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History Science Literature Education Book Reviews Historical Narratives Science Discussions Book RecommendationsIf you enjoy this podcast and would like to support its production, you can contribute via PayPal at: paypal.me/AVillavicencioUsbeck
History Science Literature Education Book Reviews Historical Narratives Science Discussions Book Recommendations
In the season premiere of "Philosophical Faultlines," we venture into the brilliant, beautiful, and often bleak world of Arthur Schopenhauer, one of philosophy's greatest curmudgeons.
This episode unpacks the earth-shattering sentence at the heart of his masterpiece: "The world is my idea". We explore what Schopenhauer meant by this and how it builds on Immanuel Kant's distinction between the world as it appears to us (the phenomenon) and the true, unknowable "thing in itself" (the noumenon). Is our reality simply a mental construct, a grand "virtual reality simulation" from which we can never remove the headset?
Join us as we discover the "back door" Schopenhauer claimed to have found to peek behind this "veil of illusion". By examining our own bodies, he argues we can directly experience the inner reality of all existence: a blind, striving, and relentless force known as "the Will". To understand his philosophy, you must first accept his starting point: the world you perceive is a phenomenon of your mind.