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Philosophy Portal
Cadell Last
36 episodes
2 days ago
This is a podcast that seeks to bring philosophy into the Real qua Impossible, that is: the little piece of the present moment that resists our desire.
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All content for Philosophy Portal is the property of Cadell Last and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This is a podcast that seeks to bring philosophy into the Real qua Impossible, that is: the little piece of the present moment that resists our desire.
Show more...
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/36)
Philosophy Portal
CHRISTIANITY IN TRANSITION (w/ Christian Baxter)

Preparing for the second month in The Portal focused on Christianity in Transition: https://philosophyportal.online/christianity-in-transition

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7 months ago
1 hour 39 minutes 44 seconds

Philosophy Portal
Why Psychosis Is Not So Crazy (w/ Stijn Vanheule)

To join the next two months at The Portal focused on Christianity in Transition, see: https://philosophyportal.online/christianity-in-transitionOr get involved by joining The Portal: https://philosophyportal.online/event-space--Why Psychosis Is Not So Crazy: https://otherpress.com/product/why-psychosis-is-not-so-crazy-9781635424423/--The Portal @ Wake (April 27-May 1): https://philosophyportal.online/the-portal-at-wakeDeleuze and Analysis (year long course): https://philosophyportal.online/deleuze-and-analysisSlovenian School Reading Group (year long group): https://philosophyportal.online/slovenian-school-reading-groupMarxism and Politics @ The Portal: https://philosophyportal.online/marxism-and-politics-at-the-portal--Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/cadelllastContact:Website: https://cadelllast.comEmail: cadell.last@gmail.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/CadellsSphere/Twitter: https://twitter.com/cadellnlastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/lastcadell/Academia: https://vub.academia.edu/CadellLastResearch Gate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Cadell_LastGoogle Scholar: https://scholar.google.be/citations?user=_rMgHMcAAAAJ&hl=en

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7 months ago
1 hour 34 minutes 36 seconds

Philosophy Portal
De/Reconstruction with Jim Palmer, Brendan Graham Dempsey

This video is a conversation Conversation with Jim Palmer, Brendan Graham Dempsey on "De/Reconstruction" inspired by our upcoming seminar series in The Portal on "Christianity in Transition". To learn more:

https://philosophyportal.online/christianity-in-transition

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8 months ago
2 hours 21 minutes 40 seconds

Philosophy Portal
Emerging Church, Capitalist Religion, Genesis Experience, Marxism & Politics (w/ Rob Zahn, Kevin Crouse, Helen Rollins, Timothee Bres, Pamela von Salbjar, Rebecca Rose Prentice) / The Portal Feb 2025

https://philosophyportal.substack.com/p/emerging-church-capitalist-religion


Conversation time stamps: 


  • Beyond the Emerging Church w/ Rob Zahn, Kevin Crouse (0:09)


    Capitalist Religion w/  Helen Rollins (1:07:33)


  • Genesis Experience w/  Timothee Bres, Pamela von Sabljar (2:25:20)


  • Reflecting Marxism & Politics w/ Rebecca Rose Prentice (3:26:19)


  • Throughout the first conversation we are thinking towards the next month in The Portal with Rob Zahn and Kevin Crouse. Both Zahn and Crouse are long-term contributors to Peter Rollins’ Wake Festival, and active practitioners of Rollins’ pyrotheology and Church of Contradiction. Part of our investigation in The Portal will be speculating on the “Beyond of the Emerging Church” movement. This will be hosted in coordination with both Jim Palmer who will be presenting on de/reconstruction, and Brendan Graham Dempsey, who will be presenting on meta-God concepts. To find out more about the process as a whole, see:

    https://philosophyportal.online/christianity-in-transition


    In the second conversation, Helen Rollins and I discuss Death of God theology in the context of capitalism as the religion of the modern world. This conversation is preparing for both H. Rollins contributions to the upcoming Christian Atheism conference at Philosophy Portal (to be announced soon), as well as the Philosophy Portal at Wake events at Peter Rollins’ Wake Festival in late April, see:


    https://philosophyportal.online/the-portal-at-wake


    In the third conversation, Timothée Brès, Pamela von Sabljar and I discuss our participation in the Genesis Experience event hosted at the Commons Hub Brussels in January. The Genesis Experience was an event focused on Reinventing Leadership for Generative Futures, bringing together entrepreneurs, thinkers, and facilitators for a two day collective exploration of our capacity to face the unknown, navigate complexity and embrace radical innovation and emergence. For more information, see:


    https://www.genesisxperience.com


    Finally, in the fourth conversation, Rebecca Prentice and I reflect on the last month in The Portal with Chris Cutrone inspired by his latest book, Marxism and Politics. This past month focused on four different major themes, including the Russian Revolution of 1917, the nature of contradiction on the level of ontology/epistemology, capitalist society as structured by the contradiction of labour and capital, and finally, a reflection on Marxism and Politics for “today and tomorrow”. You can access the recordings of course here:


    https://philosophyportal.online/marxism-and-politics-at-the-portal

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    8 months ago
    4 hours 40 minutes 3 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Christian Atheism (w/ Slavoj Žižek)

    Discussion with philosopher Slavoj Žižek focused on his latest book Christian Atheism.

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    1 year ago
    58 minutes 30 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Singularities (03) ft. Javier Rivera

    Singularities is a new series aiming for a more narrative investigation into the personal dimension of religion. The third episode hosts Javier Rivera, philosopher and writer attempting to think.

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    1 year ago
    2 hours 1 minute 13 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Negativity in Psychoanalysis (w/ Duane Rousselle, Mark Gerard Murphy)

    This discussion features psychoanalyst Duane Rousselle and theologian Mark Gerard Murphy to discuss their new edited volume Negativity in Psychoanalysis.

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    1 year ago
    2 hours 26 minutes 56 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Singularities (02) ft. Peter Robinson

    Singularities is a new series aiming for a more narrative investigation into the personal dimensions of religion. The second episode features Peter Robinson, the CTO of an Australian tech start-up, Tribees, but finds time to explore his philosophical interests in the relationship between reason and intuition, and between the intellectual and the existential.

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    1 year ago
    2 hours 31 minutes 36 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    What Do Men Want? (w/ Nina Power)

    Nina Power and I discuss her book What Do Men Want? (2023) which focuses on some of the contemporary issues that specifically center around masculinity and male identity.

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    1 year ago
    1 hour 51 minutes 32 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Singularities (01) ft. Jacob Kishere

    Singularities is a new series aiming for a more narrative investigation into the personal dimension of religion. The first episode hosts Jacob Kishere, creator of Sensespace, a project that focuses on unfolding dialogues related to Insight, Wisdom & Healing.


    https://philosophyportal.online/

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    1 year ago
    1 hour 53 minutes 52 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Reading Lacan's Ecrits (Part 2)

    This conversation with Samuel McCormick is the second in a series titled "Reading Lacan's Ecrits". The first conversation prepared Philosophy Portal for teaching Lacan's Ecrits, and this second conversation opens up a post-course reflection and a deeper ritual conversation inspired by Lacan's writings.

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    1 year ago
    2 hours 4 minutes 22 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    The Idea of the University (w/ David McKerracher, Ann Snelgrove of Theory Underground)

    In this discussion, David, Ann and I discuss the importance of thinking The Idea of the University in the contemporary neoliberal and digitised political-economic landscape.  The Idea of the University is a book by existentialist philosopher Karl Jaspers, and written to serve an educational reconstruction project in post-World War II Germany.  Now we discuss this book in our historical context, but with the aim the same: to think the Idea of the University as such.

    Theory Underground's new course "The Idea of the University" starts January 14th 2023, learn more and sign up here!: https://theory-underground.com/courses/tiotu 

    *Bonus: if you are signed up for the Science of Logic course and/or if you want to sign up for the Science of Logic course (starting January 16th 2023) you will get a Tier upgrade if you also attend The Idea of the University (I will be taking the course as well).

    Bryan, Ann, and David talking about the course: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNHemcJnLOU&t=3089s 

    The Idea of the University audiobook: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysRXTmE5FsU 

    The post about critique, theory, and ideology: https://theory-underground.com/critique-theory-and-ideology/ 

    New Philosophy Portal course focused on Hegel's Science of Logic starts January 16th 2023: https://philosophyportal.online/science-of-logic


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    2 years ago
    2 hours 1 minute 39 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Death and World Grounding (w/ Johannes A. Niederhauser)

    Johannes A. Niederhauser argues that death is a central notion in Martin Heidegger’s work on the questions being and time, and even takes us to the core of Heidegger's entire thinking path.  Thus, Heidegger is not merely approaching death as an existentialist problem, of how to become authentically mortal.  Heidegger is suggesting that the abstract concealment and exploitation of death is how the modern project attempts to bring in and enforce a different way of being human, an inhuman way of being human.  This is achieved via the exclusive absolutization of technical knowledge, which would perceive everything, even death, as a problem to be solved.  In contrast to this view, Niederhauser suggests that we must view death as an "utter non-availability".  This involves that we think the relationship between technology and death, and also language and death, in terms of the way death limits the powers of both to "make available".  From these ideas, he suggests it may be possible to “dwell in death” (as a cut), and in so doing overcome death's abstract concealment, by confronting the irreducible and singular personal relation to our concrete death, i.e. “that we have to die”.  What is to be “won” in this dwelling is potentially a real human ethics that can seriously entertain the question "what does it mean to die well?", thereby transcending epistemic instrumentalization of rationality.  What does it mean to become the type of being that, instead of unconsciously desiring to control, manipulate, eradicate or possess death with instrumental rationality, becomes the type of being that can really be, and that can really ground a new world in or as time.

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    3 years ago
    2 hours 5 minutes 3 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    What is the "Phenomenology of Spirit"? (w/ Mika Leinonen, Eric Jobe, Chetan Anand)

    G.W.F Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit is often conceived as Hegel's classic work, and one of the most important texts in the history of philosophy.  How are we to conceive of this work?  This question can be framed in many ways: How are we to understand the procedure or methods by which it was written?  What are the main concepts that define this work and how are we to think of these concepts today?  Finally, can we say there is an overall project for this work, and if so, does this project still have relevance for self-consciousness in the 21st century world?

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    3 years ago
    2 hours 41 minutes 32 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Thinking the Commons: Tribe in the Internet Age (w/ Michel Bauwens & Alexander Bard)

    The commons is an ancient social structure of allowing for the exchange of value.  The act of commoning can be defined as the act of exchanging with the ‘whole’ (i.e. doing something for the self as part of a larger tribe, clan, family, rather than for the self itself).  Throughout the history of human civilization more complex structural layers for exchanging value have been built on top of commoning, e.g. including equality matching value (gift economy), distributing value according to social merit (authority rank), and most recently capitalist assignment of value (market pricing).  Commoning can be thought of as the foundation of inter-tribal relation of value, where the value-extension structures on top of commoning can be thought of as forms for intra-tribal relation and commodity exchange.  In the age of capitalism commodity exchange has overshadowed and eroded the importance of other forms of exchange value (i.e. merit-based rankings, exchanging gifts, and commoning).  But with the emergence of digital networks, commoning is re-appearing with a new qualitatively dimension, and a new social importance.  This can be seen in many online communities that operate on a peer-to-peer logic, i.e. where individuals can freely connect and communicate, exchange, self-organize and create new ‘value circuits’.  If these online communities can take advantage of new technological forms (e.g. blockchain, cryptocurrencies), there is the possibility for commoning to once again take center stage as the foundation for a global economy.  This new center would not eliminate other forms of exchanging value (e.g. gift economy, authority rank, market pricing), but could potentially rebalance them in relation to a common tribal relation.

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    3 years ago
    1 hour 57 minutes 25 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Philosophy of Lack (#3) (w/ O.G. Rose, Tim Adalin, Alexander Ebert): Excess

    There is an excess which repeats most easily when not observed (it does not want to be observed?).  This excess is its own knowledge as the center of enjoyment and truth of identity.  Of relevance to our on-going discussion, the excess seems to appear most deeply at the site of lack.  Being in touch with this experiential knowing seems primal, and brings one to sites or drives of the body, whether oral, genital, anal, nasal, visionary or vocal.  Does it make sense to say this excess is the place of "perfect" forms?  What is our relation to perfect forms in time?  What role do these forms play in our maturation as subjects?  How can we be in touch, or in-formed by these forms, while also maintaining separation?

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    3 years ago
    3 hours 11 minutes 20 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Return to Metaphysics: How to Think Our Being? (w/ Alexander Bard, O.G. Rose, Alexander Elung)

    Metaphysics concerns the study of first principles of being (e.g. identity, change, space, time, causality, necessity, possibility).  In other words, whereas physics studies the physical world, metaphysics is the study of the fundamental categories we use to make sense of the world in the first place.  For example, Isaac Newton structured much of modern physics with his system of categories; Immanuel Kant revolutionized philosophy by attempting to think of these categories as structures of the mind; and Georg Hegel introduced a higher-order dialectical movement to these categories as features of a historical process.   

    Martin Heidegger, certainly one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century, famously attempted to “overcome metaphysics”.  Heidegger’s project is marked by “returning to Dasein” (or our being-in-the-world), claiming that all of Western philosophy had “forgotten being” under different “metaphysical regimes”.  In our age Heidegger was convinced that metaphysics imposed a “techno-scientific-industrial” character onto our being-in-the-world.  However, even Heidegger admitted that we must return to being-in-the-world only in order to be able to “begin anew” (metaphysics).  In this discussion we seek such new beginnings, not only an affirmation of our being-in-the-world, but also a return to metaphysics.

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    3 years ago
    1 hour 56 minutes 56 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Modern Dating and Romantic Relationships (w/ Javier Rivera)

    The dating landscape used to be generally regulated by a traditional-normative symbolic structure which organized society towards a more-or-less clear value-form: marriage/pair-bonding.  The modern dating landscape has largely lost this symbolic structure, and consequently, it has become extremely complex and confusing: a disorienting digital marketplace of wild drives and images disconnected from long-term value-forms.  Javier Rivera and I attempt to philosophize about this complexity and confusion with a psychoanalytic perspective.  We discuss the possibility that an internal-intersubjective symbolic structure can be re-organized if we consciously accommodate the real as an impossibility.

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    3 years ago
    2 hours 52 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Philosophy of Lack (#2.5) (w/ Alexander Ebert): Prelude to Perfection

    We feel the lack of an absolute being, and reality itself seems to lack as a split between atom/void.  Here we play with the imaginary of the mind which exists in this split between nothing and everything: what would it look like if we could “subtract lack” or “become lack" and “connect to the absolute”?  Would we be “fucking everything”?  Would we exist in a “giant social orgy”?  To start this dialogue, I give the personal example of a psychedelic experience which "connected to the absolute", the feeling of such a state, as well as the after-effects.  We then spend the majority of the discourse discussing dialectical dynamics of our relations to the feeling of the absolute under the model of "oscillations and negativity".   From this we push towards the idea of a dialectical-historical understanding of the emergence of "perfect form".

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    3 years ago
    1 hour 44 minutes 22 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    Philosophy of Lack (#2) (w/ O.G. Rose, Tim Adalin, Alexander Ebert): Materialism

    We started our first discourse on lack in the context of the origin of philosophy in the Parmenidean presupposition of absolute being banishing the void; and its relationship to the emergence of psychoanalysis as a discipline that operates by necessity in the void of subjectivity.  In our second discourse, I propose to shift our context to Democritus, and his atomist ontology, which we may say is the spontaneous unofficial metaphysics of scientific materialism (i.e. the universe at base is divided between indivisible somethings and nothing (“the void”).  However, the complimentary opposite of atoms, the void, is often left unthought by scientific materialists, leaving open-ended the philosophical consequences of a presence that depends on absence.  For Democritus, a presence that depends on absence signifies an important distinction vis-a-vis thinking “the real” (or fundamental reality), namely, that the most essential cannot be either a being (atoms, something), and neither can it be a non-being (void, nothing), but a paradox of the two.  He referred to this paradox of the two as a “not-nothing”, or what we might call “Lack”.  What does thinking Lack as a fundamental reality mean for scientific materialism?

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    4 years ago
    2 hours 25 minutes 24 seconds

    Philosophy Portal
    This is a podcast that seeks to bring philosophy into the Real qua Impossible, that is: the little piece of the present moment that resists our desire.