Before she ever studied them as an academic, Rebecca Kukla was fascinated by cities. Growing up in the middle of Toronto, she spent her days walking the city and noticing the way people and place interact. That fascination stayed with her, and motion, embodiment, and place has become a subtle through line in both her professional philosophy and personal interests.
In her conversation with Tyler, Kukla speaks about the impossibility of speaking as a woman, curse words, gender representation and “guru culture” in philosophy departments, what she learned while living in Bogota and Johannesburg, what’s interesting in the works of Hegel, Foucault, and Rousseau, why boxing is good for the mind, how she finds good food, whether polyamory can scale, and much more.
Follow Tyler on Twitter
More CWT goodness:
Cliff Asness on Comics and Why Never to Share a Gym with Cirque du Soleil (Live at Mason)
Dani Rodrik on Premature Deindustrialization and Why the World is Second Best at Best
Luigi Zingales on Italy, Google and Conglomeration, and Donald Trump (Live at Mason)
Jeffrey Sachs on Charter Cities and How to Reform Graduate Economics Education (Live at Mason)
Peter Thiel on Stagnation, Innovation, and What Not to Call your Company (Live at Mason)
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Teachers Talk Radio
LifeBlood
Navigating Life After 40
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast