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Philosophical Paths

Philosophical Paths

著者: Ian Macfarlane
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Navigating life with wisdom and wit.

There are maps for almost everything in life — careers, status, achievement — but almost none for how to live well. And at some point, often in midlife, the questions become unavoidable:

Is this the life I intended to build?
What direction should I take now?
How do I live meaningfully with the time I have?

Philosophical Paths is for that moment.

Hosted by Ian Macfarlane, this podcast blends timeless wisdom with real-world guidance for navigating change, uncertainty, and personal transformation. Not academic philosophy — but philosophy as the ancients intended it: a practical guide to living deliberately.

Each episode offers:

  • Clear, compassionate reflection
  • Insight from the world’s greatest thinkers
  • Tools for examining your beliefs, decisions, and direction
  • Ways to cultivate purpose, steadiness, and inner clarity — especially when the old maps no longer apply

This is a space for thoughtful adults who have lived enough to ask deeper questions — and who are ready to walk forward with intention.

© 2025 Philosophical Paths
個人的成功 哲学 心理学 心理学・心の健康 社会科学 自己啓発 衛生・健康的な生活
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  • NAVIGATING A GOOD LIFE – THE SOCRATIC COMPASS
    2025/11/16

    Navigating a Good Life: The Socratic Compass

    In this episode of Philosophical Paths, we return to the ridge — that symbolic vantage point where the landscape of life opens in every direction and the unsettling truth becomes clear: there isn’t one path ahead, but many, and you still have to choose.

    Building on Episode 1 and the supplemental deep-dive into The World’s Condition and How We Got Here, we now turn inward to the question Socrates insisted no one can avoid: What is a good life? And what does that really mean for you?

    Modern life overwhelms us with choice, pressure, and noise — yet offers very little guidance. Psychology helps us cope with our symptoms, but philosophy helps us examine our foundations. This episode explores that distinction, showing why so many of us drift through life on “default settings,” going with the flow, or chasing fleeting moments of happiness that never accumulate into lasting contentment.

    Through stories, ancient insights, modern reflections, and a live demonstration of the Socratic method, we test our most common assumptions about happiness, success, and the myths we’ve inherited about living well.
    Together we ask:

    • Is happiness really a solid foundation for a life?
    • Why do our best-laid plans dissolve the moment life intervenes?
    • What happens when the universe — indifferent as it is — doesn’t cooperate?
    • If not happiness, then what should we be aiming for?

    Drawing on thinkers from Seneca and Socrates to Simone de Beauvoir, Solon, the Buddha, and modern psychology, we arrive at a deeper, more durable concept: telos — the ancient idea of one’s unfolding purpose.
    A life not defined by destinations, but by continuous becoming.

    By the end of the episode, you’ll understand why philosophy begins with questioning, why certainty is the enemy of discovery, and why shaping yourself — not chasing outcomes — is the heart of the good life.

    Next time, we turn to Aristotle — the thinker who transformed Socratic questioning into a comprehensive system for living well.

    This episode is part of *Philosophical Paths* — where we navigate life with wisdom and wit.
    For deeper essays, tools, and reflections, visit the Substack.
    And for visual storytelling and companion pieces, find the series on YouTube.

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    33 分
  • Supplemental Episode: "The world's condition and how we got here"
    2025/11/13

    This companion to Episode 1 steps back from your individual life and looks at the wider landscape you’re trying to navigate — a world many of us feel we didn’t design, nor that we are responsible for.

    Rather than shrugging and saying “it’s always been this way,” we trace how today’s pressures took shape: from the “stable” late 20th century, through the Reagan–Thatcher economic turn, the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, widening wealth and income gaps, and the quiet erosion of job security, dignity, and trust in institutions. We look at how short-term thinking, financial engineering, and policy choices bent the market away from Adam Smith’s vision of value creationtoward value extraction — and what that has meant for ordinary lives.

    We then connect the dots to the human cost: anxiety, burnout, loneliness, mental health strain, and a pervasive sense that the old social contract has broken. COVID didn’t create these problems; it revealed how fragile the system already was.

    This isn’t a doom scroll in audio form. It’s reconnaissance: a clear-eyed map of the terrain so that you can begin to choose, consciously, how to live within it — and why a personal philosophical framework is no longer a luxury, but a necessity.

    For references and data mentioned in this episode, see the companion Substack article, “The World’s Condition and How We Got Here.”

    This episode is part of *Philosophical Paths* — where we navigate life with wisdom and wit.
    For deeper essays, tools, and reflections, visit the Substack.
    And for visual storytelling and companion pieces, find the series on YouTube.

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    36 分
  • Episode 1: When Life's Map No Longer Fits
    2025/11/06

    We all begin life with a map—an idea of how things are supposed to unfold. Work hard, make good choices, stay the course, and everything will make sense in the end.
    But somewhere along the way, many of us realise the map no longer matches the terrain.

    In this opening episode of Philosophical Paths, we step onto a figurative ridge and look back at the path we've travelled. The careers pursued, the compromises made, the hopes deferred — and the quiet question that follows:

    Is this the life I chose… or the one I drifted into?

    We explore why these questions emerge so sharply in midlife and later adulthood, why the world we were prepared for no longer resembles the one we're living in, and why “just coping” isn’t a path forward.

    Drawing on Socrates, Montaigne, Marcus Aurelius, Kierkegaard, and contemporary experience, we examine the moment where the map fails — and what it means to step deliberately into a life chosen, rather than inherited.

    This episode introduces:

    • The daimon — your inner voice calling for honesty
    • The changed landscape of modern life
    • Why old promises of stability no longer hold
    • The three paths available when the old map fails
    • And the invitation to craft a philosophy that is genuinely your own

    This is not self-help, and it’s not theory.
    This is the beginning of a path toward living deliberately.

    Keep questioning. Keep walking. Keep becoming

    This episode is part of *Philosophical Paths* — where we navigate life with wisdom and wit.
    For deeper essays, tools, and reflections, visit the Substack.
    And for visual storytelling and companion pieces, find the series on YouTube.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    44 分
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