Dr. John Vervaeke
What happens when our need for certainty quietly disconnects us from the very meaning we’re trying to find? In this episode, live-recorded first session of a three-part conversation series with Taylor, Ethan, and John Vervaeke, the group introduces a format combining an hour of dialogue with a follow-on Zoom practice led by the featured guest. Centering on “theory into practice and practice into theory,” John links Plato’s cave cycle, Aristotle’s move from sophia to phronesis, and 4E cognition to explain a continual movement between embodied activity and abstract reflection....
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What if poetry is not optional to human flourishing, but essential to it? In this second dialogue, John Vervaeke and Adam Walker explore poetry as a way of knowing reality rather than merely describing it. Their conversation moves through imagination, inexhaustible meaning, beauty, sacredness, freedom, embodiment, and the possibility of a new renaissance in culture. Along the way, they discuss voluntary necessity, spiritual senses, participatory knowing, and why modern notions of freedom can become hollow when detached from gratitude, devotion, and love. This is a rich and wide-ranging episode...
info_outlineDr. John Vervaeke
Can reclaiming poetry spark a second renaissance and wake us from our digital slumber? John welcomes Adam Walker to the Lectern dialogue series, praising his balanced critique of higher education and his work on poetry as a spiritual practice and the possibility of a second renaissance. Adam, an English PhD from Harvard, explains he developed a critical vocabulary for “spiritual poetics” (using Wordsworth) and now teaches public literature courses outside the academy to bridge the widening gap between universities and the public. They discuss causes of the chasm: humanities shifting from...
info_outlineDr. John Vervaeke
Lectern Q&As are monthly live sessions where members of the Lectern community explore the practical application of cognitive science, philosophy, and contemplative practice in everyday life. These conversations typically feature John Vervaeke and Ethan Hsieh responding to questions from the community. In this session, Ethan is joined by Mark Miller to discuss Mark’s upcoming course Generations of Joy, and to explore how philosophical practice and developmental insight can deepen meaning across generations. Participants can submit questions in advance or ask them live on camera during the...
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Can the meaning crisis be addressed by transforming how we perceive reality rather than what we believe about it? In this episode, John Vervaeke and Ethan Hsieh introduce the course Between East and West, which explores Zen Neoplatonism as a dialogical framework integrating Eastern and Western traditions. The course is designed not as a system of belief but as a training in perception, participation, and understanding. Zen offers a path of intimacy, presence, and immanence, while Neoplatonism provides intelligibility, transcendence, and coherence. Together, they form a stereoscopic vision that...
info_outlineDr. John Vervaeke
Is reality fully captured by science or are we missing its most essential dimension? In this dialogue, John Vervaeke joins William Desmond and Guy Sengstock to explore the philosophical foundations of meaning, being, and knowing. Their exchange reveals a shared concern that modern frameworks have narrowed our understanding of reality by excluding participatory and relational dimensions. Desmond’s “between” metaphysics and Vervaeke’s relevance realization converge to illuminate how meaning arises through engagement rather than detached observation. The discussion moves through cognitive...
info_outlineDr. John Vervaeke
Why does the modern pursuit of happiness so often leave people feeling lost? In this episode of The Lectern, John Vervaeke speaks with cognitive scientist Mark Miller about the emerging science of happiness and the deeper architecture of the human mind. Drawing from predictive processing theory, the conversation explores how human beings function as epistemic agents who constantly construct models of the world and themselves. The discussion examines why common cultural narratives about happiness are often misleading and why genuine flourishing requires understanding the underlying cognitive...
info_outlineDr. John Vervaeke
Lectern Q&As are monthly live sessions where members of the Lectern community explore the practical application of cognitive science, philosophy, and contemplative practice in everyday life. These conversations typically feature John Vervaeke and Ethan Hsieh responding to questions from the community. In this session, Ethan is joined by Mark Miller to discuss Mark’s upcoming course Generations of Joy, and to explore how philosophical practice and developmental insight can deepen meaning across generations. Participants can submit questions in advance or ask them live on camera during the...
info_outlineDr. John Vervaeke
Is reality fundamentally inert, or is it structured by divine desire? In this episode, John Vervaeke and Zevi Slavin explore the metaphysical vision of Ibn Gabirol and the integration of Jewish thought with Neoplatonism. They examine the claim that all of existence arises through the coupling of matter and form, unified by divine will. The conversation traces the Philosophical Silk Road and reflects on how Ibn Gabirol shaped Christian, Islamic, and Jewish philosophy. At its center is a contemporary challenge: can we recover a shared philosophical language that orients us toward unity without...
info_outlineDr. John Vervaeke
In this episode of The Lectern, John Vervaeke sits down with Zevi Slavin to explore the radical metaphysics of Ibn Gabirol and the role of divine desire at the heart of reality. Ibn Gabirol, also known as Avicebron, was a major figure in Jewish Neoplatonism whose philosophy reshaped medieval thought across traditions. His view that matter and form seek each other through divine desire challenges mechanical models of existence and reintroduces relational depth into metaphysics. John and Zevi examine how Gabirol’s ideas intersect with Jewish mysticism, medieval philosophy, and contemporary...
info_outlineThank you for joining us live for this month’s Silk Road Seminar, featuring JP Marceau.
JP Marceau is a philosopher and author specializing in the integration of Neoplatonism, Thomism, and Cognitive Science. With a Master’s degree in the Philosophy of Mind, his work emerges from a personal and intellectual journey that moves from early materialism and reductionism toward a non-reductionist, participatory understanding of reality. His research focuses on bridging abstract philosophical frameworks with lived religious practice, particularly within a renewed vision of Christianity.
He is the author of Post-Reductionist Christianity: A Path of the Meaning Crisis, where he uses the language of cognitive science to articulate and defend a Platonic vision of Christianity. JP is also a frequent collaborator with Jonathan Pageau and contributes to The Symbolic World through French-language content, helping extend symbolic and participatory approaches to meaning-making.
In this seminar, JP explores the limitations of reductionism and materialism, offering an alternative framework grounded in relational ontology, symbolism, and participatory knowing. The conversation moves through topics such as the hard problem of consciousness, the role of myth and symbolism, the contrast between substance-based and relational metaphysics, and the integration of Eastern and Western Christian thought. At its core, the dialogue points toward a vision of reality rooted in love, transformation, and the co-participation of the human and the divine.
Silk Road Seminars are live, hour-long conversations hosted by John Vervaeke, weaving together ideas from cognitive science, philosophy, psychology, and wisdom traditions. Each seminar is streamed live on YouTube and followed by an exclusive Q&A where participants can engage directly with John and the guest.
To be entered onto the guest list for the live Q&A, sign up at the Gamma Tier (or above) on The Lectern:
https://lectern.teachable.com/p/lectern-lounge
University students (undergraduate through doctoral level) receive free access to the Q&A.
Email proof of student status to:
ethan@vervaekefoundation.org
Students added to the guest list also receive access to previous Silk Road Seminars.
If you’d like to support John’s work through a goodwill donation, consider joining the Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/johnvervaeke
John Vervaeke online:
https://johnvervaeke.com/
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https://www.youtube.com/@johnvervaeke
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