Knowledge-seeker and psychologist Stuart Kelter shares his joy of learning and “delving in.” Ready? Let’s delve... Join Chris Churchill on the possible reasons why the search for intelligent life in the universe is coming up empty. Let’s hear from Israeli psychiatrist Pesach Lichtenberg about a promising approach to schizophrenia—going mainstream in Israel—that uses minimal drugs and maximal support through the crisis, rejecting the presumption of life-long disability. Find out what Pulitzer ...
…
continue reading
1
#139. The Amazing New Science of Smell
55:42
55:42
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:42
Jonas Olofsson is a professor at Stockholm University in Sweden, where he directs the Sensory Cognitive Interaction Lab, with a particular focus on the sense of smell, as well as its loss, as it interacts with memory, emotion, language, and information processing. He is the author of the recent book, The Forgotten Sense: The New Science of Smell an…
…
continue reading
1
#138. The History and Enduring Effects of the 2022 Uprising in Iran
55:02
55:02
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:02
Farhad Khosrokhavar is a retired professor and former Director of Studies at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris, whose work focuses on the social movements in Iran after the Islamic Revolution, the uprisings during the Arab Spring of 2010-12, the Jihadist movements in France and the rest of Europe, and the philosophical…
…
continue reading
1
#137. Science, Pseudoscience, and the Co-opting of Quantum Physics by the New Age Movement
54:02
54:02
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
54:02
Sadri Hassani is a professor emeritus of Physics at Illinois State University, who continues to teach courses in thermal and quantum physics as the University of Illinois. He holds a PhD in theoretical physics from Princeton University, has authored several books on mathematical physics for undergraduate and graduate students, and in addition has a…
…
continue reading
1
#136. The Complicated History of Native American Identity
57:02
57:02
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:02
For seven years Carrie Lowry Schuettpelz was a policy advisor in the Obama Administration, focusing on homelessness and Native policy. In addition to an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, she holds a Master’s in Public Policy from Harvard University and was a Fulbright Scholar in Denmark. She currently teaches public …
…
continue reading
1
#135. Where Does Economic Inequality Come From?
51:19
51:19
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
51:19
Jeffrey Zax is an economics professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, whose research focuses on labor economics, public economics, and urban economics. He has served as a consultant for various public entities, including the Attorneys General of several states. He has also been a Fulbright Lecturer and has taught at the University of Ghana.…
…
continue reading
1
#134. Reflecting on (an Unusally) Long Career as a Child Protective Worker
48:17
48:17
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
48:17
Tom Russell is a retired Child Protective Services investigator and foster care worker, who was employed by the state of Michigan. Although this honest and thoughtful interview does not go into graphic detail about child abuse, it may nevertheless be upsetting to some. Listener discretion is advised. Recorded 9/10/20.…
…
continue reading
1
#133. Benjamin Franklin's Scientific Dimension Underpinned Everthing Else
52:02
52:02
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
52:02
Author and environmental activist, Richard Munson, has served as senior director of the Environmental Defense Fund, and senior vice president at Recycled Energy Development. He has been a coordinator for the Northeast-Midwest Institute and Congressional and Senate Coalitions and several other environmental organizations, including bipartisan caucus…
…
continue reading
1
#132. A Religious Movement that is Reshaping American Politics and is Threatening Our Democracy
57:33
57:33
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:33
Matthew Taylor is a senior scholar at the Institute for Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Studies in Baltimore, where he specializes in American Christianity, American Islam, Christian extremism, and religious politics. He also serves as an associate fellow at the Center for Peace Diplomacy in New Orleans, where he works on preventing religion-related…
…
continue reading
1
#131. A Daughter of Holocaust Survivors Reflects on Intergenerational Trauma, Memory, and Listening
54:28
54:28
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
54:28
Award-winning novelist, poet, and non-fiction writer, Elizabeth Rosner, talks about themes from Survivor Café: the Legacy of Trauma and the Labyrinth of Memory, published in 2017, and her latest book, Third Ear: Reflections on the Art and Science of Listening. The daughter of Holocaust survivors, Rosner became attuned not only to words and sounds, …
…
continue reading
1
#130. State Laws that Promote Vigilante Intimidation
55:39
55:39
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:39
David Noll is the former associate dean for faculty research and a professor of law at Rutgers University Law School. His scholarly work encompasses a broad set of interlocking aspects of the law, including complex litigation, governmental legislation, regulation, and administration, and the framework of constitutional law in which all of these are…
…
continue reading
1
#129. An Evangelical Mega-Church that Fights Racism
57:44
57:44
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:44
Hahrie Han is a Political Science Professor at Johns Hopkins University, whose research focuses on grass-roots political activism, particularly against systemic racism. She has partnered with a wide range of civic and political organizations and movements around the world, including those in the United States, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, the Un…
…
continue reading
1
#128. Space, Time, and the Universe
49:51
49:51
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
49:51
Wladimir Lyra is an astronomer at New Mexico State University, whose research focuses around high-end computer simulations of planet formation, both in our own solar system and beyond, i.e., exoplanets and their solar systems. In this interview, we discuss empirically-based theories of time and space, their relationship to each other, and current i…
…
continue reading
1
#127. White Rural Rage: The Threat to American Democracy
58:22
58:22
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
58:22
Thomas Schaller and Paul Waldman and the co-authors of Rural White Rage: The Threat to American Democracy. Tom Schaller, who is a professor of political science at the University of Maryland in Baltimore, is the author of The Stronghold: How Republicans Captured Congress but Surrendered the White House; Whistling Past Dixie: How Democrats Can Win W…
…
continue reading
1
#126. The Paranoia and Drama of the McCarthy Era
57:08
57:08
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:08
Historians Andrea Balis and Elizabeth Levy are co-authors of the Bringing Down a President: The Watergate Scandal, published in 2019, and Witch Hunt: The Cold War, Joe McCarthy, and the Red Scare, published just this year and the subject of today’s interview. Andrea was a professor at the City University of New York for 30 years, has worked as a th…
…
continue reading
1
#125. Immigrant Workers Take on America's Largest Meatpacking Company
53:11
53:11
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
53:11
Alice Driver is a writer from the Ozark Mountains in Arkansas. She is the author of More or Less Dead: Feminicide, Haunting, and the Ethics of Representation in Mexico, published in 2015, and the translator of Abecedario de Juárez, published in 2022. Her latest book, The Life and Death of the American Worker: The Immigrants Taking on America's Larg…
…
continue reading
1
#124. Hypochondria: A Personal Story and Historical Exploration
57:38
57:38
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:38
Caroline Crampton is a writer and a podcaster, and the author of two books. The Way to the Sea, published in 2019, recounts the stories, literature, and history about the Thames Estuary in the U.K. Her second book, published in 2024 and the subject of today’s interview, is A Body Made of Glass: A Cultural History of Hypochondria. Crampton creates a…
…
continue reading
1
#123. Space Archaeology: Preserving Artifacts on the Moon
56:49
56:49
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:49
Beth O’Leary is a Professor Emerita at New Mexico State University, whose areas of interest include both cultural anthropology and archaeology. She is one of the creators and experts in Space Archaeology and Heritage, investigating the heritage status of the Apollo 11 Tranquility Base site on the Moon. In 2010, she and colleagues successfully nomin…
…
continue reading
1
#122. The Life, Times, and Philosophy of Baruch Spinoza, a Founding Thinker of the Enlightenment
53:40
53:40
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
53:40
Ian Buruma is a Professor of Human Rights and Journalism at Bard College. Originally from the Netherlands, he is a prolific writer with broad interests, including Japanese and Chinese culture and history, organized religion and religious intolerance, and intellectual and political freedom or lack thereof. He has been a regular contributor to the Ne…
…
continue reading
1
#121. Doing Philosophy with Children
55:16
55:16
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:16
This interview is dedicated to Samantha Keleher Bursum, who died on March 1 of 2024 in a car accident at the age of 14. She participated in this interview, at age 11, with her mother, Lori Keleher, who is a philosophy professor at New Mexico State University. Together they share the joys and benefits of philosophical conversations with children, st…
…
continue reading
1
#120. A Muslim Scholar, Who Converted to Islam, Promotes Interfaith Dialogue
59:42
59:42
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
59:42
Celene Ibrahim is a multidisciplinary scholar specializing in Islamic intellectual history, gender studies, and ethics. Her 2020 monograph, Women and Gender in the Qur'an, won the Association of Middle East Women's Studies Book Award and was featured by the American Academy of Religion for Women's History Month. Ibrahim is also the author of Islam …
…
continue reading
1
#119. A History of American Inequality.
58:59
58:59
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
58:59
Jamie Bronstein has been a history professor at New Mexico State University since 1996. She is the author of six books about American and British History: Land Reform and Working-Class Experience in Britain and the United States, 1800-1862 (published in 1999); Caught in the Machinery: Workplace Accidents and Injured Workers in 19th-century Britain …
…
continue reading
1
#118. Unjust Inequities in Bankruptcy Law
56:02
56:02
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:02
Melissa Jacoby is a law professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she teaches commercial and bankruptcy law. Melissa is a frequent commentator in the news media and has spoken with thousands of people about debt, lending, commercial law, and bankruptcy. In 2021 the Chief Justice of the United States, John Roberts, appointe…
…
continue reading
1
#117. A Cause Fraught with Peril: Exposing Abusive Medical Research
52:28
52:28
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
52:28
Carl Elliott is a philosophy professor at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and a recipient of the Erikson Institute Prize for Excellence in Mental Health Media. His work focuses on the influence of market forces on medicine, the ethics of enhancement technologies, research ethics, the philosophy of psychiatry, and the work of Ludwig Wittg…
…
continue reading
1
#116. What is the Universe Made of and What is its Destiny?
59:04
59:04
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
59:04
Harry Cliff is a particle physicist at the University of Cambridge. He is a member of an international team of around 1400 physicists, engineers and computer scientists who use the CERN particle accelerator in search of answers to some of the biggest questions in modern physics, such as the nature of dark matter and why the universe is made of matt…
…
continue reading
David Jacobson, Professor of Sociology at the University of South Florida. Today's interview, focuses on his book, Of Virgins and Martyrs: Women and Sexuality in Global Conflict. Published in 2013, the book explores the interplay among cultural, political, economic, and historical forces that shape gender relations and violence, individualistic vs.…
…
continue reading
1
#114. Real World Harms Created by Advances in Artificial Intelligence
56:23
56:23
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:23
Madhumita Murgia is a writer specializing in artificial intelligence and its impact on society. She was the artificial intelligence editor for Wired magazine and in February 2023 was appointed as the first A.I. Editor of the London-based Financial Times. Her recent book, Code Dependent: Living in the Shadow of A.I., was shortlisted for the 2024 Wom…
…
continue reading
1
#113. A Renaissance Man Reflects on the Creative Process and the Honing of Artistic Skills
56:21
56:21
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:21
Las Cruces’s very own renaissance man, Bob Diven -- an accomplished painter, sculptor, set designer, actor, playwright, composer, actor, satirist, cartoonist, singer-songwriter, folk guitarist; columnist, and more -- reflects on the creative process and the development of artistic skills. Recorded 2/13/21.…
…
continue reading
1
#112. Reclaiming the Vietnamese Heritage Her Refugee Father Never Shared
54:11
54:11
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
54:11
Vietnamese-American Christina Vo is the author of two memoirs. The first, entitled The Veil Between Two Worlds: A Memoir of Silence, Loss, and Finding Home, was published in 2023. Our interview will focus on her second book, published this past April, entitled, My Vietnam, Your Vietnam: A Father Flees. A Daughter Returns. A Dual Memoir. This book c…
…
continue reading
1
#111. The National Park Service, Its Mission, and How it was Co-opted by the South to Celebrate the Confederacy
55:25
55:25
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:25
Dwight Pitcaithley, the former Chief Historian of the National Park Service, discusses NPS's history and its three-fold mission of preservation, research, and education, with the last segment focusing on the controversies surrounding Civil War monuments. Recorded 2/10/21.Von Stuart Kelter
…
continue reading
1
#110. Research that Proved the Toxic Effects of Lead in Our Gasoline and in Our Drinking Water
56:12
56:12
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:12
Joel Schwartz won a MacArthur Award for work that made a major contribution to the phase-out of lead in gasoline. Ronnie Levin worked at the Environmental Protection Agency to help establish federal standards and more robust testing to protect consumers from lead in drinking water. Both Schwartz and Levin teach at the Harvard University T.H. Chan S…
…
continue reading
1
#109. Finding Meaning After Catastrophic Illness or Injury
57:57
57:57
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:57
Dr. Keith Rafal, medical director of the Rehabilitation Hospital of Rhode Island and creator of the non-profit organization and website, Our Heart Speaks, through which people from around the world share inspirational stories and artistic expressions about their rehabilitation, healing, connection, and meaning. Recorded 3/7/21.…
…
continue reading
1
#108. The Amazing Auditory World of Sea Creatures
58:16
58:16
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
58:16
Amorina Kingdon is an award-winning science writer, at Hakai Magazine until 2021 and as a contributor to publications at the University of Victoria and the Science Media Center, both in Canada. She is also a writer of fiction, published in PRISM and Flash Fiction magazine. The subject of today’s interview is her recently released book, Sing Like Fi…
…
continue reading
1
#107. Teaching Social Justice Issues to White Students in a Wealthy Suburb of Boston
57:54
57:54
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:54
David Nurenberg is a professor, educational consultant, and writer in the Boston area who teaches courses at both the high school and graduate level, in suburban, urban, and international teaching and learning environments. He shares his insights on all things educational in his podcast, Ed Infinitum, and is the author of the book, What Does Injust…
…
continue reading
1
#106. The Incredible Potential and Daunting Risks of Stem Cell Therapy
56:22
56:22
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:22
Sheldon Krimsky was a professor of humanities and social sciences at Tufts University and a fellow of the Hastings Center, an independent bioethics research institution. His long and distinguished career focused on the links between public policy and science and technology, environment and health, and ethics and values. His work stressed the import…
…
continue reading
1
#105. How Mandela Averted Civil War in South Africa
53:28
53:28
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
53:28
Justice Malala is one of South Africa’s foremost political commentators, both in print and on television. A longtime weekly columnist for The Times of South Africa, he has also written for The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, and Financial Times, among other major publications. He is the author of the #1 bestseller, We Have N…
…
continue reading
1
#104. The Promise and Shortcomings of Massive Open Online Courses
56:32
56:32
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:32
Justin Reich is a professor in Comparative Media Studies and director of the Teaching Systems Lab, both at MIT. He is the host of a podcast called TeachLab; one of the earliest researchers in the development of Harvard X, which was one of the first initiatives in massive scale online course offerings; and developer and host of five open online cour…
…
continue reading
1
#103. Cognitive Biases that are Amplified by Social Media
56:09
56:09
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:09
Amanda Montell is a linguist, cultural commentator, and host of the weekly podcast Sounds Like a Cult. In addition to essays published in Time, Cosmopolitan, and other magazines, she has published three books. Her first, Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language, released in 2019, established her as a writer who deconstructs bi…
…
continue reading
1
#102. How Bayesian Statistics Underpins Both Scientific Prediction and Everyday Functioning
55:28
55:28
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:28
Tom Chivers is a science writer who has won several awards, including the Royal Statistical Society’s award for statistical excellence in journalism, the Association of British Science Writers’ science journalist of the year, and the Times’s science books of the year. He has written three books. His first, The Rationalist’s Guide to the Galaxy: Sup…
…
continue reading
1
#101. Schadenfreude (Pleasure From Someone Else's Misfortune)
57:21
57:21
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
57:21
Colin Wayne Leach is a social and personality psychologist at Columbia University, who researches Schadenfreude -- i.e., deriving pleasure from witnessing someone else's misfortune -- and related emotions, such as Genugtuung, which means deriving pleasure from seeing justice done. Recorded 4/12/21.Von Stuart Kelter
…
continue reading
1
#100. What Life Was Like in the Prehistoric Past
56:07
56:07
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:07
Ran Barkai is the co-author, with Eyal Halfon, of the recently published book, They Were Here Before Us: Stories from the First Million Years. Dr. Barkai is a professor of archaeology at Tel Aviv University, who for 20 years has co-directed the excavations and research at Qesem Cave in northern Israel. His wide-ranging research interests encompass …
…
continue reading
1
#99. Ethical Dilemmas of Non-Invasive Prenatal Testing
55:33
55:33
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:33
Vardit Ravitsky is a Professor of Bioethics at the University of Montreal and President of the International Association of Bioethics. Her research focuses on the ethical, legal and social implications of genetics/genomics and assisted reproductive technologies and their implications for women’s autonomy and for disability rights. She is President …
…
continue reading
1
#98. Re-examining the Evidence for the Genetic Basis of Mental Illness
56:45
56:45
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:45
Jay Joseph is a clinical psychologist in the San Francisco Bay Area. Dr. Joseph challenges the empirical evidence behind the mainstream view that mental illness is genetically based, and argues instead that the real causes include oppression, trauma, abuse, and psychologically unhealthy aspects of the social and political environment. He is the aut…
…
continue reading
1
#97. How to Best Help the Most Vulnerable Children? Start Before They're Even Born!
55:03
55:03
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:03
David Olds is a professor at the Pediatrics-Prevention Research Center at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He has devoted his long and distinguished career to the developing and testing of very early interventions in family and child functioning, starting prenatally and continuing through toddler age. After devoting decades to high qu…
…
continue reading
1
#96. Compassionate Care for a Devastating Disease
56:22
56:22
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:22
In 2003, Ron Hoffman became the founder of an organization in Falmouth, Massachusetts called Compassionate Care ALS (CCALS.org), which has helped well over 1000 families with Lou Gehrig’s disease on both practical and spiritual levels, above all by being deeply present. His memoir, Sacred Bullet, published in 2014, reveals in powerful and personal …
…
continue reading
1
#95. The Amazing Grit and Determination of the First Women Doctors
55:10
55:10
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:10
Olivia Campbell is a journalist, essayist, and author focusing on the intersections of medicine, women, history, and nature. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, The Washington Post, Smithsonian Magazine, and many other major publications. She is the author of the 2021 NY Times bestseller, Women in White Coats: How the First Women Doctors Changed…
…
continue reading
1
#94. Can Trauma Be Inherited?
55:49
55:49
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:49
Isabelle Mansuy, a professor in neuroepigenetics in the Medical Faculty of the University of Zurich and the Department of Health Science and Technology of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich. Specializing in neuroepigenetics and molecular psychiatry, Dr. Mansuy is doing cutting edge research, using mice, to separate nature from nurture…
…
continue reading
1
#93. An Evolutionary Perspective on Mental Illness and Human Suffering
56:56
56:56
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:56
Psychiatrist, professor, and researcher, Randolph Nesse, is a cofounder of the field of evolutionary medicine. Twenty-five years ago his book, Why We Get Sick, which he co-authored with George C. Williams, went on to sell more than 100,000 copies and to be translated into eight languages. He served for many years on the faculty of the University of…
…
continue reading
1
#92. The Trailblazers of the Dance Theatre of Harlem
55:12
55:12
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:12
Karen Valby is a culture writer whose work has appeared in Vanity Fair, the New York Times, O Magazine, Glamour, Fast Company, and EW. She is also the author of two books. The first, Welcome to Utopia: Notes from a Small Town, was published in 2010. Her soon-to-be-released book, The Swans of Harlem: Five Black Ballerinas, Fifty Years of Sisterhood,…
…
continue reading
1
#91. The Corporatization of American Health Care
56:25
56:25
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
56:25
Robert W. Derlet, MD is a Professor Emeritus at the medical school of the University of California, Davis, former Chief of Emergency Medicine at the Davis Medical Center, candidate for Congress in 2016, and author of the recent book, Corporatizing American Health Care. Recorded 6/16/21.Von Stuart Kelter
…
continue reading
1
#90. Symbiotic Relationships with Bacteria
55:42
55:42
Später Spielen
Später Spielen
Listen
Gefällt mir
Geliked
55:42
Michele Nishiguchi, a professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Merced, she runs the Nishiguchi Symbiosis Lab, specializing in the study of the association and interaction between the tiny Bobtail squid and a light emitting bacteria called Vibrio fischeri, which are relevant to the evolution of both beneficial and det…
…
continue reading