The Best of Making Sense with Sam Harris
En podcast af Sam Harris
63 Episoder
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#159 — Conscious
Udgivet: 9.1.2023 -
#226 — The Price of Distraction
Udgivet: 19.12.2022 -
#238 — How to Build a Universe
Udgivet: 12.12.2022 -
#219 — The Power of Compassion
Udgivet: 5.12.2022 -
#136 — Digital Humanism
Udgivet: 28.11.2022 -
#77 — The Moral Complexity of Genetics
Udgivet: 21.11.2022 -
#137 — Safe Space
Udgivet: 14.11.2022 -
#127 — Freedom From the Known
Udgivet: 7.11.2022 -
#173 — Anti-Semitism and Its Discontents
Udgivet: 31.10.2022 -
#48 — What Is Moral Progress?
Udgivet: 24.10.2022 -
#116 — AI: Racing Toward the Brink
Udgivet: 17.10.2022 -
#196 — The Science of Happiness
Udgivet: 10.10.2022 -
#200 — Creatures of Habit
Udgivet: 3.10.2022 -
#175 — Leaving the Faith
Udgivet: 26.9.2022 -
#211 — The Nature of Human Nature
Udgivet: 19.9.2022 -
#209 — A Good Life
Udgivet: 12.9.2022 -
#205 — The Failure of Meritocracy
Udgivet: 5.9.2022 -
#113 — Consciousness and the Self
Udgivet: 29.8.2022 -
#18 — The Multiverse & You (& You & You & You...)
Udgivet: 22.8.2022 -
#107 — Is Life Actually Worth Living?
Udgivet: 15.8.2022
Join neuroscientist, philosopher, and five-time New York Times best-selling author Sam Harris as he explores important and controversial questions about the mind, society, current events, moral philosophy, religion, and rationality—with an overarching focus on how a growing understanding of ourselves and the world is changing our sense of how we should live. Sam is also the creator of the Waking Up app. Combining Sam’s decades of mindfulness practice, profound wisdom from varied philosophical and contemplative traditions, and a commitment to a secular, scientific worldview, Waking Up is a resource for anyone interested in living a more examined, fulfilling life—and a new operating system for the mind. Waking Up offers free subscriptions to anyone who can’t afford one, and donates a minimum of 10% of profits to the most effective charities around the world. To learn more, please go to WakingUp.com. Sam Harris received a degree in philosophy from Stanford University and a Ph.D. in neuroscience from UCLA.