The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast

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Jack Symes | Andrew Horton, Oliver Marley, and Rose de Castellane
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10.7K - 17.8K listeners Female/Male 4.8 rating 711 reviews 350 episodes United Kingdom
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An 'informal and informative' philosophy podcast inspiring and supporting students, teachers, academics and free-thinkers worldwide. All episodes are available at www.thepanpsycast.com.

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Recent Hosts, Guests & Topics

Here's a quick summary of the last 5 episodes on The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast.

Hosts

Previous Guests

Rose Cartwright is an author and screenwriter best known for her memoir 'Pure', which details her experiences living with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) and was adapted into a popular Channel 4 television drama. She is currently a screenwriter for the Netflix show '3 Body Problem'. Her latest book, 'The Maps We Carry', explores themes of trauma, healing, and the limitations of the medical model in understanding mental health. Cartwright's work emphasizes the importance of narratives in shaping our understanding of mental distress and advocates for a more expansive approach to mental health.
Julian Baggini is a philosopher and author known for his work in popular philosophy. He has written several best-selling books, including 'How the World Thinks', 'How to Think Like a Philosopher', and 'The Pig That Wants to be Eaten'. Baggini has served as the academic director of the Royal Institute of Philosophy and is a member of the Food Ethics Council. He has contributed articles to major publications such as The Guardian, the Times Literary Supplement, the Financial Times, and Prospect Magazine, as well as numerous academic journals and think tanks. His latest book, 'How the World Eats', explores food practices across different societies and aims to establish a food philosophy that addresses contemporary challenges in food systems.
Elizabeth Oldfield is a writer, speaker, and the host of The Sacred podcast. She is the former director of Theos Think Tank, a leading think tank in the UK that focuses on the intersection of religion and society. In her recent book, Fully Alive: Tending to the Soul in Turbulent Times, she revives the concept of the seven deadly sins, not as a means of moral condemnation, but as a framework for examining personal practices and principles. Her work emphasizes the importance of understanding sin in a way that can help individuals confront crises of meaning and community.

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The Panpsycast – Archive
@ThePanpsycast

Channel Stats

Subscribers: 2,480
Total Videos: 373
Total Views: 94,373
Joined: Feb 18, 2018
Location: United Kingdom

Description

Archive of Talking About Philosophy; this channel is unedited and unmonitored.

Talking About Philosophy© produces podcasts, books, and events in philosophy. The project aims to provide students and teachers with high-quality resources, whilst creating content that is appealing and accessible to the wider public. Talking about Philosophy also aims to inspire further study and seeks to disseminate research from leading scholars.

The project centres around The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast®, a podcast released internationally free of charge. The show has over 65,000 listeners and regularly features in the Top 5 Higher Education podcasts on iTunes.

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Episodes

Here's the recent few episodes on The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast.

0:00 30:33

Episode 143, ‘The Philosophy of Mental Health’ with Rose Cartwright (Part II - Further Analysis and Discussion)

Hosts
N/A
Guests
Rose Cartwright
Keywords
mental health OCD trauma healing medical model psychedelic journeys narratives consciousness

We’re living through a mental health crisis. In Europe, use of antidepressant has more than doubled in the past twenty years, and one in five children are now living with a recognised mental health condition. These numbers are striking, and the suffering they reflect personal, and clouded in mystery. But have we always been like this? Or has something shifted – in our politics, our culture, or perhaps in our understanding of what it means to be a person? Is the rise in mental health disorders a product of modern life, or are we simply more willing to talk about them? And what happens when system, designed to help us, ends up making us feel more broken, more stuck, and more alone?

In this episode, we’ll discussing these questions with Rose Cartwright – best-known as the author of Pure, a raw and radical memoir about living with OCD, which went on to become a popular Channel 4 television drama. Today, Rose is a screenwriter on the Netflix show 3 Body Problem, and her latest book, The Maps We Carry, takes a deep dive into the territory of trauma, healing, and the limits of the medical model.

As shall see, Rose’s work explores how our distress is shaped by the stories we tell – and the stories we’re told – about our minds. She asks whether we need new narratives, new frameworks, and even new states of consciousness to understand and transform our inner lives. Drawing on her own experiences – talking therapies, medications, psychedelic journeys, and the spaces in between – Rose invites us to imagine a more expansive approach to mental health. What does that expansive model look like? And is it really necessary? Well – lie back on the couch, take a deep breath… and let’s find out.

Links

Rose Cartwright, Website.

Rose Cartwright, The Maps We Carry.

Rose Cartwright, Pure.

Pure – TV Show.

3 Body ProblemTV Show.

0:00 35:55

Episode 143, ‘The Philosophy of Mental Health’ with Rose Cartwright (Part I - The Maps We Carry)

Guests
Rose Cartwright
Keywords
mental health OCD trauma healing medical model narratives talking therapies psychedelic journeys

We’re living through a mental health crisis. In Europe, use of antidepressant has more than doubled in the past twenty years, and one in five children are now living with a recognised mental health condition. These numbers are striking, and the suffering they reflect personal, and clouded in mystery. But have we always been like this? Or has something shifted – in our politics, our culture, or perhaps in our understanding of what it means to be a person? Is the rise in mental health disorders a product of modern life, or are we simply more willing to talk about them? And what happens when system, designed to help us, ends up making us feel more broken, more stuck, and more alone?

In this episode, we’ll discussing these questions with Rose Cartwright – best-known as the author of Pure, a raw and radical memoir about living with OCD, which went on to become a popular Channel 4 television drama. Today, Rose is a screenwriter on the Netflix show 3 Body Problem, and her latest book, The Maps We Carry, takes a deep dive into the territory of trauma, healing, and the limits of the medical model.

As shall see, Rose’s work explores how our distress is shaped by the stories we tell – and the stories we’re told – about our minds. She asks whether we need new narratives, new frameworks, and even new states of consciousness to understand and transform our inner lives. Drawing on her own experiences – talking therapies, medications, psychedelic journeys, and the spaces in between – Rose invites us to imagine a more expansive approach to mental health. What does that expansive model look like? And is it really necessary? Well – lie back on the couch, take a deep breath… and let’s find out.

Links

Rose Cartwright, Website.

Rose Cartwright, The Maps We Carry.

Rose Cartwright, Pure.

Pure – TV Show.

3 Body ProblemTV Show.

0:00 33:21

Episode 142, 'The Philosophy of Food' with Julian Baggini (Part II - Further Analysis and Discussion)

Guests
Julian Baggini
Keywords
food philosophy food production food consumption global food web food ethics Julian Baggini

Food is one of the most universal and essential parts of human life. From gourmet steaks to the everyday, humble, packet of crisps, food consumption is everywhere. But what do we actually know about how our food is grown? How is it processed? And how does it ends up on our supermarket shelves or in our restaurants and takeaways? While we may look back and think traditional food customs are more often in harmony with the natural environment, most of us today rely on a complex global food web of production, distribution, consumption and disposal. But how does it work, and what can philosophy say about food?

Joining our discussion on food philosophy today is philosopher Julian Baggini. Baggini is an expert in popular philosophy with Sunday Times best-selling books such as How the World Thinks, How to Think Like a Philosopher and The Pig That Wants to be Eaten. He has served as the academic director of the Royal Institute of philosophy and is a member of the Food Ethics Council. He has written for The Guardian, the Times Literary Supplement, the Financial Times, and Prospect Magazine, as well as a plethora of academic journals and think tanks.

In his wide-ranging and definitive new book, How the World Eats, Baggini argues that the need for a better understanding of how we feed ourselves has never been more urgent. Baggini delves into the best and worst food practises around the world in a huge array of different societies, past and present-exploring cutting edge technologies, the ethics and health of ultra processed food and the effectiveness of our food governance. His goal: to extract a food philosophy of essential principles, on which to build a food system fit for the 21st century and beyond. What is that food philosophy? Let's tuck in, and find out.

Links

Julian Baggini, Website

Julian Baggini, How the World Eats: A Global Food Philosophy

0:00 40:30

Episode 142, 'The Philosophy of Food' with Julian Baggini (Part I - How the World Eats)

Guests
Julian Baggini
Keywords
food philosophy food consumption global food web food ethics Julian Baggini How the World Eats

Food is one of the most universal and essential parts of human life. From gourmet steaks to the everyday, humble, packet of crisps, food consumption is everywhere. But what do we actually know about how our food is grown? How is it processed? And how does it ends up on our supermarket shelves or in our restaurants and takeaways? While we may look back and think traditional food customs are more often in harmony with the natural environment, most of us today rely on a complex global food web of production, distribution, consumption and disposal. But how does it work, and what can philosophy say about food?

Joining our discussion on food philosophy today is philosopher Julian Baggini. Baggini is an expert in popular philosophy with Sunday Times best-selling books such as How the World Thinks, How to Think Like a Philosopher and The Pig That Wants to be Eaten. He has served as the academic director of the Royal Institute of philosophy and is a member of the Food Ethics Council. He has written for The Guardian, the Times Literary Supplement, the Financial Times, and Prospect Magazine, as well as a plethora of academic journals and think tanks.

In his wide-ranging and definitive new book, How the World Eats, Baggini argues that the need for a better understanding of how we feed ourselves has never been more urgent. Baggini delves into the best and worst food practises around the world in a huge array of different societies, past and present-exploring cutting edge technologies, the ethics and health of ultra processed food and the effectiveness of our food governance. His goal: to extract a food philosophy of essential principles, on which to build a food system fit for the 21st century and beyond. What is that food philosophy? Let's tuck in, and find out.

Links

Julian Baggini, Website

Julian Baggini, How the World Eats: A Global Food Philosophy

0:00 38:37

Episode 141, ‘Deadly Sins’ with Elizabeth Oldfield (Part II - Further Analysis and Discussion)

Hosts
Unknown
Guests
Elizabeth Oldfield
Keywords
ethics seven deadly sins Christian tradition moral transformation relationships flourishing disconnection distraction

Much of ethics is relational: it’s about how we treat other people, the world around us, and how those relationships shape who we become. In philosophy, this often gets formalised as a set of virtues to cultivate, duties to obey, or harms to avoid. But today, we rarely talk about sins – let alone the seven deadly sins.

Historically rooted in the Christian tradition – pride, greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath, and sloth – have been understood not just as personal failings. They were taken seriously because they obscured what it meant to flourish: that is, to be fully alive. They are, fundamentally, habits of being that corrode our ability to love. So, what might we learn today from the seven deadly sins? How can these ancient categories illuminate our lives, in a world marked by disconnection and distraction?

In this episode, we’ll be speaking about the seven sins with Elizabeth Oldfield. Elizabeth is a writer, speaker, host of The Sacred podcast, and the former director of Theos Think Tank. In her recent book Fully Alive, she revives the seven deadly sins – not as a tool for moral condemnation, but as a lens through which to examine our practices and principles.

We’ll be talking with Elizabeth about how sin, properly understood, can help us confront the crisis of meaning and the collapse of community. We’ll also explore her Christian vision of moral transformation and why it’s vital to believers and non-believers alike.

Links

Elizabeth Oldfield, Website

Elizabeth Oldfield, Fully Alive: Tending to the Soul in Turbulent Times

Jules Evans on Psychedelics

Sarah Stein Lubrano, Don't Talk About Politics: How to Change 21st-Century Minds

Ratings

Global:
4.8 rating 711 reviews

UK

4.8 ratings 321 reviews

USA

4.8 ratings 286 reviews

Canada

4.6 ratings 48 reviews

Australia

4.8 ratings 34 reviews

New Zealand

5.0 ratings 7 reviews

South Africa

4.6 ratings 7 reviews

Ireland

4.8 ratings 4 reviews

Singapore

5.0 ratings 4 reviews