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The Intellectual Diversity Podcast

19 Episodes

70 minutes | May 6, 2019
Jonathan Orchard on the game of life
Jonathan Orchard is a musician and founding member of the post-punk band Jonah and the Wail. We talk about his musical career in the 80s and 90s and about his subsequent journey as a yoga teacher and the developer of a game designed to recreate through humour, story and song the synchronicities and processes of self-discovery that make up a life. Learn more about him at his website: http://jonathanorchard.com/
65 minutes | Apr 20, 2019
Dr David Luke on psychedelics and the psychology of exceptional human experiences.
Dr. David Luke is a Senior Lecturer in psychology at that University of Greenwich where he studies the psychology of exceptional human experiences. In the podcast we discuss his research in this area, and his work on psychedelic drugs like DMT and LSD and their implications for our understanding of the mind and of the nature of reality. You can purchase his books here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/l/B00JC9L5EK?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1555852990&redirectedFromKindleDbs=true&ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1&rfkd=1&shoppingPortalEnabled=true&sr=1-1
60 minutes | Apr 9, 2019
Prof. Rachel Fulton Brown on Catholicism, conservatism and not being at home in modernity
Rachel Fulton Brown is an Associate Professor of Medieval History at the University of Chicago where she works on the history of Christianity with a focus on devotion to the Virgin Mary, a subject about which she has written two books. We talk about how she became a medievalist, how this led to her conversion to Catholicism, the experience of being a conservative and a Catholic in 21st-century academe, and why she teaches The Lord of the Rings. You can read more about her and find links to her publications and her blog here:https://home.uchicago.edu/~rfulton/  
58 minutes | Apr 1, 2019
Prof. Roy Baumeister on sexual difference, free will and the nature of evil
Prof. Roy Baumeister is a psychologist who has written prolifically on subjects including sexual difference, free will, the nature of evil and the nature of the self. Here we talk about intellectual diversity in academia, what the social sciences tell us about sexual difference and the claims of feminism, evil and free will, and his forthcoming work on the self.  You can find his personal website and links to his books and articles here: http://www.roybaumeister.com/
62 minutes | Mar 24, 2019
Yahia Lababidi on wisdom and poetry in the era of twitter
Yahia Lababidi is an Egyptian-American poet and essayist who has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and has recently published his second book of aphorisms, Where Epics Fail. We discuss his journey from Egypt to America, the life of a poet in a time that doesn't value poetry, and the nature of evil, among other topics. You can find his books here: https://www.amazon.com/Yahia-Lababidi/e/B0042SRQWG%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share
94 minutes | Mar 15, 2019
Eli Serabeth on kabbalah and the tarot
Eli Serabeth is a professional tarot reader and a kabbalist. In this episode he explains his heterodox worldview and how it alienated him from mainstream academia where he did a Ph.D in theology before embarking on an individual path into esoteric thought and practice. You can read his work or contact him through his website: http://www.elitarotstrickingly.com/
60 minutes | Mar 8, 2019
Prof. Russell Jacoby on being an intellectual in the age of academe
We discuss the changing face of the culture wars since Jacoby's 1987 book The Last Intellectuals, the decline of the left's utopian imagination, and his forthcoming work on the concept of diversity. [Apologies for some sound distortion in parts of this recording]
75 minutes | Mar 1, 2019
Thomas Moore on the nature of the soul
Thomas Moore has written numerous books on spiritual topics, including Care of the Soul, Dark Nights of the Soul, and Care of the Soul in Medicine. Here we discuss the differences between soul and contemporary academic concepts of the self, between soul and spirit, how experiences of depression and failure can bring us closer to the soul, and ways to cultivate a more soulful life. You can buy his books here: https://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Moore/e/B000AQ15XA
79 minutes | Feb 22, 2019
Russian-American novelist Keith Gessen discusses his life and work
Keith Gessen is a Russian-American writer, translator, and co-editor of the magazine n+1. In the first half of this podcast he discusses his new novel, A Terrible Country, about a young academic adrift in Russia, as well as his journalism about Russia. In the second half we discuss our differing views of the contemporary American academic scene. You can buy his book here: https://www.amazon.com/Terrible-Country-Novel-Keith-Gessen/dp/0735221316
69 minutes | Feb 15, 2019
Prof. Thomas Main on the rise of the alt-right
In this episode we discuss Professor Main's recent book, The Rise of the Alt-Right, in which he sketches a genealogy of alt-right thought, and places it in the broader context of right-wing and conservative politics.You can find the book here: https://www.amazon.com/Rise-Alt-Right-Thomas-J-Main/dp/0815732880
67 minutes | Feb 8, 2019
Gary Lachman on politics and the occult.
Gary Lachman discusses his journey from playing bass with Blondie and Iggy Pop to becoming a historian of the occult and a biographer of people like Swedenborg, Madame Blavatsky and Colin Wilson. We go on to discuss the relationship between politics and the occult in the context of his new book about Donald Trump.Check out Gary's blog here: https://garylachman.co.uk/?You can find his books here: https://www.amazon.com/Gary-Lachman/e/B001HOVBZ6
84 minutes | Feb 1, 2019
Tobias Churton on Aleister Crowley, Brexit and the true self.
Tobias Churton has written four books about Aleister Crowley, as well as numerous other works on topics including  Gnosticism, Gurdjieff, and the history of occultism. We talk about Crowley's notion of the true self in the context of Brexit and about the experience of working today as an intellectual outside the dominant materialist paradigm. 
155 minutes | Jan 25, 2019
Ken Wilber on Integral Theory and contemporary American politics
Ken Wilber is the world's most well-known exponent of Integral Theory. In this episode he describes his intellectual development, discusses his theory of the evolution of consciousness in the context of the artificial intelligence revolution, and outlines the argument of his recent book about Donald Trump's America.
71 minutes | Jan 18, 2019
John Waters on Ireland's transition from Catholicism to liberalism
John Waters is a writer and journalist whose writing career has followed the profound changes Ireland has undergone since the 1980s. We discuss what has happened to the media, the church, and the public sphere in this period.
92 minutes | Jan 11, 2019
Prof. Richard Tarnas on philosophy, cosmology and consciousness
Prof. Richard Tarnas is the author of Passion of the Western Mind and Cosmos and Psyche. In this episode we discuss  topics including Jungian depth psychology and astrology, and their place in post-enlightenment and postmodern culture.
80 minutes | Jan 6, 2019
Public Sociology Lab on the differences between left wing politics in Russia and America
This episode features two of my Russian colleagues, Maxim Alyukov and Natalia Savalyeva, and is our first serious political conversation despite having worked together for 18 months, in which they disabuse me of various misconceptions about them, before we go on to consider the differences between Russia and America with regard to the academic left.
94 minutes | Dec 30, 2018
Dr Kirk Meighoo on nationalism, global liberalism, the alt-right, and the new left.
Dr Kirk Meighoo, former Trinidadian senator, and author of Politics in a Half Made Society, discusses the history of modern Caribbean politics and his political odyssey from student radical to public intellectual. We cover topics including the New World Group of Caribbean intellectuals founded in 1962, the nature of nationalism, global liberalism, the aims of the alt-right, and the character of the contemporary left.
64 minutes | Dec 23, 2018
Eugene Pustoshkin on the importance of Integral Theory today.
Eugene Pustoshkin is editor of Eros and Kosmos magazine. He is a highly articulate interpreter and practitioner of Integral Theory who has translated several of Ken Wilber's books into Russian. Here he gives an overview of its central teachings and discusses its importance in Russia and beyond.
89 minutes | Dec 16, 2018
Dr. Michael Rectenwald on his journey out of Marxism
In this episode Prof. Michael Rectenwald of NYU discusses his life in the academy after he left an advertising career in search of more meaningful work, his ultimate disillusionment with leftist politics, and his continuing exploration of alternative paradigms in his forthcoming books.
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