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EV - 191 Utopian Sociology with William Paris

EV - 191 Utopian Sociology with William Paris

FromEmbrace The Void


EV - 191 Utopian Sociology with William Paris

FromEmbrace The Void

ratings:
Length:
74 minutes
Released:
May 7, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

My guest this week is William Paris (@WilliamMParis), the Frank B Weeks Visiting Assistant Professor at Wesleyan,  starting assistant professor as University of Toronto, and cohost of the What’s Left of Philosophy podcast. We discuss the role of utopia in the work of Du Bois and how it allows the possible to permeate the actual.Convocation: Utopia by Thomas MoreEditing by Lu Lyons, check out her amazing podcast Filmed Live Musicals! http://www.filmedlivemusicals.com/podcast.htmlMusic by GW RodriguezSibling Pod Philosophers in Space: https://0gphilosophy.libsyn.com/Support us at Patreon.com/EmbraceTheVoidIf you enjoy the show, please Like and Review us on your pod app, especially iTunes. It really helps!If you enjoyed this and want to discuss more, start a conversation with me here: https://letter.wiki/AaronRabinowitz/conversationsRecent Appearances: Aaron was on Decoding the Gurus talking about Michael O'Fallon and his conspiracy theory projects with his friend James Lindsay: https://twitter.com/ETVPod/status/1390128269433913349?s=20Next week: Social Economy and Agency with Lillian Cicerchia
Released:
May 7, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Welcome friends, to a podcast for a darker timeline. Maybe the darkest of all timelines. Definitely not one of the good timelines. Maybe it’s always been a dark timeline, maybe the Hadron collider screwed us over. Science may never know. What we do know is that we live in the void. The void, a place where a chittering mass of void crabs can infest a person suit and win the presidency. The void, a place where we're just clever enough to know that climate change is happening, but not quite clever enough to do anything about it. The void seems terrible and cruel, but it loves you, in its own ironic way.