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On the show
Recent episodes
Wittgenstein and his impact upon Anglophone philosophy, Peter Hacker
Mar 6, 2026
1h 30m 11s
Social Equality: Then And Now, Jonathan Wolff
Feb 27, 2026
1h 30m 25s
Imagining Democracy, Michele M. Moody-Adams
Feb 20, 2026
1h 44m 41s
Is Philosophy a Science?, Timothy Williamson
Feb 13, 2026
1h 32m 53s
Apocalyptic Technology: Naturalism and Nihilism, Mazviita Chirimuuta
Jan 30, 2026
1h 29m 08s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3/6/26 | Wittgenstein and his impact upon Anglophone philosophy, Peter Hacker | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Peter Hacker. He discusses the salient achievements of Wittgenstein’s two masterpieces, the Tractatus and the Investigations, and their influences on philosophy. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 30m 11s | ||||||
| 2/27/26 | Social Equality: Then And Now, Jonathan Wolff | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Jonathan Wolff, who explores how ideas of relational equality have developed in the past 100 years. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 30m 25s | ||||||
| 2/20/26 | Imagining Democracy, Michele M. Moody-Adams | In this London Lecture, Professor Michele M. Moody-Adams will explore the role of imagination in political communities as democracies. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 44m 41s | ||||||
| 2/13/26 | Is Philosophy a Science?, Timothy Williamson | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Timothy Williamson. He asks what it might mean to call philosophy a science, and explores different views of the relation between philosophy and science over the past century. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 32m 53s | ||||||
| 1/30/26 | Apocalyptic Technology: Naturalism and Nihilism, Mazviita Chirimuuta | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Dr Mazviita Chirimuuta. Science assumes the universe is comprehensible to the human mind. AI tech casts doubt on this. So, should scientists give up on their goal? Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 29m 08s | ||||||
| 1/23/26 | Developments in Feminist Philosophy, Clare Chambers | Over the last 100 years the condition of women in society has changed and so has feminist philosophy. Professor Clare Chambers will reflect on the philosophy, politics, and practice of sex discrimination as it has developed over the past century. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 31m 28s | ||||||
| 1/16/26 | Why Does Philosophy Have a History?, Michael Rosen | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Michael Rosen. Unlike other disciplines, the history of philosophy does not involve the accumulation of knowledge or the resolution of problems. But why? Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 31m 25s | ||||||
| 11/28/25 | The You Turn, Naomi Eilan | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Naomi Eilan. She offers an account of second person awareness, mutual I-you relations, and the essential link between second person awareness and ethics. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 31m 32s | ||||||
| 11/21/25 | Empathy and Ethics: A Complicated Relation?, Rowan Williams | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Dr Rowan Williams. Is empathy required for ethical values? How we can hang on to a proper valuation of empathic understanding without sentimentality. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 30m 11s | ||||||
| 11/7/25 | Avicennan and Cartesian Doubt, Peter Adamson | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Peter Adamson, who will argue that Avicennan and Cartesian “arguments from doubt” may actually be stronger than they seem. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 33m 28s | ||||||
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| 10/31/25 | The Most Permanent Interests of the Human Spirit, John Haldane | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor John Haldane. He looks back at philosophy since 1925, arguing for a kind of philosophical humanism that was more prominent a century ago than it is today. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 35m 12s | ||||||
| 10/24/25 | Why philosophers need to think about pregnancy, Fiona Woollard | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Fiona Woollard. She explores how philosophy can help us to understand pregnancy and improve the treatment of people who are pregnant. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 28m 54s | ||||||
| 10/17/25 | What became of the public philosopher?, Regina Rini | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Professor Regina Rini. She explores why we no longer need philosophers as all-purpose public sages. Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 31m 50s | ||||||
| 10/10/25 | The Problematic and the Unproblematic, Nikhil Krishnan | This lecture in the series Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect, is presented by Dr Nikhil Krishnan. The politics of the last decade have been accused of moralistic excess. If this is fair, how might moral philosophy cure us of moralism? Part of TRIP's Centenary Lectures 2025-6: Philosophy in Retrospect and Prospect. | 1h 29m 59s | ||||||
| 6/5/25 | Choosing how we Represent the Past; Derek Matravers | This lecture is presented by Derek Matravers, and discusses how the choices we make in framing the past can influence our views on it. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 27m 59s | ||||||
| 5/29/25 | Proust’s Theory of Memory and Knowledge; Tom Stern | This lecture is presented by Tom Stern, exploring the phenomenon of involuntary memory in Proust’s work. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 29m 12s | ||||||
| 5/22/25 | Who should we remember, and for how long? A theory of justice for public commemoration; James Wilson | This lecture is presented by James Wilson, exploring how to reconcile different reasons for public remembrance. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 24m 26s | ||||||
| 5/15/25 | Can memories be unjust?; Katherine Puddifoot | Katherine Puddifoot explores how social stereotypes shape our recollections and how this can lead to injustice in personal memories. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 17m 03s | ||||||
| 5/8/25 | Remembering the dead; Kathleen Higgins | This lecture is presented by Kathleen Higgins, exploring how memories and new insights help us honor the dead and integrate their presence into our lives. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 27m 33s | ||||||
| 5/1/25 | Trauma, emotion, and memory; Michael Brady | In this episode, Michael Brady explores how memory can contribute to post-traumatic growth, examining the role of emotional memories in recovery. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 28m 51s | ||||||
| 4/24/25 | On Being Emotionally Haunted by One’s Past, Matthew Ratcliffe | In this talk Matthew Ratcliffe discusses the broader conception of human emotional experience through the lens of being haunted by one’s past. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 27m 20s | ||||||
| 4/17/25 | Insta-Worthy Memories and Filtered Truth: The Effects of Technology on Our Personal Histories and Records of the Past | In this episode Kieron O’Hara examines how digital technology shapes our memories and alters our perception of the past, questioning the integrity of human memory in the age of social media and AI. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 29m 07s | ||||||
| 3/20/25 | Conservation as a Method of Remembering (and forgetting) - Erich Hatala Matthes | In this episode, Erich Matthes navigates questions of conservation, and how some easily overlooked aspects of conservation can render its relationship with remembering more complex than it initially appears. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 27m 01s | ||||||
| 3/12/25 | Forgiveness: Do we need it? - Lucy Allais | In this lecture, Lucy Allais considers the reasons philosophers have given for thinking that forgiveness is puzzling, and argue that they are key to understanding why we need it – but also why we don’t always have to forgive. Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 28m 23s | ||||||
| 2/24/25 | How We Remember and Forget Online; Alessandra Tanesini | In this talk Alessandra Tanesini explores how Social Networking Sites, especially Facebook, act as platforms where memories can be shared, individuals memorialised, and where at times some feel shunned and forgotten. Alessandra delves into the potential consequences of offloading one’s private memories onto public digital platforms . Part of TRIP's London Lecture Series 2024-25, on Remembering and Forgetting. | 1h 28m 02s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
6 placements across 6 markets.
Chart Positions
6 placements across 6 markets.





