Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
News
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Podjoint Logo
US
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/e2/cd/f2/e2cdf2c5-640c-9ed7-ffe7-7c01d7b5ce25/mza_9735652727909787110.png/600x600bb.jpg
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
213 episodes
5 days ago
The Deeper Thinking Podcast https://thedeeperthinkingpodcast.podbean.com/
Show more...
Philosophy
Technology,
Society & Culture,
Science,
Social Sciences
RSS
All content for The Deeper Thinking Podcast is the property of The Deeper Thinking Podcast 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.
The Deeper Thinking Podcast https://thedeeperthinkingpodcast.podbean.com/
Show more...
Philosophy
Technology,
Society & Culture,
Science,
Social Sciences
https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/ep-logo/pbblog19459659/The_Crooked_Horizona4afg.png
Distortionism: The Crooked Horizon - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
31 minutes
1 month ago
Distortionism: The Crooked Horizon - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
Distortionism: The Crooked Horizon The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.  For those drawn to truth in resonance, the crooked paths of bias, and the wonder of living within illusion. #Distortionism #DayCart #ImmanuelKant #FriedrichNietzsche #Buddhism #CognitiveBias #Postmodernism #Philosophy What if distortion is not the fog but the lens itself? In this episode we introduce Distortionism, a new philosophy that argues we do not merely encounter bias—we are bias. Distortion is not a flaw in thought but the condition of thought. Drawing from Descartes, Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Buddhism, and cognitive bias, we explore how illusion structures experience, politics, memory, and even theology. This is not a call to cynicism. Distortion shelters us in grief, binds us in culture, and orients us in politics. The challenge is not to abolish it but to steward it—through humility, compassion, irony, discipline, and art. Theology, too, is reborn here as the crooked infinite: the awe of an unreachable horizon bending away as we approach. We close with the myth of the Crooked Horizon, where Straight-Seeker, Nihilist, Iron Believer, and Wanderer each respond to the crooked path. Only the Wanderer accepts distortion, and by arranging it, endures. Reflections Distortion is not an error—it is the condition of perception. Truth is resonance across crookedness, not purity beyond it. Bias cannot be abolished, but it can be arranged with care. Humility, irony, and compassion are practices of distortion’s stewardship. Theology becomes awe at the unreachable, bending horizon. Resonance is a landmark of reality, not its escape. The crooked staff guides further than the straight rule. Why Listen? Encounter a brand-new philosophy that reframes truth, ethics, and theology for an age of misinformation. Learn how bias, illusion, and distortion are not enemies of thought but its ground. Discover practical ethics of navigating distortion, from institutions to daily life. Hear the parable of the Crooked Horizon, a modern myth Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work - give me 5 stars on apple podcasts please.  If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee  Bibliography Descartes Meditations on First Philosophy. Paris: 1641..  Immanuel Kant. Critique of Pure Reason. Riga: 1781. Friedrich Nietzsche. On the Genealogy of Morality. Leipzig: 1887. Buddhist texts on Māyā. Contemporary studies on cognitive bias and postmodern philosophy. Bibliography Relevance Descartes: Sought clarity through methodical doubt, showing the pull of illusion’s undoing. Immanuel Kant: Demonstrated how the mind structures experience itself. Friedrich Nietzsche: Recast truth as perspectival, not absolute. Buddhism: Names illusion—māyā—as intrinsic to lived experience. Cognitive Bias: Maps distortion in contemporary psychology and decision-making. Postmodernism: Challenges purity of truth, offering multiplicity instead. Truth is not what remains when distortions vanish. It is what resonates when crookedness is arranged with care.  #Distortionism #CrookedHorizon #Bias #PhilosophyOfTruth #Epistemology #PoliticalPhilosophy #MoralPhilosophy #Theology #PublicPhilosophy #Ethics #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #Resonance #CognitiveBias #Postmodernism #Philosophy #ModernMyth About Philosophy has often imagined distortion as something to be peeled away, an illusion to be corrected, bias to be minimized, appearance to be overcome. From Descartes methodological doubt to Kant’s categories, from Nietzsche’s perspectivism to postmodern relativism, the tradition has oscillated between two poles: the hope of pure truth and the despair of radical illusion. Distortionism offers a third path. It asserts that distortion is not an occasional deviation but the constitutive condition of thought. We do not perceive truth distorted by bias; we inhabit distortion, which sometimes reveals truth. T
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
The Deeper Thinking Podcast https://thedeeperthinkingpodcast.podbean.com/