The Grindstone

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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 tha


    • Aug 14, 2020 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 46m AVG DURATION
    • 27 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from The Grindstone

    The New Normal, and Life After the Pandemic

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2020 46:48


    In the final episode of The Grindstone's COVID-19 series, our guests share their thoughts on how this pandemic is changing, will change, and could change the world...for better and for worse. Topics of discussion include technology's role in our experience of this pandemic, what the economic crisis might mean for the future, what we can expect as we return to school, when we can expect things to return to normal - whether or not such a thing is possible - and what positive societal growth may come out of these challenges.Today's guests are: Dr. Audrey Ruple, Assistant Professor of One Health Epidemiology at Purdue; Dr. Kevin Harrelson, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Ball State University; Dr. Jillian Carr, Assistant Professor of Economics at Purdue; PhD candidate in the Department of History at Purdue, Caitlin Fendley; Dr. Dan Kelly, Professor of Philosophy at Purdue; Dr. Nilupa Gunaratna, Assistant Professor of Public Health at Purdue; and Dr. David Bernard, an emergency pediatrics physician in Birmingham, AL.Special thanks to Al Terity for all the new sounds.Thanks for listening and enjoy! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Jobs, Food, and Crime: Economic Snapshots of a Pandemic

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2020 58:22


    In the sixth episode of The Grindstone's COVID-19 Series, we explore the economic impact of the pandemic. We begin by revisiting the dilemma of choosing between our physiological and economic health. We then examine three specific aspects of the economy: the macroeconomic concern with the job market and current unemployment rates in the US; global food supply chains and the workers that comprise it who have been effected by COVID-19; and finally, the microeconomics of crime and crime reporting during the economic shutdown.Today's episode features returning guests Dr. Kevin Harrelson, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Ball State University, and Dr. Jillian Carr, Assistant Professor of Economics at Purdue University. We also welcome to the series for the first time Dr. Nilupa Gunaratna, Assistant Professor of Public Health at Purdue.Enjoy and thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Body and Mind: Dis-Ease in the Time of Coronavirus

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2020 59:30


    In the fifth episode of The Grindstone's COVID-19 Series, we consider our bodies and minds as they experience illness and the current pandemic. To do this, we first share some personal stories about times in our lives when we experienced severe illness. We talk to Purdue Philosophy graduate student Tom Doyle about the phenomenology of illness, quiet and loud bodies, the concept of 'dis-ease', and the social dis-ease being caused by the pandemic. And finally we shift the conversation to mental health, mental healthcare, and the anxiety of social isolation and the uncertainty of such a disruptive virus.In addition to Tom Doyle, today's episode also features returning guests: Dr. Dan Kelly, Professor of Philosophy at Purdue; Dr. Amy Martin, a bioethicist at IU Health; and Dr. David Bernard, an emergency pediatrics physician in Birmingham, AL.Enjoy and thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Faithe Day: COVID-19, Race, and the COVID Black Taskforce

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2020 72:32


    In the fourth episode of The Grindstone's COVID-19 Series, we return to our typical interview format to speak with Dr. Faithe Day, Assistant Director of COVID Black: A Taskforce on Black Health and Data.We discuss the COVID Black Taskforce, its mission, and how it was formed; the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on Black essential workers; environmental factors in healthcare inequities in communities of color; how COVID Black has responded to the recent murders of Black lives at the hands of white police officers and white civilians; balancing the need for peaceful protests and social activism with the need to remain physically distant and to wear face coverings; and what people can do to support the push for racial equity and to dismantle racist policies.Dr. Faithe Day is the Assistant Director of COVID Black and a CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation within the Libraries and School of Information Studies and the African American Studies and Research Center at Purdue University. Dr. Day works on developing curriculum, data collection, and curation projects in collaboration with other scholars to identify critical frameworks and best practices to ensure an ethical and justice-centered approach to data curation, with a focus on Black and LGBTQIA+ community-based data and discourse. Some helpful links are below:COVID Black WebsiteCOVID Black Twitter: @COVIDBLK Dr. Day's post in the AMSJ Blog "On Teaching in the Time of COVID-19"Thank you to Dr. Day, and thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Hospitals and Healthcare Before, During and After COVID-19

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2020 48:20


    In the third episode of The Grindstone's COVID-19 Series, we look at how hospitals, and healthcare systems generally, responded to, were effected by, and may eventually change due to the novel coronavirus pandemic. We also consider the inequities and disparities in how certain populations, particularly here in the United States, have been effected by COVID-19.Today's episode features returning guests: Dr. Audrey Ruple, Assistant Professor of One Health Epidemiology at Purdue; Dr. David Bernard, an emergency pediatrics physician in Birmingham, AL; Dr. Amy Martin, a bioethicist at IU Health; and Purdue graduate students Caitlin Fendley (History) and Tom Doyle (Philosophy).Enjoy and thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    COVID-19: Some Characteristics and Historical Context

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 49:41


    In the second full-length episode of The Grindstone's COVID-19 Series, we look at the disease itself, and put it into historical context. We begin by talking with experts about viruses in general, the ability of COVID-19 to make its way around the world so quickly, and why this only emphasizes our need to be diligent when going out into the world where physical distancing and wearing face masks is concerned, a topic we discussed through an ethical lens in the first episode.Our guests in this episode are: Dr. David Bernard, an emergency pediatrics physician in Birmingham, AL; returning guests Dr. Amy Martin, a bioethicist at IU Health, and Dr. Audrey Ruple, Assistant Professor of One Health Epidemiology at Purdue; Dr. Kevin Harrelson, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Ball State University; and PhD candidate in the Department of History at Purdue, Caitlin Fendley.Enjoy and thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    On Trolleys, Shutdowns and Face Masks

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2020 71:26


    In this, the first full-length episode of The Grindstone's COVID-19 Series, we start with some ethical questions. We start with considerations of moral dilemmas in a broader, philosophical sense. We then drill down to talk about the moral dilemma inherent in determining whether or not to shut down the economy as a response to the pandemic, and the different short- and long-term consequences this decision can, did, and will have. And is having, at the time we posted this episode. We also look at some of the potential effects of shutting down the economy on the heathcare system and the economy itself. We then end the show with considerations of the moral psychology of wearing face masks and the ethics of social distancing.Our guests in this episode are: Dr. Dan Kelly, Professor of Philosophy at Purdue; Dr. Amy Martin, a bioethicist at IU Health; Dr. Jillian Carr, Assistant Professor of Economics at Purdue; Dr. Audrey Ruple, Assistant Professor of One Health Epidemiology at Purdue; and Tom Doyle, a graduate student in the Department of Philosophy at Purdue.Enjoy and thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Welcome to The Grindstone COVID-19 Series

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 13:23


    The Grindstone is releasing a COVID-19 series over the next few weeks. Today we introduce the series, which will sound quite different from our typical format, and share the story of how it came to be and how we recorded it. We also wanted to take a moment to say hello to all of you, and that we hope you all are staying healthy and safe out there.Check out the first full-length episode from our COVID-19 series this Friday afternoon, 19th June, 2020!Thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Andrew Cutrofello: This Quintessence of Dust, and the Hand That Writ It

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2020 38:52


    We have a special bonus episode of The Grindstone today!Years ago, Matthew interviewed Dr. Andrew Cutrofello, Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University Chicago, during Dr. Cutrofello's visit to Purdue to give an Illuminations Lecture. We video recorded this interview on 21 November 2013. Consider this a basement tape, a demo of sorts. The audio is a little quiet in places as we converted it from video, and it is definitely unrehearsed, factual errors and all. Matthew and Dr. Cutrofello discuss among other topics: Shakespeare's Sonnet 71, the meta-poetics of contemporary and Shakespearean poetry, meta-references to the act of writing in Sonnet 71 and the physical act of writing poetry by hand (i.e., chirographically) vs. with the aide of technology, Hamlet as an interlocutor of philosophers, their favorite film versions of Hamlet and the range of potential and actual performances, Shakespeare in contemporary culture and contemporary culture's relation to Elizabethan culture, and the Shakespeare role they would love most to play.Dr. Cutrofello's book, All for Nothing: Hamlet's Negativity, was published by the MIT Press (2014).You can watch his Illuminations lecture, "On the Idea of Metaphysical Poetry", here.Enjoy, and thanks for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    The Grindstone Live: Ask a Philosopher

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 52:38


    On Wednesday, 21 August 2019, The Grindstone set up a table in the Purdue Memorial Mall as part of the College of Liberal Arts' Celebrate Liberal Arts Week. This week was itself part of the larger "150 Years of Giant Leaps" sesquicentennial celebration of Purdue University.We asked students and other passersby what they think philosophy is, whether or not they have taken philosophy classes, and generally opened up the microphones giving people the opportunity to ask a philosopher any questions they had. This episode features some of the results of those conversations.Thanks to Drs. Daniel R. Kelly, Michael Augustin, Leonard Harris, and Morganna Lambeth, and graduate student Brandon Rdzak for their participation. And a big thank you to all of the students and other members of the campus community who stopped by that day to engage our philosophers. The end of the pod features a very special guest - a true Boilermaker icon!Special thanks to Caroline Cross, who produces and edits The Grindstone, for her tireless efforts in stitching together all of this audio! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    A Quick Update from The Grindstone

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2020 8:22


    This week, just a quick update from The Grindstone. We look ahead to upcoming episodes that will drop in the next couple weeks, and future content we are currently planning.Most of all we just want to say thank you for listening, and that we hope this finds you all healthy and safe.Take care of yourselves and each other!(Full episodes returning Friday, 24 April 2020.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Richard McKirahan Lecture: An Aristotelianizing Parmenides

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2020 57:25


    This episode of The Grindstone features the lecture given by Richard McKirahan (Pomona College) 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: "An Aristotelianizing Parmenides".In this talk, Dr. McKirahan discusses the historical Parmenides' poem. In the poem itself, generally speaking, Parmenides examines being, that which is. The broader debate around the poem largely centers on fragment 8, in which a series of arguments is given for the characteristics of what is. The traditional view is that as a consequence of these arguments for what is, Parmenides is subscribing to a numerical monism, the theory that what is is one unitary thing. Here, however, Dr. McKirahan offers a different interpretation, one which he forms through Aristotle's discussion of being qua being in the Metaphysics. This Aristotelian interpretation does not preclude there being many "genuine beings," which would alleviate the burden of Parmenides' supposed numerical monism. Another outcome of Dr. McKirahan's interpretation of the poem is that it gives us a better pathway for understanding the transition from the first part of the poem, in which Parmenides is concerned with the inquiry into what is and what makes something a genuine entity, to the second part of the poem in which Parmenides presents his cosmology.This is the fifth and final episode from the "PatFest" series. Thank you to Dr. Michael Augustin, Postdoctoral Research Associate at Purdue University and scholar of ancient philosophy, for his tireless efforts in organizing the conference and for helping us with the introductions to this series and the individual lectures. Special thank you to Caroline Cross, a Philosophy major at Purdue, for recording, editing and producing the introductions, and for putting the series together. And thanks to you all for listening! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Daniel Frank Lecture: Wisdom, Piety, and Superhuman Virtue

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2020 69:54


    This episode of The Grindstone features the lecture given by Daniel Frank (Purdue University) at Purdue University on Friday, 26 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: "Wisdom, Piety, and Superhuman Virtue".Dr. Frank's abstract of the talk is below:This paper moves between Aristotle, Maimonides, and the Stoics. Aristotle's moral taxonomy, outlined in Nicomachean Ethics 7.1, appears problematic, given his view that in the sphere of moral virtue, the intermediate (temperance, courage) is the extreme, and there is no excess of temperance or courage. This is hard to square with the moral agent whom he describes as possessed of “hyperbolic” (hyperbole, excessive) virtue. As Aristotle has very little to say about the latter, I turn to Maimonides and the Stoics for clarification and enlightenment. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Alexander Nehamas Lecture: The Academy at Work: Dialectic in the Parmenides

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020 75:01


    This episode of The Grindstone features the lecture given by Alexander Nehamas (Princeton University) at Purdue University on Friday, 26 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: "The Academy at Work: Dialectic in the Parmenides".Dr. Nehamas' abstract of the talk is below:Plato's Parmenides comes in two parts. The first presents several crucial criticisms of Plato's metaphysics. The second illustrates a dialectical method that Parmenides tells Socrates he must master if he is to answer these criticisms. I try to offer a new account of the metaphysical and linguistic objections of the first part in order to understand better the nature of the dialectic of its second part. I suggest that Parmenides' demonstration of that method prepares the way for a radical new understanding of Plato's own theory of Forms and may well be an instance of the actual dialectic practiced during the first, and very obscure, years of Plato's Academy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Carl Huffman Lecture: Pythagorean Ethics in the Time of Plato

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2020 56:35


    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.

    Vanessa de Harven Lecture: Plato, The Last Presocratic

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2020 61:32


    This episode of The Grindstone features the lecture given by Vanessa de Harven (UMass-Amherst) 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: "Plato, The Last Presocratic: Remarks on Republic V in honor of Pat Curd".Dr. de Harven's overview of the talk is below:The end of Republic V is a locus classicus for the characterization of Plato as an impossible realist so committed to Forms that he forgoes all knowledge of the sensible world. I argue that one can stand by a so-called objects analysis of the argument directed to the lovers of sights and sounds, which sets knowledge and opinion over different objects, without precluding knowledge of the sensible world. The mistake engrained in the tradition is the idea that sensible particulars themselves (say, Helen or a vase) are the objects of opinion, as opposed to sensible particulars considered only in terms of their sensible properties (e.g. their shapes and colors). Setting knowledge over the Forms and opinion over sensibles is thus not a move to another world or to mere Form-gazing, but a change in perspective on this one world. Indeed, Socrates' underappreciated analogy with dreaming and waking tells us as much, and I show it is of a piece with the argument that follows. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    In Honor of Dr. Patricia Curd, an Ancient Philosopher

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2020 17:07


    Welcome to PatFest...Patapalooza...the PatBash...Call it what you will, this series features lectures in honor of Dr. Patricia Curd - a luminary in the field of ancient philosophy who retired from Purdue last spring (2019). Over two days, 26-27 April 2019, a group of preeminent scholars of ancient philosophy gathered here in West Lafayette, IN, to give talks in honor of Dr. Curd's work and career.The conference, organized and hosted by Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Dept. of Philosophy at Purdue Dr. Michael Augustin, was exceptional. The weather cooperated, the talks were brilliant, and the admiration and camaraderie on display demonstrated what a great influence, interlocutor, and friend Dr. Curd has been to so many over the years.In this episode, Michael and Matthew look back on the conference, preview the talks, and share some loving anecdotes about Dr. Curd. We will begin posting the full lectures next Friday (13 March 2020).Enjoy! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Season 3 Trailer: Lectures in Honor of Dr. Patricia Curd

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2020 3:06


    The Grindstone is back! Starting tomorrow we will be posting lectures given in honor of Dr. Patricia Curd, preeminent scholar of Ancient Philosophy, who retired from Purdue University's Department of Philosophy in Spring 2019. We will be dropping these episodes on Friday, starting with an introduction to the series tomorrow, Friday, 6 March 2020. Enjoy! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Mark Bernstein: 74 Billion

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2019 51:04


    This week we welcome the Joyce & Edward E. Brewer Chair in Applied Ethics in the Department of Philosophy at Purdue University, Dr. Mark Bernstein. Dr. Bernstein tells us the story of how he went from being an undergrad math major to being a metaphysician as a grad student and early in his professional career to ultimately being an expert in animal ethics. We then discuss the moment in his life in which he became a vegetarian, his intuitive sense that the moral status of animals was a worthy philosophical pursuit, the principle of gratuitous suffering which he has developed, the moral status of meat eaters, vegetarianism vis-à-vis environmental sustainability, the causal impotence argument and our complicity in the meat industry and in harm to animals generally, and the astonishing number of animals consumed annually worldwide. The numbers are staggering.This episode also features a line from Paul Simon, a reference to Bruce Springsteen and several mentions of Steely Dan...and of Queens College!Note: There is some volume discrepancy during the first 2 minutes or so of the interview. After that, the volume for both mics evens out. Sorry! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Daniel Kelly: Things That Make You Go Ewww

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2019 53:35


    This week on The Grindstone we are joined by Dr. Daniel Kelly, Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Purdue University. Dr. Kelly shares his journey to a career in philosophy (inspired, in part, by his desire to organize his thoughts more effectively), his interest in the epistemic foundations of modern science and naturalistic approaches to philosophy of mind, the history of naturalism in philosophy, and the interplay between the scientific image and the manifest image. We also take a deep dive into repulsion and morality, which Dr. Kelly expounds in his book Yuck! The Nature and Moral Significance of Disgust. The latter discussion leads to some candid thoughts from Matthew regarding the Green Bay Packer's color scheme. Also, Dr. Kelly makes the bold claim that When Harry Met Sally is the original rom-com!Dr. Kelly was a 2018-19 fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, where he continued his interdisciplinary research in moral psychology. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Lacey Davidson: Philosophy in Service of Lives Less Free

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 55:00


    To kick off the long-awaited second season of The Grindstone, we welcome to the studios Dr. Lacey Davidson, who graduated with her PhD from Purdue just this past summer! Dr. Davidson is now a Visiting Assistant Professor at California Lutheran University.In this episode, we discuss how one of her first philosophy courses challenged her worldview, critical philosophy and philosophy born of struggle, her work with the organization Springfield Promise Neighborhood (Springfield, OH), community organization and effective strategies, the influence community organization and activism has on her philosophical research program, entity type pluralism as a way through the individualist-structuralist debate in philosophies of racism, Dr. Leonard Harris' actuarial account of 'necrobeing', and her research on implicit bias. Many of the ways Lacey talks about community organizing and the power of people comes from the collectively developed epistemic resources of the Younger Womxn's Task Force of Greater Lafayette. You can read Dr. Davidson's recent article, "When Testimony Isn't Enough: Implicit Bias Research as Epistemic Exclusion," in Overcoming Epistemic Injustice: Social and Psychological Perspectives (eds. Sherman and Goguen, Rowman & Littlefield, 2019).We also launch the Sally Scholz fan club. Enjoy! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Tom Scholl: Putting Your Philosophy Degree to Work, and Succeeding

    Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2019 29:19


    For the Season 1 finale of The Grindstone, we dip into the archive to share our interview with Purdue Philosophy grad Tom Scholl. Tom joined us last fall while he was in town for the Scholl Lecture Series, which he sponsors.Tom discusses his journey from starting out as an Electrical Engineering major to graduating with a Philosophy degree, Purdue University in the late '60s, what he might do differently if he were to be a student again, some of the interesting jobs he had post-graduation, how students can put a Liberal Arts degree to work, his time as a CIA systems programmer, why it is that engineers and programmers are often leaning on the philosopher in the room, the ups and downs of entrepreneurship, and how philosophy has helped him in his business career.The 2018 Scholl Lecture was given by Jenann Ismael, Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University. You can see her talk here: "Some Thoughts on Time, Totality and Transcendence" Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Andrew Iliadis: Semantics, Metadata and the Ontologies of Information

    Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2019 41:04


    Dr. Andrew Iliadis, Assistant Professor of Media Studies and Production in the Lew Klein College of Media and Communication at Temple University, joins The Grindstone to discuss his background in philosophy and communication, navigating interdisciplinary spaces as a grad student and as faculty, Gilbert Simondon and the philosophy of information, web 3.0, metadata ontologies, and the social and ethical implications of semantic technologies. Matthew absolutely nails the first line of "Scarborough Fair," but, sadly, there was a technical glitch (see below).Note: Matthew's mic cuts out a few times from the 5:35-7:02 mins marks. Andrew's responses can be heard clearly and will give you a sense of the questions being asked. Special thanks to Reyes Espinoza, who was on the mixer for this episode, for catching the technical difficulty and helping to restore order. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Taylor Davis: Evolutionary Psychology and the Norms of Sustainability

    Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2019 47:30


    Dr. Taylor Davis, Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Purdue University, discusses his journey from undergrad psychology major to being an evolutionary psychology expert in a philosophy department, the challenges of incorporating theory into an observational science, the dual inheritance theory, and how norms of sustainability are, and can be, developed. Sadly, there are no digressions regarding the 1990s.Also, Taylor would love it if any interested developmental psychologists would contact him immediately re: a question he has tried to identify using theory. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Sally Scholz: Philosophy, Social Work and Solidarity

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2019 57:41


    Dr. Sally Scholz, Professor and Chair of the Department of Philosophy at Villanova University, discusses her experience as a graduate student at Purdue, working at a shelter for victims of domestic violence before she began her career at Villanova, the importance of having hobbies outside of philosophy (including reading novels!), and the concept of political solidarity. There is also a slight digression regarding early '90s fashion! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Chris Yeomans: Ethics in the Age of Data Science and Internet Trolls

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2019 54:59


    Dr. Christopher Yeomans, Professor and Head of the Department of Philosophy at Purdue University, discusses his path to becoming a philosopher, critical theory and Hegel's aesthetic philosophy, the role of philosophy in the data sciences, Kantian moral philosophy, and internet trolls. There is also mention of Tony La Russa and Oakland A's baseball in the early '90s! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Season 1 Trailer: Welcome to The Grindstone

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2019 4:59


    Welcome to The Grindstone!Check out the trailer for our first season, which introduces the podcast and shares some soundbites from our upcoming episodes. Our first full length episode will air on 24 April 2019. We will continue to release episodes on Wednesdays. Thanks for listening! The Grindstone was created, and is hosted and produced by Matthew Kroll. Reyes Espinoza mixes and co-produces the podcast. Intro and outro music is by Al Terity. Special thanks to 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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