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The Grindstone
Purdue Department of Philosophy
32 episodes
7 months ago

ABOUT THE POD


Philosophy is an important academic subject, one we believe everyone should be exposed to and explore. But philosophy can also feel distant and abstract to many people. The Grindstone is an ‘armchair interviews with philosophers’ podcast that gets to know the people who study and teach philosophy, and tries to apply some of their wisdom to the world around us.


We let the conversations unfold in their own way, but we try to cover three topics with all of our guests:

  • the moment that set them on the path to study philosophy
  • their current area of research
  • and how that philosophical research can help us better understand some aspect of contemporary culture (e.g., technology; social justice and activism; morality; environmental issues; pop culture, etc.)


We also occasionally interview people who majored in philosophy and went on to careers in various industries outside of academia to ask them how their education in philosophy prepared them for and applies to their current work.


The conversations are informal, organic, and go where they go. We hope that they are informative and insightful. And we hope that you enjoy them. Thanks for listening!


YOU CAN FOLLOW US:


@grindstone.pod (Instagram)

@GrindstonePod (Twitter)


ABOUT OUR TEAM


The Grindstone was created, and is hosted, by Matthew Kroll, the Academic Program Manager in the Department of Philosophy at Purdue University. Caroline Cross, a philosophy major at Purdue, mixes, edits and produces the podcast. The intro and outro music is by Al Terity. Special thanks to Purdue philosophy alum Madison Maroney for voicing the intro and outro.


This podcast is supported by the Department of Philosophy and the College of Liberal Arts at Purdue University



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Philosophy
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All content for The Grindstone is the property of Purdue Department of Philosophy 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.

ABOUT THE POD


Philosophy is an important academic subject, one we believe everyone should be exposed to and explore. But philosophy can also feel distant and abstract to many people. The Grindstone is an ‘armchair interviews with philosophers’ podcast that gets to know the people who study and teach philosophy, and tries to apply some of their wisdom to the world around us.


We let the conversations unfold in their own way, but we try to cover three topics with all of our guests:

  • the moment that set them on the path to study philosophy
  • their current area of research
  • and how that philosophical research can help us better understand some aspect of contemporary culture (e.g., technology; social justice and activism; morality; environmental issues; pop culture, etc.)


We also occasionally interview people who majored in philosophy and went on to careers in various industries outside of academia to ask them how their education in philosophy prepared them for and applies to their current work.


The conversations are informal, organic, and go where they go. We hope that they are informative and insightful. And we hope that you enjoy them. Thanks for listening!


YOU CAN FOLLOW US:


@grindstone.pod (Instagram)

@GrindstonePod (Twitter)


ABOUT OUR TEAM


The Grindstone was created, and is hosted, by Matthew Kroll, the Academic Program Manager in the Department of Philosophy at Purdue University. Caroline Cross, a philosophy major at Purdue, mixes, edits and produces the podcast. The intro and outro music is by Al Terity. Special thanks to Purdue philosophy alum Madison Maroney for voicing the intro and outro.


This podcast is supported by the Department of Philosophy and the College of Liberal Arts at Purdue University



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Philosophy
Society & Culture,
Science,
Social Sciences
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Carl Huffman Lecture: Pythagorean Ethics in the Time of Plato
The Grindstone
56 minutes 35 seconds
5 years ago
Carl Huffman Lecture: Pythagorean Ethics in the Time of Plato

This episode of The Grindstone features the lecture given by Carl Huffman (DePauw University) at Purdue University on Saturday, 27 April 2019. The lecture was given at a conference honoring the career of Dr. Patricia Curd, Professor Emerita of the Department of Philosophy at Purdue.


The title of the lecture is: "Pythagorean Ethics in the Time of Plato".


Dr. Huffman's abstract of the talk is below:


In this talk I first argue that the Pythagoreans whose way of life Plato notes in Book Ten of the Republic are the Pythagoreans whose ethical system Aristoxenus described in his Pythagorean Precepts. The rest of the talk is devoted to an overview of the ethical system found in the fragments of the Pythagorean Precepts and a brief discussion of that system's place in the history of Greek ethics. The ethical system of the Pythagorean Precepts is based on a peculiarly Pythagorean understanding of human beings as by nature insolent and excessive. In the natural state human beings live shameless and incoherent lives from which they must be saved by supervision, which imposes restraint upon them. I examine the Pythagorean treatment of the following topics in light of these general principles: the proper goals for human action, desire, diet, sex, procreation, friendship and luck. Study of these topics shows that the Precepts are best understood as a parallel development to the ethics of Democritus and Socrates. The Precepts emphasize expertise and appeal to authority figures rather than just to the best argument, which is not surprising in Pythagoreanism, which is ultimately based on the authority of the master, Pythagoras.


NOTE TO LISTENER: Due to technical difficulties with the wireless mic during this talk, portions of the audio drop out for a few seconds here and there. In an effort to keep the flow of the talk in tact, we did not edit these portions out. The longest drop lasts for about 15-20 seconds, but in total less than 2 minutes of the 50 minute talk have been lost. We apologize to Dr. Huffman and our listeners for this.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Grindstone

ABOUT THE POD


Philosophy is an important academic subject, one we believe everyone should be exposed to and explore. But philosophy can also feel distant and abstract to many people. The Grindstone is an ‘armchair interviews with philosophers’ podcast that gets to know the people who study and teach philosophy, and tries to apply some of their wisdom to the world around us.


We let the conversations unfold in their own way, but we try to cover three topics with all of our guests:

  • the moment that set them on the path to study philosophy
  • their current area of research
  • and how that philosophical research can help us better understand some aspect of contemporary culture (e.g., technology; social justice and activism; morality; environmental issues; pop culture, etc.)


We also occasionally interview people who majored in philosophy and went on to careers in various industries outside of academia to ask them how their education in philosophy prepared them for and applies to their current work.


The conversations are informal, organic, and go where they go. We hope that they are informative and insightful. And we hope that you enjoy them. Thanks for listening!


YOU CAN FOLLOW US:


@grindstone.pod (Instagram)

@GrindstonePod (Twitter)


ABOUT OUR TEAM


The Grindstone was created, and is hosted, by Matthew Kroll, the Academic Program Manager in the Department of Philosophy at Purdue University. Caroline Cross, a philosophy major at Purdue, mixes, edits and produces the podcast. The intro and outro music is by Al Terity. Special thanks to Purdue philosophy alum Madison Maroney for voicing the intro and outro.


This podcast is supported by the Department of Philosophy and the College of Liberal Arts at Purdue University



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.