Robert Wright believes that there are a number of key tenets of Buddhism which are both compatible with present day evolutionary theory, and accurate about our relationship with the world and with our own minds. In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast he discusses Buddhism, reality, and the mind, with interviewer Nigel Warburton.
We are very grateful for support for this episode from the Marc Sanders Foundation
We are also grateful for the continuing support we receive from donations on Patreon and Paypal.
Noel Malcolm on Hobbes' Leviathan in Context
Mark Rowlands on Philosophy and Running
John Gardner on Constitutions
Fiona Macpherson on Hallucination
Jeff McMahan on Gun Control
Colin McGinn on Descartes on Innate Knowledge
Tom Sorell on Surveillance
John Campbell on Schizophrenia
Kendall Walton on Photography
Alan Ryan on Freedom and Its History
Who's Your Favourite Philosopher?
Peter Adamson on Avicenna's Flying Man
Tim Bayne on the Unity of Consicousness
Liane Young on Mind and Morality
Gary Francione on Animal Abolitionism
Richard Sorabji on Mahatma Gandhi as Philosopher
Tim Crane on Non-Existence
Michael Tye on Pain
Daniel Dennett on Free Will Worth Wanting
Patricia Churchland on What Neuroscience Can Teach Us About Morality (originally on Bioethics Bites)
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