Philosophy

Philosophy

Examine life’s biggest questions, from ethics to existence, with curiosity and critical thinking.

A collage featuring classical illustrations: a muscular figure holding up a map, fragments of text, silhouettes, a ship drawing, and tree branches on a green background.
Classic literature reveals how resilience can be both a source of strength in troubled times — and a dangerous ideal.
A small human figure stands at the base of a very tall tree, emphasizing the tree’s large size against a background with faint grid lines.
Every generation has faced a version of this moment — the question has never been what our tools can do, but what we choose to do with them.
Book cover of "Emergence" by David Sussillo, featuring a blue background with fish and circuit patterns, and a subtitle about boyhood, computation, and the mysteries of mind.
In this preview, the Stanford professor muses on how emergence, arriving at complex patterns from simple parts, explains AI, brains, and life itself.
M81 Group
Over billions of years, fewer stars form, galaxies mutually recede, and the Universe becomes ever darker. Here's how fast it all happens.
Book cover of "No Friend to This House" by Natalie Haynes, featuring an ornate dagger, decorative lines, and a quote noting her as the bestselling author of "Stone Blind." A striking design hints that danger is no friend of this house.
A preview of the latest novel by the New York Times bestselling author.
A blue hand holding a tool touches a red illustrated brain, with brain wave patterns shown in the background.
A new framework suggests that bursts of neural chaos could be the fingerprints of a conscious mind at work.
Text reads "follow the rules?" with "follow" underlined twice and a question mark after "rules" drawn in red. The simple beige background highlights the message—a subtle nod to good writing and when to challenge conventions.
Anne Lamott and Neal Allen join us to discuss why embracing constraints can be the best way to find freedom in the craft.
A man sits on a chair against a white backdrop, with a background featuring repeated vintage images of a person riding a horse.
1hr 19mins
Theoretical physicist Jim Al-Khalili explores why our sense of time may be incredibly misleading, including the idea that past, present, and future might all exist at once.
A man with short dark hair, wearing a dark t-shirt and smartwatch, gestures with his hands while standing in front of a plain white background.
23mins
Brian Cox examines why, despite billions of stars and trillions of planets, we have found no evidence of other intelligent life.
No civilization, no matter how successful, can last forever. What does the non-detection of intelligent aliens mean for our own longevity?
A person with purple hands holds a phone displaying text messages that read, "OMG then what happened??.
Throughout history, the ability to tell increasingly believable stories has become available to more people. Kevin Ashton says that’s a blessing and a curse.
A hand holds a red square above an eye shape, symbolizing the brain after blindness, with a geometric wireframe cube below on a blue circle, all set against a pale green background.
When people born blind gain sight, the hardest part isn’t opening their eyes — it’s teaching the brain how to see.
A person in a suit with a vintage computer monitor as a head carries a large, orange computer tower against a blue background with faint code text.
The quiet transfer of human agency in the age of artificial intelligence.
A robotic hand places a black stone on a Go board, surrounded by scattered black and white stones.
Philosopher Sven Nyholm on reclaiming achievement from the machines.
A grayscale statue of a bearded man, inspired by Confucian wisdom, sits at a modern office desk with a computer, keyboard, mouse, and grid-patterned background with colored circles.
The great Chinese philosopher offers a durable and practical blueprint for harmonizing with our work colleagues.
The fundamental building blocks of reality are indivisible: quanta that cannot be split or divided. Our understanding remains incomplete.