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Robert Stern

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We have 2 summarized appearances for Robert Stern so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

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2 episodes
In Our Time

Hope

In Our Time
53 minProfessor of Philosophy at University of Sheffield

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Philosophers debate whether hope is a virtue or delusion, tracing its evolution from Pandora's jar through Christian theology (Paul, Augustine, Aquinas) to Enlightenment thinkers (Kant, Nietzsche) and modern existentialists, examining hope's relationship to faith, agency, and human flourishing. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Theological virtue paradox:** Peter Lombard reconciled faith and hope by defining hope as certain expectation of future glory, making it proleptic—representing future good through imagination in the present, though this removes uncertainty some consider essential to hope's nature. - **Kant's practical framework:** Hope occupies the middle ground between despair and complacency in moral striving. It motivates effort toward the summum bonum (highest good) without guaranteeing success, preventing both lazy reliance on divine intervention and complete abandonment of moral tasks. - **Hope versus control:** Hope fails Aristotelian virtue criteria because humans cannot practice or control it like courage or temperance. Contemporary philosophers who treat hope as virtue reframe it as planning or positive thinking, gaining controllability but potentially losing what makes it distinctively hope. - **Political resignation threshold:** Hope requires evidence to remain rational outside religious frameworks. Without theological guarantees, humanist hope faces a critical decision point—when accumulated disappointments should trigger either active revolt (anger) or complete resignation, rather than perpetual waiting for improvement. → NOTABLE MOMENT Nietzsche reinterpreted Pandora's myth as self-fulfilling deception: humans read the story optimistically (hope as gift) precisely because hope blinds them to its true nature as the worst evil, thereby demonstrating how hope's deceptive power operates by making people believe in their own salvation. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Philosophy of Hope, Christian Theology, Existentialism, Virtue Ethics

In Our Time

Hegel's Philosophy of History

In Our Time
52 minProfessor of Philosophy at University of Sheffield

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Hegel's philosophy of history examines how human freedom evolved from ancient China (where one was free) through Greece and Rome (where some were free) to modern Christian Europe (where all are conceptually free). → KEY INSIGHTS - **Freedom's dialectical structure:** Hegel argues freedom requires necessity—you must will certain things to be free, like respecting rights. A free state must structurally separate civil society from government, and divide government into legislature, executive, and sovereign branches. - **Historical progression framework:** History moves through three stages: China embodied patriarchal rule where only the emperor was free; fifth-century Athens granted freedom to citizens but excluded slaves; Christianity established the principle that all humans are free before God. - **Individual identity formation:** People do not craft their identities alone—desires, personality, and character emerge from social influences, cultural institutions, and historical context. Understanding freedom requires recognizing how society shapes individual aims and values, not autonomous self-creation. - **Philosophy requires historical study:** Philosophy cannot understand itself without examining its history. Studying how concepts like freedom evolved across cultures provides the critical distance needed to evaluate current beliefs and institutions, creating a toolbox for independent analysis. → NOTABLE MOMENT Hegel completed his Phenomenology during the Battle of Jena in 1807, hearing cannons from his room. He sent his only manuscript copy through French military lines on horseback, uncertain for days whether it would reach his publisher. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ German Idealism, Political Philosophy, Philosophy of History, Freedom Theory

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