エピソード

  • Reading 'What Is Sex' by Alenka Zupancic
    2025/12/02

    Hey! This episode is one of five older episodes from 2020-2021 that I am re-uploading to this channel. They are episodes from back when I first got into podcasting, when I called my podcast 'Metaphor & Reality', instead of 'About Reality'. You'll see the older cover art for the 'Metaphor & Reality' version of the podcast uploaded with these eight episodes to tell them apart. I always liked these episodes, and have had them saved on my computer since discontinuing the older podcast. You'll notice these older episodes feature writers from a range of disicplines, not explicitly to do with philosophy. Moving forward I want to continue diagraming the influence I've always drawn from the broader range of human inquiry over the years, and I'm reposting these older episodes wherein I don't think twice whether the idea I want to elaborate comes from a work of fiction, poetry, history, politics, etc.

    Hope you find the ideas in these eight episodes are worth sticking around for, and that you like them as I do, and can forgive them their faults!

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    1 時間 58 分
  • Novelist as Visionary: On Cormac McCarthy's 'Blood Meridian'
    2025/11/21

    Hey! This episode is one of five older episodes from 2020-2021 that I am re-uploading to this channel. They are episodes from back when I first got into podcasting, when I called my podcast 'Metaphor & Reality', instead of 'About Reality'. You'll see the older cover art for the 'Metaphor & Reality' version of the podcast uploaded with these five episodes to tell them apart. I always liked these episodes, and have had them saved on my computer since discontinuing the older podcast. You'll notice these older episodes feature writers from a range of disciplines, not explicitly to do with philosophy. Moving forward I want to continue diagraming the influence I've always drawn from the broader range of human inquiry over the years, and I'm reposting these older episodes wherein I don't think twice whether the idea I want to elaborate comes from a work of fiction, poetry, history, politics, etc.

    Hope you find the ideas in these episodes are worth sticking around for, and that you like them as I do, and can forgive them their faults!

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    1 時間 10 分
  • Part 2: Honoré de Balzac's 'Lost Illusions'
    2025/11/21

    Hey! This episode is one of five older episodes from 2020-2021 that I am re-uploading to this channel. They are episodes from back when I first got into podcasting, when I called my podcast 'Metaphor & Reality', instead of 'About Reality'. You'll see the older cover art for the 'Metaphor & Reality' version of the podcast uploaded with these eight episodes to tell them apart. I always liked these episodes, and have had them saved on my computer since discontinuing the older podcast. You'll notice these older episodes feature writers from a range of disicplines, not explicitly to do with philosophy. Moving forward I want to continue diagraming the influence I've always drawn from the broader range of human inquiry over the years, and I'm reposting these older episodes wherein I don't think twice whether the idea I want to elaborate comes from a work of fiction, poetry, history, politics, etc.

    Hope you find the ideas in these eight episodes are worth sticking around for, and that you like them as I do, and can forgive them their faults!

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    1 時間 3 分
  • Honoré de Balzac's 'Lost Illusions'
    2025/11/20

    Hey! This episode is one of eight older episodes from 2020-2021 that I am re-uploading to this channel. They are episodes from back when I first got into podcasting, when I called my podcast 'Metaphor & Reality', instead of 'About Reality'. You'll see the older cover art for the 'Metaphor & Reality' version of the podcast uploaded with these eight episodes to tell them apart. I always liked these episodes, and have had them saved on my computer since discontinuing the older podcast. You'll notice these older episodes feature writers from a range of disicplines, not explicitly to do with philosophy. Moving forward I want to continue diagraming the influence I've always drawn from the broader range of human inquiry over the years, and I'm reposting these older episodes wherein I don't think twice whether the idea I want to elaborate comes from a work of fiction, poetry, history, politics, etc.

    Hope you find the ideas in these eight episodes are worth sticking around for, and that you like them as I do, and can forgive them their faults!

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    45 分
  • A Reading of Book VIII from Plato's 'Republic'
    2025/11/20

    Hey! This episode is one of eight older episodes from 2020-2021 that I am re-uploading to this channel. They are episodes from back when I first got into podcasting, when I called my podcast 'Metaphor & Reality', instead of 'About Reality'. You'll see the older cover art for the 'Metaphor & Reality' version of the podcast uploaded with these eight episodes to tell them apart. I always liked these episodes, and have had them saved on my computer since discontinuing the older podcast. You'll notice these older episodes feature writers from a range of disicplines, not explicitly to do with philosophy. Moving forward I want to continue diagraming the influence I've always drawn from the broader range of human inquiry over the years, and I'm reposting these older episodes wherein I don't think twice whether the idea I want to elaborate comes from a work of fiction, poetry, history, politics, etc.

    Hope you find the ideas in these eight episodes are worth sticking around for, and that you like them as I do, and can forgive them their faults!

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    52 分
  • 56. To Practice Philosophy, One Must Learn How to Love
    2025/01/10

    To be honest, as I upload this episode I am realizing I may have expressed this sentiment in a previous recording, that the philosopher must first learn how to love if they are to practice philosophy aright. 'Philosophy' as a 'love of wisdom', where emphasis always seems placed on the wisdom, rather than the love; however, to love is to transcend one's self concern for the concern of another, and to learn how to do this is the beginning of wisdom, for why else seek to be wise? Unless one equates wisdom with utlitarian knowledge an individual may possess which they can then use to their advantage, including over others. We don't equate wisdom with such a thing in this podcast series, though.

    As always, if you are enjoying the episodes, consider (seriously) becoming a supporter on my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/esdallaire?view_as=patron

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    32 分
  • 55. When I Grow Up, I Want to Be a Philosopher
    2025/01/06

    If I am going to claim to practice philosophy, and ostensibly occupy the position of philosopher and represent myself as such, I better be able to back that up by what I am saying. That's a pretty simple description of a basic responsibility of the philosopher, but it applies to anyone professing to be any identifiable figure and impactful member within society, that they must speak like that person they present themselves as: doctor, police officer, lawyer, veterinarian, history professor. Speaking with the integrity of one who has dedicated themselves to truly be ___, may just be at the core of any endeavour in this life—one must choose their words with much consideration of their intent, and of course the philosopher is compelled to ask how anyone can be certain of their intention, and their desire to be.

    Please consider supporting me on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/esdallaire?view_as=patron

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    26 分
  • 54. The Moral Consequence of Our Being
    2024/05/08

    In this episode, philosophers are those who have become cognizant of the moral weight of their thought, and are concerned by it. In fact, they see thinking as equivalent with the recognition of the moral impact of their being within reality; in other words, they think that to be amoral is to be without thought, while to be immoral is to act against the inevitable conclusions of thought, which are always underscored by the acknowledgement of the moral consequence of our being.

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    25 分