeare’s Memory” and the [essay/story/poem/literary sketch??] “Everything and Nothing.”  What would it mean to have the memory of a supreme artist like Shakespeare? Would it help us understand his work, or how he was able to produce masterpiece after masterpiece What does it mean to have our own memories? How does all this connect to our sense of self? Plus cancel culture comes to Cornell, but don’t worry it’s about that one thing it's fine to...

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Episode 307: What's in the BOX? show art Episode 307: What's in the BOX?

Very Bad Wizards

David and Tamler talk about two famous puzzles that for different reasons have bedeviled the rationalist community – The Monty Hall Problem and Newcomb’s “paradox.” Why is it so hard for people to see that a 66% chance of winning a car is better than a 33% chance? Why do famous mathematicians struggle with this problem? And David and Tamler split on the Newcomb case – can you guess which one of us is the one boxer? Plus since we’re basically a TV recap podcast now, some thoughts on White Lotus Season 3.  [imdb.com] [wikipedia.org] [youtube.com] [wikipedia.org] Nozick, R....

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Episode 306: What to Expect When You're Expecting (David Lynch's Episode 306: What to Expect When You're Expecting (David Lynch's "Eraserhead" with Barry Lam)

Very Bad Wizards

David and Tamler welcome Barry Lam back to the show. In the first segment we violate one of our own rules by talking about his new book "Fewer Rules, Better People", a full frontal attack on David’s strict Kantian worldview. Then we dive DEEP into David Lynch’s first movie, "Eraserhead," and eventually arrive at a few coherent interpretations of Lynch’s “most spiritual film." [ucr.edu] by Barry Lam [amazon.com affiliate link] [wikipedia.org] (Origin of "Eraserhead is my most spiritual film" quote) [youtube.com]

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Episode 305: Emile Is the Name of the Goat (with Paul Bloom) show art Episode 305: Emile Is the Name of the Goat (with Paul Bloom)

Very Bad Wizards

VBW favorite Paul Bloom joins us to break down the Severance season finale and season 2 in general. We all agree that it’s a much-needed return to form and debate some of the choices and questions the episode raises. Plus, an evolutionary account of the ‘ick’  and the adaptive trait of graceful ping-pong ball chasing.  Paul's Substack Newsletter

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Episode 304: The Planes Don't Land show art Episode 304: The Planes Don't Land

Very Bad Wizards

What has four thumbs and can effortlessly glide from the a priori to the a posteriori in a single episode? These guys. In the first segment we tackle a brand new paper called “Being Exalted: an A Priori Argument for the Trinity.” That’s right, the Holy Trinity arrived at through reason alone. Then in the main segment we talk about Richard Feynman’s classic 1974 Caltech commencement address “Cargo Cult Science.” Does Feynman’s metaphor suggest that whole paradigms might be systematically misguided? Or is he just admonishing social scientists to maintain their integrity and use...

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Episode 303: Measure This show art Episode 303: Measure This

Very Bad Wizards

Everyone knows Tamler hates numbers but he’s not the only one who worries about them. We talk about the philosopher C. Thi Nguyen’s excellent paper “Value Capture” which examines how the ever-increasing presence of metrics, data, indicators, rankings, and other forms quantification shape our values as individuals and institutions. Plus, VBW Does Conceptual Analysis – we’re on to the ‘S’ words now: smug.  Nguyen, C. T. (2024). J. Ethics & Soc. Phil., 27, 469.

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More Episodes

David and Tamler crawl up a riverbank, kiss the mud, and dream a discussion of Borges’ “The Circular Ruins.” We sort through various interpretations and allusions, the story as a metaphor for artistic creation, gnostic cosmology, solipsism, eternal recursion, and the unstable boundary between reality and illusion. How does Borges fit all of this and much more in a 5 page story?

Plus, Scientific American endorses Kamala Harris – is that a big deal? We look at a study purporting to show that Nature’s Biden endorsement eroded trust in science among Trump supporters.

Political endorsement by Nature and trust in scientific expertise during COVID-19 [nature.com]

The Circular Ruins by Jorge Luis Borges [wikipedia.org]