
Can Mathematics Explain Reality?
The Ancient Wisdom of Pythagoras
Enjoying the episode?
Occasional letters on philosophy, reading, and the examined life. No spam, ever.
Related Episodes

From Logic to Ethics
Aristotle spent twenty years studying under Plato, then walked away and built a rival system that would dominate Western thought for two millennia. This episode traces his life from the court physician's son in Stagira, through the Academy, his years tutoring Alexander the Great, and the founding of the Lyceum in Athens. It examines his major contributions across logic, metaphysics, ethics, politics, and poetics: the categories of being, hylomorphism, the four causes, the unmoved mover, the function argument, eudaimonia as the highest good, the doctrine of the mean, practical wisdom, and the vision of the good life laid out in the Nicomachean Ethics. Dante called him the Master of Those Who Know, and for centuries no one in the Western or Islamic world could think seriously about the world without first thinking through Aristotle.

God or Nature
Deus sive Natura. God or Nature. With these three Latin words, Baruch Spinoza announced the most dangerous idea of the seventeenth century: that God and Nature are one and the same infinite reality. This episode follows Spinoza from Amsterdam's Portuguese-Jewish community through his excommunication at age twenty-three, his quiet years as a lens grinder, to his posthumous influence on Einstein and the Romantics. We trace the geometric arguments of the Ethics through substance monism, mind-body parallelism, the affects, human bondage, and the path to freedom through understanding.