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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 a way of life • Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Stoics, Epicureans, Skeptics, Plotinus • reasons and normativity • logic and rational revisability • epistemology/metaphysics • a priori scrutability, Carnap–Quine • philosophy of mind: phenomenal experience, knowledge argument, externalism, self-locating beliefThis podcast presents annual John Locke Lectures, a long-running, high-profile philosophy lecture series. Across the episodes, listeners encounter extended, research-level arguments delivered over multiple installments, typically organized around a single overarching theme for each year’s lectures.
A recurring focus is how philosophy bears on reasons, normativity, and rational requirement: what it is for something to count as a reason, how normative structures relate to metaphysical commitments, and what epistemological challenges arise for realist and non-realist views. Several lectures also explore the normative role of logic and the possibility that logic itself might be rationally revisable, including puzzles about what counts as revising a logical system and how such revisability connects to broader epistemological projects.
Another major strand concerns how we construct or describe the world using conceptual and explanatory resources. Topics include a priori scrutability, conceptual change, and debates associated with figures such as Carnap and Quine, as well as “hard cases” where mathematics, ontology, intentionality, and normativity interact.
The podcast also features sustained work in philosophy of mind and epistemology, especially issues about phenomenal consciousness and self-knowledge. Episodes engage classic thought experiments (including the knowledge argument), questions about self-locating belief, externalism about mental content, and whether we can have privileged access to what we think and experience. Alongside these contemporary analytic themes, the lectures also treat ancient philosophy as a practical enterprise, examining traditions—from Socrates through Plato and Aristotle to Stoics, Epicureans, Skeptics, and later Platonists—that framed philosophy as a reason-guided way of life.