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Hannah Dawson on Mary Wollstonecraft

Philosophy Bites

Release Date: 09/27/2023

Carlos Alberto Sánchez on Mexican Philosophy show art Carlos Alberto Sánchez on Mexican Philosophy

Philosophy Bites

What is distinctive about Mexican philosophy? How much is it linked to its geopolitical  context? Carlos Alberto Sanchez, author of Blooming in the Ruins, a book about major themes in 20th century Mexican philosophy discusses this topic in conversation with David Edmonds. This episode was  supported by the Ideas Workshop, part of Open Society Foundations.

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Ellie Robson on Mary Midgley on Animals show art Ellie Robson on Mary Midgley on Animals

Philosophy Bites

Mary Midgley didn't begin publishing until she was 59 years old, but nevertheless made a significant impact and had a distinctive approach. In this episode of Philosophy Bites  Ellie Robson discusses some of her key ideas about our relationship with other animals. 

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Sari Nusseibeh on Philosophy and Conflict show art Sari Nusseibeh on Philosophy and Conflict

Philosophy Bites

Many people think philosophical discucssion is a luxury in times of conflict, but the Palestinian philosopher Sari Nusseibeh is more optimistic. In this episode of Philosophy Bites, recorded in early 2025, he explains why.

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Robert Talisse on Civic Solitude show art Robert Talisse on Civic Solitude

Philosophy Bites

Democracy is about acting as a group, but, surprisingly, Robert Talisse argues that what it needs to function well is a degree of solitude for citizens. In-group and out-group dynamics mean that individuals become vulnerable to being pushed towards more extreme views than they would otherwise hold. There is, Talisse, maintains, a need to balance times of thinking together with times of thinking alone, at a distance from the fray.

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Hanno Sauer on The World History of Morality show art Hanno Sauer on The World History of Morality

Philosophy Bites

How did morality evolve? Why do different cultures have such a similar set of moral norms and values? Hanno Sauer gives an evolutionary story that explains the genealogy of morality through human co-operation. 

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Takeshi Morisato on Japanese Philosophy show art Takeshi Morisato on Japanese Philosophy

Philosophy Bites

Most Western philosophers are deeply ignorant of Japanese philosophy. Takeshi Morisato who was brought up in Japan, and who has studied both continental and analytic Western traditions provides and introduction to some of the key strands in Japanese philosophy. 

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Melissa Lane on Plato, Rule, and Office show art Melissa Lane on Plato, Rule, and Office

Philosophy Bites

  Melissa Lane, a classics scholar as well as a philosopher, discusses some key features of Plato's political philosophy and shows its continuing relevance.  

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Agnes Callard on Lessons from Socrates show art Agnes Callard on Lessons from Socrates

Philosophy Bites

Does Socrates still have something to teach us? Agnes Callard thinks he has. Here she discusses the great Athenian and his continuing relevance with David Edmonds. 

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Emily Herring on Henri Bergson show art Emily Herring on Henri Bergson

Philosophy Bites

Henri Bergson was once one of the most living famous philosophers. Now he is less well known. Emily Herring, his biographer, discusses this and some of his key ideas in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast. Nigel Warburton is the interviewer.

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Lyndsey Stonebridge on the Life and Mind of Hannah Arendt show art Lyndsey Stonebridge on the Life and Mind of Hannah Arendt

Philosophy Bites

For this episode in the Bio Bites strand of the Philosphy Bites podcast Nigel Warburton interviews Lyndsey Stonebridge, author of a recent book about Hannah Arendt, We Are Free To Change the World, about how her thought was affected by her circumstances as an emigré fleeing Nazism. 

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More Episodes

In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast Nigel Warburton interviews Hannah Dawson (editor of The Penguin Book of Feminist Writing) on Mary Wollstonecraft and her book A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).