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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):
➤ annual academic philosophy lectures • ancient Greek philosophy as way of life • Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Stoics, Epicurus, Skeptics, Plotinus • reasons, normativity, motivation, expressivism • logic, rational revisability • a priori scrutability, Carnap–Quine • mind, content externalism, phenomenal knowledge, knowledge argumentThis podcast presents recordings from the John Locke Lectures, an annual, long-running philosophy lecture series. Across the episodes, listeners encounter multi-part lecture sequences in which a single philosopher develops a sustained argument over several sessions, often moving from framing questions and methodological commitments to increasingly technical issues and applications.
A recurring focus is normativity and reasons: what it is for something to count as a reason, how normative claims relate to metaphysical commitments, and what epistemological problems arise when we try to be “realistic” about reasons. Another cluster of lectures examines the connection between logic and rationality, asking what normative role logic plays in thought and inquiry and whether, and in what sense, logic itself can be rationally revised.
The podcast also features work in analytic metaphysics and epistemology concerning how we can “construct” or “scrutinize” our picture of the world, including debates about a priori scrutability, conceptual change, and influential contrasts in twentieth-century philosophy (for example, between Carnap and Quine). These discussions extend to difficult cases such as mathematics, ontology, intentionality, and the status of normative domains.
Several episodes engage philosophy of mind and language through questions about mental content, self-knowledge, and consciousness. Topics include externalism about content, privileged access to one’s own thoughts, self-locating belief, and arguments associated with phenomenal experience (including the knowledge argument and related thought experiments).
Alongside these contemporary analytic themes, the podcast includes historically oriented lectures on ancient Greek philosophy as a way of life, tracing how figures such as Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Epicurus, Skeptics, and later Platonists treated reason and philosophy as practical authority shaping one’s entire life.