Podcast appearances and mentions of jonathan lear

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Best podcasts about jonathan lear

Latest podcast episodes about jonathan lear

geister - Der Philosophie-Podcast
Nächste Lektüre: Jonathan Lear - Radikale Hoffnung

geister - Der Philosophie-Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2024 2:40


Hey, im nächsten Special werden Jens und ich über Jonathan Lears "Radikale Hoffnung" sprechen. Wenn ihr das Buch schonmal vor der Folge lesen wollt, dann habt ihr dafür noch zwei Wochen Zeit. Das ist der Klappentext: Kurz vor seinem Tod erzählte Plenty Coups, der letzte große Häuptling der Crow, seine Geschichte – bis zu einem gewissen Punkt: »Als die Büffelherden verschwanden, fielen die Herzen meiner Leute zu Boden und sie konnten sie nicht mehr aufheben. Danach ist nichts mehr geschehen.« Diese verstörende Äußerung über ein Volk, das vor dem Ende seiner Lebensweise steht, ist Ausgangspunkt für Jonathan Lears bewegende philosophische Untersuchung. Ihm zufolge wirft die Geschichte von Plenty Coups eine tiefgreifende ethische Frage auf, die uns alle angeht: Wie sollen wir mit der Möglichkeit umgehen, dass unsere eigene Kultur zusammenbrechen könnte, wie mit dieser Verwundbarkeit leben? Ist es sinnvoll, sich einer solchen Herausforderung mutig zu stellen? Auf Grundlage der Anthropologie und Geschichte der nordamerikanischen Ureinwohner und mittels Philosophie und psychoanalytischer Theorie erforscht Lear die Geschichte der Crow im Angesicht der kulturellen Zerstörung. Sein Buch ist eine tiefschürfende und höchst originelle philosophische Studie über eine eigentümliche Verletzlichkeit, die den Kern der conditio humana betrifft. Das Special erscheint am 30. April und ihr könnt es hören, wenn ihr geister auf Steady unterstützt: steadyhq.com/geister

Poetry For All
Episode 67: Alex Dimitrov, Winter Solstice

Poetry For All

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 24:27


In this episode, we read and discuss a poem that provides a powerful meditation on the longest night of the year. To learn more about Alex Dimitrov, please visit his website (https://www.alexdimitrov.com/poems). Thanks to Copper Canyon Press (https://www.coppercanyonpress.org/authors/alex-dimitrov/) for granting us permission to read this poem from Love and Other Poems. During our conversation, we briefly allude to "Love," Dimitrov's wonderful poem that he continues to write each day. To read the original poem, you can check the American Poetry Review (https://aprweb.org/poems/love0); and to read Dimitrov's additional lines on Twitter, you can follow him at @apoemcalledlove on Twitter (https://x.com/apoemcalledlove?s=20).

The Art of Listening
Grief as a Catalyst: The Philosophical Dimensions of Mourning with Jonathan Lear

The Art of Listening

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 37:35


The weight of grief descends upon us all at some point in life. It arises from loss, whether of people or parts of ourselves we can no longer recognize. When it comes to the unbearableness of grief, our primal instincts may be to swallow the feelings and push forward. But it is only when we allow the feelings of mourning and embrace what loss means that we can unmask the transformative nature it holds.Through his extensive body of work teaching philosophy, practicing psychoanalysis, and publishing a series of books on the topic, Jonathan Lear has taken all he has come to know and study about grief and used it to analyze his own deeply personal confrontation with the mourning process.In this episode of the Art of Listening, Jonathan will take us on a historical journey from ancient times to modern day as he discusses his studies that tie together the practices of philosophy and psychoanalysis, the importance of dialogue in thoughtful discovery.  We'll also learn how these studies provided Jonathan with the foundation to form his own philosophical findings on the process of grief and mourning.Chapters1 - Jonathan's international philosophy studies (3:24)2 - How philosophy led Jonathan to psychoanalysis (6:19)3 - Where ancient philosophy and modern psychoanalysis intersect (8:59)4 - The role narratives play in the psychoanalytic setting (14:01)5 - Grief and mourning, and maintaining hope in human life (25:22)LinksJonathan LearJonathan's BooksThe Art of ListeningEileendunnpsyd.com

Robinson's Podcast
149 - Jonathan Lear: Free Association and the Fundamental Rule of Psychoanalysis

Robinson's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 121:44


Jonathan Lear is the John U. Nef Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Philosophy and at the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago. He is also a practicing psychoanalyst. Jonathan's work focuses on understanding the human psyche both through philosophy—with an emphasis on Aristotle and the ancients—and psychoanalysis. In this episode, Jonathan and Robinson discuss three pinnacles of psychoanalysis: free association, the unconscious, and transference. Jonathan's most recent book is Wisdom Won From Illness: Essays in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis (Harvard, 2017). Jonathan's Website: https://home.uchicago.edu/~jlear/ Wisdom Won From Illness: https://a.co/d/hxkokCz OUTLINE 00:00 In This Episode… 00:50 Introduction 03:28 Philosophy and Psychoanalysis 12:29 What Is The Fundamental Rule of Psychoanalysis? 20:02 On Slavoj Žižek and Free Association 25:26 Following Freud 37:55 Transference and Changing One's Mind 49:22 How the Analyst Listens 01:09:40 Analysis and Contradiction 01:25:44 Dreams and Free-Association 01:34:42 Transference 01:55:12 Who Is Psychoanalysis For? Robinson's Website: http://robinsonerhardt.com Robinson Erhardt researches symbolic logic and the foundations of mathematics at Stanford University. Join him in conversations with philosophers, scientists, weightlifters, artists, and everyone in-between.  --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/robinson-erhardt/support

Sense-making in a Changing World
Episode 104: Permaculture Living with Kirsten Bradley and Morag Gamble

Sense-making in a Changing World

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 38:58 Transcription Available


Join me this week for a Permaculture Writer's special in conversation with amazing permaculture educator and doer, author and grower Kirsten Bradley from Milkwood Permaculture. As this podcast is going live, Kirsten has just released her new book -> 'The Milkwood Permaculture Living Handbook: Habits for Hope in a Changing World'. You can find it in your local library, bookstore, online and maybe even in your street library!It was so great to catch up with Kirsten, chatting about everything from her writing process and the importance of books to how to find a belonging to place when you're renting and practice 'active hope'.I hope you enjoy this episode as much as I enjoyed making it!For those who were interested in Kirsten's reference to the book 'It's Not That Radical:Climate Action to Transform Our World' by Mikaela Loach, here it is! And for those looking for Jonathan Lear's book around First Nations' stewardship, it's called 'Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation'.Support the showThis podcast is an initiative of the Permaculture Education Institute.Our way of sharing our love for this planet and for life, is by teaching permaculture teachers who are locally adapting this around the world - finding ways to apply the planet care ethics of earth care, people care and fair share. We host global conversations and learning communities on 6 continents. We teach permaculture teachers, host permaculture courses, host Our Permaculture Life YouTube, and offer free monthly film club and masterclass. We broadcast from a solar powered studio in the midst of a permaculture ecovillage food forest on beautiful Gubbi Gubbi country. I acknowledge this is and always will be Aboriginal land, pay my respects to elders past and present, and extend my respect to indigenous cultures and knowledge systems across the planet. You can also watch Sense-Making in a Changing World on youtube.SUBSCRIBE for notification of each new episode. Please leave us a 5 star REVIEW - it really it does help the bots find and myceliate this show.

Tradition Podcast
The Hidden Order of Intimacy

Tradition Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 38:52


Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg is an internationally recognized teacher and lecturer around the English-speaking world and, each week, in multiple settings in Jerusalem, where her unique style of integrating keen readings of the weekly Torah portion with the commentaries of midrash, classical meforshim, Hasidic interpretation, and more, are supplemented by the insights she draws from philosophy, psychoanalytical readings, literature, and culture at large – the “best that's been thought and said,” as it were. Her work has inspired generations of students, and has produced a very rich body of six volumes on biblical books and themes.  TRADITION's Winter 2021 issue featured her essay “On Love, Holiness, and the Other,” and, channeling the work of psychoanalyst Jonathan Lear and R. Aharon Lichtenstein, explored the “command to aspire” as an ethical imperative. That essay has now appeared as part of a larger chapter in her most recent book, The Hidden Order of Intimacy: Reflections on the Book of Leviticus (Schocken). As the Jewish world commences our annual reading of Leviticus this week the TRADITION Podcast spoke with Zornberg about her new book, the unusual way it came about, and the intellectual “atmosphere” she breathes in order to produce works of Torah scholarship that bring together such wide-ranging voices. We also discussed the troubling state of the study of the humanities in the world today and within Jewish learning in particular. The host for this episode is Jeffrey Saks, editor of TRADITION. Watch a video recording of this conversation.

Big Brains
Why Mourning Is Essential To Our Well-Being, With Jonathan Lear

Big Brains

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2023 26:59


Mourning is an inevitable part of our human existence. But what exactly does it mean to mourn, and why is it an essential part of our well-being and survival? These questions have long fascinated Prof. Jonathan Lear, a philosopher at the University of Chicago. In his new book, Imagining the End: Mourning and Ethical Life, Lear unpacks why mourning contributes to a life well lived. He dissects the many ways we mourn in our everyday lives; when attachments are taken away from us, and even when we express gratitude.

Machshavah Lab
Dream Analysis in Halacha: Aruch ha'Shulchan and Rambam

Machshavah Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 80:43


This Friday morning "Machshavah Lab" shiur for women (12/16/22) was something like a follow-up from last week's shiur on "The Meta-Halachic Implications of the Halachos of Fingernail Cutting." Although the topics of dreams, prophecy, and prophetic dreams are fraught with difficulty, they DO have an anchor in two halachic institutions: the strange "ritual" of Hatavas Chalom (interpreting a bad dream for the good) and Taanis Chalom (fasting in response to a nightmare). Today we examined both subjects as presented by the Aruch ha'Shulchan and the Rambam, with a little help from Jonathan Lear's take on Freudian dream analysis. -----מקורות:Rav Samson Raphael Hirsch: Letters on Aggadata, Letter #4 שולחן ערוך אורח חיים רכברכות דף נה עמוד בערוך השולחן אורח חיים רכ:א-הJonathan Lear, "Freud" (2005) pp.115-116Jonathan Lear, "Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation" (2006), pp.115-116תענית דף יב עמוב דברכות דף לא עמוד ברמב"ם – משנה תורה: ספר זמנים, הלכות תעניות א:יברב האי גאון - אוצר הגאונים תענית (התשובות סי' מה; עמ' 22 וכן הוא בברכות התשובות סימן קצו)שם ברכות (הפירושים סי' קלה; עמ' 44) בשם רב האי גאוןרבינו חננאל - ברכות דף לא עמוד ב -----The Torah content for the month of Kislev has been sponsored by Serena and Paul Koppel, who want to be makir tov and express gratitude.-----If you have questions, comments, or feedback, I would love to hear from you! Please feel free to contact me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.-----If you've gained from what you've learned here, please consider contributing to my Patreon at www.patreon.com/rabbischneeweiss. Alternatively, if you would like to make a direct contribution to the "Rabbi Schneeweiss Torah Content Fund," my Venmo is @Matt-Schneeweiss, and my Zelle and PayPal are mattschneeweiss at gmail.com. Even a small contribution goes a long way to covering the costs of my podcasts, and will provide me with the financial freedom to produce even more Torah content for you.If you would like to sponsor a day's or a week's worth of content, or if you are interested in enlisting my services as a teacher or tutor, you can reach me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.com. Thank you to my listeners for listening, thank you to my readers for reading, and thank you to my supporters for supporting my efforts to make Torah ideas available and accessible to everyone.-----Substack: rabbischneeweiss.substack.com/Patreon: patreon.com/rabbischneeweissYouTube Channel: youtube.com/rabbischneeweissBlog: kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/"The Mishlei Podcast": mishlei.buzzsprout.com"The Stoic Jew" Podcast: thestoicjew.buzzsprout.com"Rambam Bekius" Podcast: rambambekius.buzzsprout.com"Machshavah Lab" Podcast: machshavahlab.buzzsprout.com"The Tefilah Podcast": tefilah.buzzsprout.comWhatsApp Group: https://chat.whatsapp.com/GEB1EPIAarsELfHWuI2k0HAmazon Wishlist: amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/Y72CSP86S24W?ref_=wl_sharel

letter paypal substack torah freud venmo alternatively zelle freudian halacha rambam kislev dream analysis halachos jonathan lear stoic jew machshavah lab rabbischneeweissblog mishlei podcast rambam bekius tefilah podcast rabbi schneeweiss torah content fund matt schneeweiss
The Ezra Klein Show
Finding hope in a world on the brink

The Ezra Klein Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 58:38


Sean Illing talks with Jonathan Lear, a psychoanalyst and philosopher, about his new book Imagining the End: Mourning and Ethical Life. How can we continue to live a good life in a world beset by catastrophe, crisis, and chaos? Sean and Jonathan discuss the role of imagination and culture in the ways we make meaning in the world, the idea of mourning as a confrontation with our uniquely human ability to love, and how to turn away from the path of despair, towards hope — and to what Lear calls "committed living towards the future." Host: Sean Illing (@seanilling), host, The Gray Area Guest: Jonathan Lear, author; professor, Committee on Social Thought & Dept. of Philosophy, University of Chicago References:  Imagining the End: Mourning and Ethical Life by Jonathan Lear (Harvard; Nov. 15, 2022) Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics Søren Kierkegaard, The Sickness unto Death (1849; published under the pseudonym Anti-Climacus) Sigmund Freud, Mourning and Melancholia (1917) "The Difficulty of Reality and the Difficulty of Philosophy" by Cora Diamond (2003) Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation by Jonathan Lear (Harvard; 2008) "Envy and Gratitude" by Melanie Klein (1957; published in The Writings of Melanie Klein, Volume III, Hogarth Press; 1975) "A Lecture on Ethics" by Ludwig Wittgenstein (lecture notes from 1929-1930, published in The Philosophical Review v. 74 no. 1, 1965)   Enjoyed this episode? Rate The Gray Area ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ and leave a review on Apple Podcasts. Subscribe for free. Be the first to hear the next episode of The Gray Area. Subscribe in your favorite podcast app. Support Vox Conversations by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts This episode was made by:  Producer: Erikk Geannikis Editor: Amy Drozdowska Engineer: Patrick Boyd Editorial Director, Vox Talk: A.M. Hall Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Machshavah Lab
17th of Tammuz Reflections on Waikiki

Machshavah Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2022 11:30


Synopsis: In lieu of a 1-page article on Parashas Balak, here is a 4-page article I originally wrote as a Facebook post last summer, entitled 17th of Tammuz Reflections on Waikiki. The impetus for this article was Jonathan Lear's, Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation, and the insights it triggered as I observed the taanis on Waikiki. Come to think of it, this article IS related to a pasuk from this week's parashah: "Behold! It is a nation that will dwell in solitude and not be reckoned among the nations" (Bamidbar 23:9). ----------The Torah content for these two weeks has been sponsored by Judah and Naomi Dardik in loving memory of Rabbi Moskowitz zt''l, who taught his students to pursue truth by asking questions, who modeled love of Torah and learning, and who exemplified living a life of the mind.----------If you have questions, comments, or feedback, I would love to hear from you! Please feel free to contact me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.----------If you've gained from what you've learned here, please consider contributing to my Patreon at www.patreon.com/rabbischneeweiss. Alternatively, if you would like to make a direct contribution to the "Rabbi Schneeweiss Torah Content Fund," my Venmo is @Matt-Schneeweiss, and my Zelle and PayPal are mattschneeweiss at gmail.com. Even a small contribution goes a long way to covering the costs of my podcasts, and will provide me with the financial freedom to produce even more Torah content for you.If you would like to sponsor a day's or a week's worth of content, or if you are interested in enlisting my services as a teacher or tutor, you can reach me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.com. Thank you to my listeners for listening, thank you to my readers for reading, and thank you to my supporters for supporting my efforts to make Torah ideas available and accessible to everyone.----------Patreon: patreon.com/rabbischneeweissYouTube Channel: youtube.com/rabbischneeweissBlog: kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/"The Mishlei Podcast": mishlei.buzzsprout.com"The Stoic Jew" Podcast: thestoicjew.buzzsprout.com"Rambam Bekius" Podcast: rambambekius.buzzsprout.com"Machshavah Lab" Podcast: machshavahlab.buzzsprout.com"The Tefilah Podcast": tefilah.buzzsprout.comGuide to the Torah Content of Rabbi Matt Schneeweiss: kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/2021/04/links-to-torah-content-of-rabbi-matt.htmlWhatsApp Group: https://chat.whatsapp.com/GEB1EPIAarsELfHWuI2k0HAmazon Wishlist: amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/Y72CSP86S24W?ref_=wl_sharel

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Ancient Greece Declassified
48 Time Traveling to the Ancient World

Ancient Greece Declassified

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 47:48


Thirty three scholars, philosophers, and archaeologists answer the question: If you could time travel to the ancient world, who would you want to meet? Scholars featured + the timestamps when they appear: 2:10  Edith Hall 3:36  Eric Cline 4:30  Andromache Karanika 5:45  Josiah Ober 6:48  Rush Rehm 7:30  Ian Morris 8:02  Rebecca Newberger Goldstein 9:20  Patrick Hunt 9:46  Raffaella Cribiore 11:04  Mark Adams 12:20  Peter Adamson 13:47  Richard Martin 15:08  M. M. McCabe 16:37  Zina Giannopoulou 18:45  Greg Nagy 19:43  Caroline Winterer 20:04  Melissa Lane 22:28  Alicia Stallings 22:57  Rhiannon Evans 24:04  Barbara Graziosi 24:54  Walter Scheidel 25:12  Matt Simonton 26:30  Emily Greenwood 27:57  Olga Levaniouk 30:00  Steele Brand 32:55  Rachel Barney 33:36  Angie Hobbs 35:31  Adrian Goldsworthy 36:30  Mary Bachvarova 37:42  Jonathan Lear 39:40  Mary Townsend 40:31  Gabriel Richardson Lear 42:14  Ben Morison

Ancient Greece Declassified
R4.5 Anatomy of the Soul | Plato's Republic, book 4 w/ Jonathan Lear

Ancient Greece Declassified

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 59:40


In book 4 of the Republic, Plato sets forth perhaps the most famous psychological theory from Greco-Roman antiquity: the tripartite model of the human soul. But how good of a model is it? How does it hold up from the perspective of modern psychology? With us to discuss these questions and more is Jonathan Lear, professor of philosophy at the University of Chicago and a practicing psychoanalyst who serves on the faculty of the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis. His article "Inside and Outside the Republic" remains one of the most important pieces of scholarship on the psychological theory offered in book 4.  ------------------ Support Ancient Greece Declassified on Patreon: patreon.com/greecepodcast Or make a one-time donation: paypal.me/greecepodcast

Machshavah Lab
Sitting Bull's Ghost Dance and Moshiach

Machshavah Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2021 5:08


Today's Torah content is sponsored by Naomi Mann, in honor of Yeshiva Bnei Torah's 50th year. May Hashem grant YBT continued success!Synopsis: This is the audio version of the 1-page article I wrote entitled, Sitting Bull's Ghost Dance and Moshiach, in which we examine the parallels between Jonathan Lear's analysis of the downfall of the Sioux, due to Sitting Bull's magical thinking, and the Rambam's analysis of the destruction of the Second Temple, due to the magical thinking of the Jewish leaders. ----------If you have questions, comments, or feedback, I would love to hear from you! Please feel free to contact me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.----------If you've gained from what you've learned here, please consider contributing to my Patreon at www.patreon.com/rabbischneeweiss. Alternatively, if you would like to make a direct contribution to the "Rabbi Schneeweiss Torah Content Fund," my Venmo is @Matt-Schneeweiss, and my Zelle and PayPal are mattschneeweiss at gmail.com. Even a small contribution goes a long way to covering the costs of my podcasts, and will provide me with the financial freedom to produce even more Torah content for you.If you would like to sponsor a day's or a week's worth of Torah content, or if you are interested in enlisting my services as a teacher or tutor, you can reach me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.com. Thank you to my listeners for listening, thank you to my readers for reading, and thank you to my supporters for supporting my efforts to make Torah ideas available and accessible to everyone.----------YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/rabbischneeweissBlog: https://kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/rmschneeweiss"The Mishlei Podcast": https://mishlei.buzzsprout.com"The Stoic Jew" Podcast: https://thestoicjew.buzzsprout.com"Rambam Bekius" Podcast: https://rambambekius.buzzsprout.com"Machshavah Lab" Podcast: https://machshavahlab.buzzsprout.com"The Tefilah Podcast": https://tefilah.buzzsprout.comOur Yeshiva: https://www.yeshivabneitorah.org/Guide to the Torah Content of Rabbi Matt Schneeweiss: https://kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/2021/04/links-to-torah-content-of-rabbi-matt.html

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Machshavah Lab
The Necessity of Metaphysical Trauma for National Teshuvah

Machshavah Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2021 5:24


This week's Torah content is sponsored by the Reznik family in dedication to the loving memory of Silvia Tanzer (Sora Hesha bas Chaim Moshe) and Irving Tanzer (Yisroel ben Yechezkel).Synopsis: This is the audio version of the one-page article I wrote entitled, The Necessity of Metaphysical Trauma for National Teshuvah, in which we answer the titular question by drawing upon key ideas from Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation, by Jonathan Lear, and The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma, by Bessel van der Kolk.  ----------If you have questions, comments, or feedback, I would love to hear from you! Please feel free to contact me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.----------If you've gained from what you've learned here, please consider contributing to my Patreon at www.patreon.com/rabbischneeweiss. Alternatively, if you would like to make a direct contribution to the "Rabbi Schneeweiss Torah Content Fund," my Venmo is @Matt-Schneeweiss, and my Zelle/Chase QuickPay and PayPal are mattschneeweiss at gmail.com. Even a small contribution goes a long way to covering the costs of my podcasts, and will provide me with the financial freedom to produce even more Torah content for you.If you would like to sponsor an article, shiur, or podcast episode, or if you are interested in enlisting my services as a teacher or tutor, you can reach me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.com. Thank you to my listeners for listening, thank you to my readers for reading, and thank you to my supporters for supporting my efforts to make Torah ideas available and accessible to everyone.----------YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/rabbischneeweissBlog: https://kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/rmschneeweiss"The Mishlei Podcast": https://mishlei.buzzsprout.com"The Stoic Jew" Podcast: https://thestoicjew.buzzsprout.com"Rambam Bekius" Podcast: https://rambambekius.buzzsprout.com"Machshavah Lab" Podcast: https://machshavahlab.buzzsprout.com"The Tefilah Podcast": https://tefilah.buzzsprout.comOur Yeshiva: https://www.yeshivabneitorah.org/Guide to the Torah Content of Rabbi Matt Schneeweiss: https://kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/2021/04/links-to-torah-content-of-rabbi-matt.html

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National Association for Primary Education
Rethinking the Curriculum with Jonathan Lear - NAPE 069

National Association for Primary Education

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 50:54


Described as having a breathtaking understanding of how to engage even the hardest to reach of children, Jonathan has established a reputation for delivering inspiring and creative inset both in the U.K. and internationally. He has worked for many years on the kind of compelling and inspirational teaching strategies that lead to incredible outcomes and is still in the thick of it as the deputy head at a large inner city primary school in Sheffield. Jonathan has also shared his passion for learning through his role as an Advanced Skills Teacher, Lead Teacher for Sheffield Local Authority, and associate of Ian Gilbert's http://www.independentthinking.co.uk/ (Independent Thinking) company. Jonathan is passionate about working with schools to create learning opportunities that are designed not just to impart knowledge, but also to engage, inspire, and most importantly, make children think. http://guerrillaeducation.co.uk/ (http://guerrillaeducation.co.uk/) https://www.independentthinking.co.uk/ (https://www.independentthinking.co.uk/) The National Association for Primary Education speaks for young children and all who live and work with them. Get a FREE e-copy of their professional journal at https://nape.org.uk/journal (nape.org.uk/journal)

Naylor's natter
The Working Class with Ian Gilbert

Naylor's natter

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2021 75:53


One of the most intractable problems in modern education is how to close the widening gap in attainment between the haves and the have-nots. Unfortunately, successive governments both in the UK and abroad have gone about solving it the wrong way. Independent Thinking founder Ian Gilbert's increasing frustration with educational policies that favour no excuses and compliance , and that ignore the broader issues of poverty and inequality, is shared by many others across the sphere of education and this widespread disaffection has led to the assembly of a diverse cast of teachers, school leaders, academics and poets who unite in this book to challenge the status quo. Their thought-provoking commentary, ideas and impassioned anecdotal insights are presented in the form of essays, think pieces and poems that draw together a wealth of research on the issue and probe and discredit the current view on what is best for children from poorer socio-economic backgrounds. Exploring themes such as inclusion, aspiration, pedagogy and opportunity, the contributions collectively lift the veil of feigned equality of opportunity for all to reveal the bigger picture of poverty and to articulate the hidden truth that there is always another way. This book is not about giving you all the answers, however. The contributors are not telling teachers or school leaders how to run their schools, their classroom or their relationships the field is too massive, too complex, too open to debate and to discussion to propose off-the-shelf solutions. Furthermore, the research referred to in this book is not presented in order to tell educators what to think, but rather to inform their own thinking and to challenge some of the dominant narratives about educating the feckless poor. This book is about helping educators to ask the right questions, and its starting question is quite simple: how can we approach the education of young people from disadvantaged backgrounds in a way that actually makes a difference for all concerned? Written for policy makers and activists as well as school leaders and educators, 'The Working Class' is both a timely survey of the impact of current policies and an invaluable source of practical advice on what can be done to better support disadvantaged children in the school system. Edited by Ian Gilbert with contributions from Nina Jackson, Tim Taylor, Dr Steven Watson, Rhythmical Mike, Dr Ceri Brown, Dr Brian Male, Julia Hancock, Paul Dix, Chris Kilkenny, Daryn Egan-Simon, Paul Bateson, Sarah Pavey, Dr Matthew McFall, Jamie Thrasivoulou, Hywel Roberts, Dr Kevin Ming, Leah Stewart, (Real) David Cameron, Sir Al Aynsley-Green, Shona Crichton, Floyd Woodrow, Jonathan Lear, Dr Debra Kidd, Will Ryan, Andrew Morrish, Phil Beadle, Jaz Ampaw-Farr, Darren Chetty, Sameena Choudry, Tait Coles, Professor Terry Wrigley, Brian Walton, Dave Whitaker, Gill Kelly, Roy Leighton, Jane Hewitt, Jarlath O Brien, Crista Hazell, Louise Riley, Mark Creasy, Martin Illingworth, Ian Loynd, David Rogers, Professor Mick Waters and Professor Paul Clarke. Here is the Spotify link I mentioned. Some crackers on there. This is the ITPress link to the book if it helps. This resource might be useful too from the ITL site.

spotify uk exploring edited working class tim taylor will ryan itl david rogers independent thinking paul dix brian walton jonathan lear hywel roberts leah stewart ian gilbert phil beadle jamie thrasivoulou
Ancient Greece Declassified
R2.5 The Justice Loophole | Plato's Republic, book 2 w/ Rachel Barney

Ancient Greece Declassified

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2021 54:03


Our exploration of Plato's Republic continues with this discussion of book 2 with philosopher Rachel Barney. Is the fear of God necessary for morality? How can you educate people so that they value and practice justice? Rachel Barney is professor of classics and ancient philosophy at the University of Toronto. She specializes in the work Plato and has spent many years analyzing and unraveling some of the key issues in the Republic. ------------------ Support the project Via Patreon: patreon.com/greecepodcast Or through a one-time donation: paypal.me/greecepodcast ------------------ Scholarly works mentioned during the conversation: Rachel Barney. “Ring-Composition in Plato: the Case of Republic X,” in M. McPherran (ed.), Cambridge Critical Guide to Plato’s Republic. Cambridge University Press, 2010, 32-51. (pdf) Jonathan Lear. "Inside and Outside The Republic," in Phronesis, 1992. vol. XXXVII/2 (pdf)

World Reimagined
Sustainable Leadership: Creating a Climate for Change with Rebecca Henderson and Spencer Glendon

World Reimagined

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2021 52:30


Economic growth demands a stable climate. So, what happens when that stability starts to erode? What becomes of our economy when it is too hot to go outside for six months of the year? Or, when the coastal cities of the world are no longer inhabitable? What does this mean for business? Climate change is a systemic risk to the global economy. However, it is a collective risk and, if we take collective action across industries and around the world, we can mitigate the worst effects of climate change. However, we must act quickly. In this episode, Host Gautam Mukunda speaks with Rebecca Henderson, one of 25 University Professors at Harvard and the author of Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire, and Spencer Glendon, an economist and senior fellow at Woodwell Climate Research Center, about saving the planet, the future of capitalism, advocating for good regulation and better government, and the idea of investing in the future without financial return. “If we decided we wanted to address climate change we couldn’t fix it, but we could absolutely ameliorate the worst effects before it’s too late. It’s not a technical problem. The problem is political will. The problem is persuading people that this is real, that it’s going to happen, [and] that it’s going to have immediate effects. If we can do that, then I am quite sure that we can address it.” — Rebecca Henderson “Climate change is a systemic risk to the entire economy and the entire financial system. You cannot diversify away from it. The pursuit of alpha in the face of this kind of risk is bizarre if you have financial holdings of any size or grandchildren.” — Rebecca Henderson Follow @GMukunda on Twitter or email us at WorldReimagined@nasdaq.com   Books Referenced: Reimagining Capitalism in a World On Fire, by Rebecca Henderson Fixing the Game: Bubbles, Crashes, and What Capitalism Can Learn from the NFL, by Roger L. Martin All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis, Edited by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katharine K. Wilkinson Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation, by Jonathan Lear   Guest Info: Rebecca Henderson is one of 25 University Professors at Harvard, a research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a fellow of both the British Academy and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Her research explores the degree to which the private sector can play a major role in building a more sustainable economy. Rebecca sits on the boards of Idexx Laboratories and of CERES. Her most recent publication is Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire, which was shortlisted for the FT/McKinsey 2020 Business Book of the Year Award. Spencer Glendon is working to make the consequences of climate change more vivid, intuitive, and useful. Collaborating with scientists, designers, technologists, and other concerned generalists like him, he founded the forthcoming initiative, Probable Futures, which will soon make local and global projections of heat, drought, wildfire, and other variables available, for free, to anyone in the world. Spencer is a pro bono consultant to many institutions and is a Senior Fellow at the Woodwell Climate Research Center. He has worked in Michigan, Chicago, Germany, Russia, China, and Boston. For many years he conducted and directed research at Wellington Management. He holds a BS in Industrial Engineering and a Ph.D. in Economics.

NTVRadyo
"Dünyadan Fısıltılar" üzerine

NTVRadyo

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2021 5:22


Carl Sagan'ın "Dünyadan Fısıltılar - Dünya'dan Uzaya Bir Selam: Voyager Yıldızlararası Plağı" adlı kitap yeni baskısıyla raflarda. Adnan Bostancıoğlu bugün hem Carl Sagan'ı hem de bu kitabı ve kitaba konu olan plağı anlatıyor. Bölümün ikinci kitabı "Aristoteles - Anlama Arzusu". Bostancıoğlu, Jonathan Lear ve kitap üzerine yorumları da aktarıyor. Ve bir çocuk kitabı var: Hepsi Bir Hikaye.

AfterThought
16. Conclusion Part 2: Beyond Hope for the Future: Compassion and Resolve

AfterThought

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2020 31:27


We begin with where the podcast started: one of the characteristics of the contemporary world, which is both an active contributor to, as well as a passive reflection of, its being in crisis, is that in contrast to the modern worldview's ideal of some magisterial overview, our current moment refuses any such overview. Such an overview appears now as impossible and implausible; part of the modern-Western-cum-ultramodern-global mythology we need to put behind us. Instead, we are all caught up inside this global moment, caught up in a plurality of incompatible worldviews and contradictory stories, incapable of escaping our inherence in this complex diversity and forced to make our way with great uncertainty. How to live in this moment, without resorting to either hopelessness or despair or inauthentic hope, with the courage, resolve, and above all, the compassion, that is needed? And beyond living in this moment, how are we to transform ourselves in the midst of the ending of the world such that a new human being emerges, ready to live – viably, sustainably, resiliently - in the new world that will come after the ending of the old? (Note: many of the references made to hope and the psychology of climate change in this episode were already given in the notes accompanying Episode 5.) A couple further references on hope: Joanna Macy (who was mentioned in Episode 5 as well) remains a psychologist of global climate change par excellence: https://www.joannamacy.net/ .For some of her work on “active hope”, see https://www.activehope.info/joanna-macy.html Jonathan Lear's analysis of hope for the Crow nation as it struggles to survive is rich, deep, and pertinent: Jonathan Lear. (2006). Radical hope: Ethics in the face of cultural devastation. Relative to references made to a non-ego actor invokes the work of Bruno Latour and “actor-network” theory, Donna Haraway, and others, that helpfully focus on breaking down nature-culture, passive mechanical natural subject vs active conscious human agent, dichotomies. For example: Latour, Bruno. (2017). Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the new climactic regime. Haraway, Donna. (2008). When species meet.

Suhrkamp espresso
#30: Gewalt, Zerstörung, Hoffnung

Suhrkamp espresso

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2020 16:54


Welche unterschiedlichen Formen der Gewalt gibt es? Wie verhalten sich Menschen in Momenten existenzieller Bedrohung? Wie können wir mit der Möglichkeit umgehen, dass unsere eigene Kultur zusammenbrechen könnte? Und warum gelingt es dennoch, inmitten großer Bedrohung nicht die Hoffnung zu verlieren? Auf Grundlage der Anthropologie und Geschichte der Crow, einem indigenen Volksstamm Nordamerikas, und mittels Philosophie und psychoanalytischer Theorie erforscht Jonathan Lear ihre Geschichte im Angesicht der kulturellen Zerstörung. Sein Buch Radikale Hoffnung ist eine philosophische Studie über eine eigentümliche Verletzlichkeit, die den Kern der conditio humana betrifft. Elsa Dorlin bietet in ihrem Buch Selbstverteidigung – Eine Philosophie der Gewalt den Versuch einer Geschichte der Selbstverteidigung. Vom Sklavenwiderstand bis zum Jiu-Jitsu der Suffragetten, vom Aufstand im Warschauer Ghetto bis zu den Black Panthers und den Queer-Patrouillen zeichnet Dorlin in ihrem Buch eine Genealogie der politischen Selbstverteidigung nach, verbunden mit einer kritischen Reflexion über legitime und illegitime Formen der Gewalt. Polina Barskova, 1976 in Leningrad geboren, debütierte bereits als Achtjährige und galt als literarisches Wunderkind. Lebende Bilder umfasst zehn längere und kürzere Prosastücke und als zentralen Text die titelgebende Geschichte: eine Dokumentation aus Stimmen, die im eisigen Blockadewinter 1941/42 in einem dunklen Saal der Leningrader Ermitage spielt. Barskova schreibt über Menschen, die selbst in der größten Not, in Zeiten des größten Zerfalls noch in der Lage waren, Mut zu beweisen und der Gewalt zu trotzen. In Theorien der Gewalt, das 2017 im Junius Verlag erschien, stellen Teresa Koloma Beck und Klaus Schlichte Sozialtheorien der Gewalt vor, die sich der Frage nach dem Verhältnis von Gewalt und sozialer Ordnung widmen. Die Bücher der Folge: Jonathan Lear, Radikale Hoffnung – Ethik im Angesicht kultureller Zerstörung: http://shrk.vg/RadikaleHoffnung-PElsa Dorlin, Selbstverteidigung – Eine Philosophie der Gewalt: http://shrk.vg/Selbstverteidigung-PPolina Barskova, Lebende Bilder: http://shrk.vg/LebendeBilder-PTheresa Koloma Beck; Klaus Schlichte, Theorien der Gewalt: http://shrk.vg/TheorienDerGewalt-P

Buchkritik - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Jonathan Lear: „Radikale Hoffnung. Ethik im Angesicht kultureller Zerstörung“ - Was passiert nach dem Verlust?

Buchkritik - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 6:27


Was macht kultureller Wandel, was macht der Verlust von Lebensweisen und Lebensbedingungen mit Menschen? Wie lässt sich trotz des permanenten Verschwindens die Hoffnung bewahren? Der Philosoph Jonathan Lear beschäftigt sich einfühlsam mit diesen Fragen. Von Carsten Hueck www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei

Lesart - das Literaturmagazin - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Jonathan Lear: „Radikale Hoffnung. Ethik im Angesicht kultureller Zerstörung“ - Was passiert nach dem Verlust?

Lesart - das Literaturmagazin - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 6:27


Was macht kultureller Wandel, was macht der Verlust von Lebensweisen und Lebensbedingungen mit Menschen? Wie lässt sich trotz des permanenten Verschwindens die Hoffnung bewahren? Der Philosoph Jonathan Lear beschäftigt sich einfühlsam mit diesen Fragen. Von Carsten Hueck www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei

Five Questions
Jonathan Lear

Five Questions

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2020 28:56


I ask the philosopher Jonathan Lear five questions about himself. Jonathan Lear is the John U. Nef Distinguished Service Professor in the Committee on Social Thought and the Department of Philosophy at the University of Chicago. He is the author of several books, including “Radical Hope” (2006) and most recently, “Wisdom Won From Illness: Essays in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis” (2017).

The Primary Knowledge Podcast
49: Curriculum principles, purpose and pedagogy – with Jonathan Lear

The Primary Knowledge Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2019 20:08


Caroline talks with Jonathan, award-winning Deputy Headteacher, curriculum adviser and author. They discuss Jonathan's curriculum development work, his thinking on pedagogy, curriculum principles and purpose. How important is school context? How do you build curriculum foundations? Is there a correct sequence for curriculum design? This podcast delves into some of the essential curriculum questions. We're excited to announce that Jonathan will be the keynote speaker at our eight free coastal curriculum events in 2020. For more information and to book your place visit https://cornerstoneseducation.co.uk/events/ (https://cornerstoneseducation.co.uk/events/) Notes And LinksHere is a list of links to some of the things we reference on the show. https://cornerstoneseducation.co.uk/primary-curriculum-event/ (Primary curriculum event – More information) https://cornerstoneseducation.co.uk/products/curriculum/curriculum-maestro/ (Curriculum Maestro – More information) https://cornerstoneseducation.co.uk/ (Cornerstones Education – Website) https://cornerstoneseducation.co.uk/curriculum-principles-important/ (Curriculum principles – Blog) https://guerrillaeducation.co.uk/ (Guerrilla Education – Website) https://twitter.com/guerrillaed (Guerrilla Education – Twitter)

Made It In Japan
第4話:Jonathan Lear

Made It In Japan

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2019 63:25


 Jonathan Lear is a PhD candidate at UC Berkeley who is currently a visiting researcher in Tokyo University's Institute of Social Sciences. His research is a comparative intellectual history of the development of atomic energy in Japan and West Germany following WWII. In this episode, we discuss how he became interested in the topic and some of the implications for studying the history of atomic energy in the 21st century.  第4話のゲストは、カリフォルニア大学バークレー校の博士課程にして東京大学の社会科学研究所の客員研究員であるジョナサン・リアーさんです。ジョナサンさんは戦後日本と西ドイツにおける原子力の開発を専門としている歴史家です。このエピソードでは、研究の選定理由や、21世紀における原子力の歴史を勉強する意義についてディスカッションしています。 Time: 63 mins. (The entire interview is in English) タイム:63分(解説のみ日本語になっています) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/miij/message

Making of a Historian
History of Coal 2: Before the Revolution

Making of a Historian

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2017 37:48


Today we talk about coal before the Industrial Revolution. People needed a lot of wood in the past to heat their houses, cook their food, and make stuff like buildings, bridges and navies. When population increased, people shifted from wood to coal. After the Black Death, population in Britain slowly crept up meaning more expensive stuff. But things got really bad in the middle of the 17th century--the Little Ice Age. It was cold. It was crowded. People needed fuel, but the forests were shrinking. Big cities like London shifted to coal. Coal miners had a field day. Coal started to replace wood in a bunch of industrial applications. Boiling stuff was easy: salt, beer, alum. Other things were harder, like glass or baking bread. In the 17th century, Britain became something new: a society that got most of its energy from a rock, rather than from the sun. Music by Jonathan Lear. Image by Duncan Barton. For book lists, images, and graphs check out https://www.historian.live/home/2017/7/28/a2ipq6n6zn0bn91pyye5fo66fr7vfg

Making of a Historian
History of Coal 1: Coalification

Making of a Historian

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2017 20:06


Show notes--including a wonderful custom made image!--at historian.live Making of a Historian is BACK doing a season on the history of coal. We start at the very beginning, in the Carboniferous period 300 million years ago. Then giant plants got trapped in oxygen-poor bogs and started to form the black burnable rock that will be at the center of our history. Questions? Feedback? Treats? Tweet me @mackieteacher Music by Jonathan Lear (jonathanlear.bandcamp.com) Images by Duncan Barton (instagram.com/duncandraw/)

Pivotal Podcast
How to Teach Guerrilla Style with Jonathan Lear – PP148

Pivotal Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2017 68:27


Jonathan Lear joined us this week to talk about ‘Guerrilla Teaching’. Jonathan is a practising teacher and deputy head at an inner-city primary school. His Independent Learning bio reads: ‘Jonathan doesn’t so much teach as create an atmosphere in his classroom that is magical, engaging and exciting and that makes the children desperate to get … Continue reading How to Teach Guerrilla Style with Jonathan Lear – PP148 →

Sydney Ideas
Noel Pearson and Jonathan Lear on What is Recognition?

Sydney Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2015 68:23


Noel Pearson is one of Australia’s foremost indigenous leaders and political activists. He titled his first Quarterly Essay, Radical Hope, explicitly referring to the work of the renowned philosopher and psychoanalyst Jonathan Lear of the same title. What is recognition? What kind of acknowledgement is involved? How does recognition affect the identities of both sides? Noel Pearson and Jonathan Lear discuss the constitutional, philosophical and psychoanalytic perspectives of the complex question of recognition of indigenous peoples. For more info and speaker's biography see this page: http://sydney.edu.au/sydney_ideas/lectures/2015/lear_pearson_recognition.shtml

Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society
18/11/2013: Jonathan Lear on Integrating the Non-Rational Soul

Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2013 59:19


Jonathan Lear is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago and a member of the Committee on Social Thought. He is author most recently of 'Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation', 'A Case for Irony', and 'Freud'. This podcast is an audio recording of Professor Lear's talk - 'Integrating the Non-Rational Soul' - at the Aristotelian Society on 18 November 2013. The recording was produced by Backdoor Broadcasting Company in conjunction with the Institute of Philosophy, University of London.

Kluge Center Series: Prominent Scholars on Current Topics

Although practicing medicine is a historic and socially established way of living a good and worthy life, the best physicians at times find themselves asking of their own activity, "What does any of this have to do with medicine?" At such moments, physicians are bewildered and are unsure of how to proceed, even as they long to become the physician they are not yet. Physicians may be experiencing irony, at least irony as the concept is used by Kierkegaard and recovered by the philosopher Jonathan Lear in his recent book, "A Case for Irony." Farr Curlin will use Lear's account to describe irony and explore its place in the practice of medicine. He will describe contemporary dynamics that seem to make it hard for physicians to recognize and respond well to irony, and suggest resources--including religious concepts and practices--that may help physicians overcome such obstacles. In the end, how physicians respond to irony will determine if ironic experience leads to renewed efforts to realize a better medicine, or results only in detachment from and cynicism regarding medical practice as a way of living a good and faithful life. For captions, transcript, and more information visit http://www.loc.gov/today/cyberlc/feature_wdesc.php?rec=5579