63: Consilience – the unity of knowledge

June 17, 2012 Will all knowledge eventually be united? And what does that even mean, anyway? In this episode of Rationally Speaking, Massimo and Julia explore the topic of consilience, or the “unity of knowledge,” a concept popularized by biologist and theorizer E. O. Wilson. Along the way they discuss whether all phenomena can be … Read more

62: What neuroscience tells us about morality (Patricia Churchland)

June 3, 2012 The Rationally Speaking podcast is proud to feature another certified genius: Patricia Churchland, a philosopher well known for her contributions to neurophilosophy and the philosophy of the mind, was professor at the University of California San Diego from 1984-2010, and won the MacArthur Genius Grant in 1991. In this episode, she, Massimo, … Read more

61: Willpower

May 20, 2012 This episode of Rationally Speaking is all about the age-old problem of willpower: why don’t we do what we know is best for us? Massimo introduces some of the early philosophical approaches to this puzzle, and then Massimo and Julia go over more recent scientific research on the issue (for example: does … Read more

60: Q&A with Massimo and Julia

May 6, 2012 Massimo and Julia answer listeners’ questions. In this installment the topics include: how much do works of fiction affect people’s rationality, Bayesian vs. frequentist statistics, what is evidence, how much blame do people deserve when their actions increase the chance of them being targeted, time travel, and whether a philosophically examined life … Read more

59: Live at NECSS – The simulation argument (David Kyle Johnson)

April 22, 2012 In this special live episode recorded at the 2012 Northeast Conference on Science and Skepticism, Massimo and Julia discuss the “simulation argument” — the case that it’s roughly 20% likely that we live in a computer simulation — and the surprising implications that argument has for religion. Their guest is philosopher David Kyle Johnson, … Read more

58: Intuition

April 8, 2012 When your intuition tells you something, should you listen? That depends! Relying on intuition can be anything from a highly effective strategy used by experts, to an excuse not to require evidence for your beliefs. In this episode, Massimo and Julia talk about what people mean by “intuition,” where our intuitions come … Read more

57: Peer review

March 25, 2012 If you value scientific evidence you’re probably familiar with the idea that having “peer-reviewed” studies is crucial to the legitimacy of any new claim. But what does “peer-reviewed” entail, anyway? In this episode, Massimo and Julia open up the black box of peer review, explaining how the process originated, how it works, … Read more

56: Science news literacy (Howard Schneider)

March 11, 2012 Massimo and Julia discuss science communication with Howard Schneider, dean of the school of journalism at SUNY Stonybrook and former editor of Newsday. A guest at previous skeptic events, including the first annual Northeast Conference on Science and Skepticism, Schneider has argued in the past that skeptics lay too much blame at the … Read more

55: Spirituality

February 26, 2012 Is “rational spirituality” a contradiction? In this episode, Massimo and Julia try to pin down what people mean when they call themselves “spiritual,” what inspires spiritual experiences and attitudes, and whether spirituality can be compatible with a naturalist view of the world. Are there benefits that skeptics and other secular people could … Read more

54: The “isms” episode

February 12, 2012 In this episode Massimo and Julia ask, “Is the fundamental nature of the world knowable by science alone?”, looking at the issue through the lenses of a series of related philosophical positions: determinism, reductionism, physicalism, and naturalism. All of those “isms” take a stance on the question of whether there are objectively … Read more