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The John Locke Lectures are among the world's most distinguished lecture series in philosophy. The series began in 1950 and are given once a year.Themes and summary (AI-generated based on podcaster-provided show and episode descriptions):
➤ ancient Greek philosophy as way of life • Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Stoics, Epicurus, Skeptics, Plotinus • reasons and normativity • logic’s normative role, revisability • epistemology, metaphysics • a priori scrutability, Carnap–Quine • philosophy of mind: externalism, self-knowledge, phenomenal experience, knowledge argumentThis podcast presents recordings from the John Locke Lectures, an annual, long-running lecture series in philosophy. Across the episodes, the content is structured as multi-part lecture sequences in which a single philosopher develops a sustained argument over several talks, often moving from introductory framing to increasingly technical problems and responses.
A recurring theme is the relationship between reasons, normativity, and rational assessment: what it is for logic or practical reasoning to guide thought and action, how norms connect to metaphysics, and what sorts of structures might underwrite claims about what one ought to believe or do. Several lectures focus on whether and how core standards—especially logical standards—can be rationally revised, and what such revisability would mean for epistemology and philosophical methodology.
Another set of talks centers on “constructing the world” in a broadly analytic tradition, engaging questions about a priori scrutability, conceptual change, and classic disputes associated with figures like Carnap and Quine, alongside harder cases involving mathematics, ontology, intentionality, and normativity.
The podcast also includes work in philosophy of mind and epistemology, especially debates about phenomenal consciousness and self-knowledge. Topics include the knowledge argument, the nature of mental content under externalism, self-locating (indexical) belief, and tensions between privileged access to one’s own thoughts and externalist accounts of content.
In addition, there is substantial attention to ancient philosophy as a practical ideal, examining the idea—prominent from Socrates onward—that philosophy is not only theoretical inquiry but a reason-governed way of life, developed through major ancient schools and late Platonism.