• Episode 02 Re-release: Two Sons of the Same Earth
    2020/12/15

    A re-recording of episode 2 with better audio!

    Our existential wandering through Forever Knight continues with part two of the 1992 pilot.

    Camus writes, "hope is disastrous for humans inasmuch as it leads them to minimize the value of this life except as preparation for a life beyond." Nick Knight's hope for salvation is precisely what damns him. His current quest for mortality is deference, a way of not negotiating the present, not accepting his current state. He pushes his Sisyphean rock up the hill angrily, already hating it for falling down the other side.

    Can Nick overcome his existential dilemma? Can Schanke figure out anything? What is going on with LaCroix's haircut?

    Tune in, gentle listeners, as we explore these eternal questions in our Forever Knight.

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    26 分
  • Episode 01 Re-Release: The Dark Knight meets Sisyphus
    2020/12/15

    A re-recording of episode 1 with better audio quality!

    There's a series of murders in Toronto, and Nick Knight is a detective on the case, but his colleagues don't know that he's actually an 800-year-old vampire. Nick laments his status an immortal bloodsucker and hopes to someday reclaim his humanity. But can he, if he continues to be shackled to the past? Can understanding Nick's plight through the lens of the existentialist idea of the absurd (as written about by Alber Camus) help us unravel both his struggle and our own quest for meaning? Tune in, dear listener...

    References:

    Camus Albert, The Myth of Sisyphus (1942)

    _____. Nuptials. (1938)

    Walter Benjamin, Theses on the Philosophy of History, (1940)

    You can find the podcast on Facebook and Twitter @podcast_still

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    25 分
  • Episode 13: Room Temperature Milk
    2020/08/05
    What is the role of the body in realizing our radical freedom? What responsibility do vampires have for their choices? Is it possible for me to be more bored by a Forever Knight episode? Tune in, gentle listener... Sources: General discussion on Sartre and Beauvoir. For a list of all the sources used on the podcast, and for information on how to support the show, go to your website: stilldreamingpodcast.wordpress.com
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    35 分
  • Episode 12: Breaking the Girl
    2020/07/28
    Oh my...this one...this one really hurt. Episode 12 of season one is called Dead Issue and deals with issues of abuse and rape. What is the existential lived condition of internalized oppression? Can Nick figure out a mystery involving the the wife of an Inspector without destroying his and Schanke's careers? Why isn't there more Natalie in the episode? And what do the writers have against famed Northern Renaissance painter Hieronymus Bosch?!? Sources: Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, 1949
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    49 分
  • Episode 11: Donut Donny: Man of Action
    2020/07/21
    Don Schanke: Cop. Father. Husband. Friend. Man of Action. But does our favorite side-kick live an existentially authentic life? Or are his choices made in bad faith? Can Nick help his friend during a time of crisis? Or will Donut Donny be picked off like the last paczki in the precinct? Tune in, gentle listener.... Want to support the show? Fine one time tipping and recurring subscription options at: stilldreamingpodcast.wordpress.com Twitter: @podcast_still IG: @stilldreamingpodcast Sources: Sartre, Existentalism is a Humanism. John Messerly, Summary of Sartre's Theory of Human Nature, (2014) reasonandmeaning.com
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    46 分
  • Episode 10: Moody Lounging
    2020/07/14

    Nick is on the radio! He's searching for a serial killer before he can strike again! But first he's got to....throw cards in the air and brood on the floor in robe? Huh? I experience existential befuddlement as we ask about the nature of being as it relates to responsibility to others and our own choices of morality...or something like that.

    Sources: Sartre, Being and Nothingness. De Beauvior, The Ethics of Ambiguity. Camus, The Rebel. And, The Myth of Sisyphus.

    Buy Me a Coffee! One time donation at: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/StillDreaming

    stilldreamingpodcast.wordpress.com

    Twitter; @podcast_still

    IG: @stilldreamingpodcast

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    41 分
  • Episode 09: No Good Deed
    2020/07/07

    Natalie's brother is dying, is Nick the only one who can save him? At what cost?

    What is the Existentialist basis for Ethical living? If "absurdity challenges ethics" how do we reconcile the need to live in the world with others with the subjective nature of freedom?

    Sources this week include:

    Simone de Beauvoir, The Ethics of Ambiguity, 1947. Beauvoir, Pyrrhus and Cineas, 1944. Sartre, "Existentialism is a Humanism," 1946.

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    38 分
  • Episode 08: China is here, Detective Knight!
    2020/06/30

    Forget it, Nick, it's Chinatown.

    What is the nature of the self in Daoism? How can the Dao help us understand Existentialism? What can Simone de Beauvoir tell us about the nature vengeance? Why is Schanke such an asshole? Do all Toronto gang members know Kung Fu? Tune in gentle listener...

    不經一事,不長一智

    (Wisdom comes with experience.)

    Chinese idiom.

    Sources:

    Confucius. Analects. 2014. Berkeley: Counterpoint

    Nivison, David. (1973). Moral Decision in Wang Yang-ming: The Problem of Chinese "Existentialism". Philosophy East and West,23(1/2), 121-137. doi:10.2307/1398068

    Wang, Yang-ming. (1963). Instructions for practical living, and other Neo-Confucian writings. Retrieved from https://hdl-handle-net.kean.idm.oclc.org/2027/heb.06056.

    Laozi, Zhuangzi, Confucius, & Mencius. (2013). The four chinese classics : tao te ching, chuang tzu, analects, mencius. (D. Hinton, Trans.).

    Wang, Qinjie James. "It-self-so-ing" and "other-ing" in Laozi's concept of Ziran. 2003. (http://www.confuchina.com/05%20zongjiao/Lao%20Zi's%20Concept%20of%20Zi%20Ran.htm)

    O'Flynn, Pauline. "A Question of Vengeance" Philosophy Now. Issue 69. 2008.

    Simone de Beauvoir, The Ethics of Ambiguity," 1947.

    Ho, David Y. F., "Selfhood and Identity in Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism, and Hinduism: Contrasts with the West," Journal for the Theory of Social behavior. 25:2. 1995.

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    42 分