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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, skepticism, Plotinus • reasons and normativity • logic’s normative role, revisability • constructing the world, a priori scrutability • epistemology, metaphysics, mind, phenomenal experience, content externalismThis podcast presents the annual John Locke Lectures, a long-running and highly regarded philosophy lecture series. Across the episodes, listeners hear extended, research-level arguments developed over multiple sessions, with each year’s lectures forming a coherent sequence around a central philosophical theme.
A substantial portion of the content explores ancient Greek philosophy not only as theoretical inquiry but as a practical “way of life.” It examines how figures in the Socratic and post-Socratic traditions treated reason—rather than religion or inherited custom—as the central authority for deciding how to live, and traces the development of this outlook through major schools and thinkers of antiquity, including Platonism, Aristotelian ethics and contemplation, Stoicism, Epicureanism, skepticism, and later Platonist traditions.
Other lectures focus on contemporary analytic questions about reasons and normativity, addressing how normative claims connect to metaphysics, epistemology, motivation, and debates such as expressivism. Another set centers on the role of logic in rational thought, asking what it is for logic to be normative, whether and how logic can be rationally revised, and how such revisions bear on broader issues in epistemology.
Further episodes investigate the mind and knowledge, especially tensions between externalist accounts of mental content and the idea that we have privileged access to our own thoughts and experiences. These discussions engage classic arguments and thought experiments about consciousness and what we can know from the first-person perspective, including issues of self-locating belief, phenomenal knowledge, and the structure of propositional content.