Life is complicated. It is afflicted with more big questions than big answers. As one is tested by the suffering and irrationality of life, the questions become more compelling and imperative, and the answers become more urgent and necessary in order to be a good person and to live a happy life. What does it mean to be a good person? What is a happy life? What is love? Who am I before I was told who I am? Why haven’t I found myself yet? Why do I have regrets? Is the world just? Everything seems to have been figured out, except how to live. In this podcast, we will ask and answer the hard questions, and we will question the simple answers, the answers you’ve been told to believe almost from the moment of birth. Think for yourself. There is no feeling like it, and it really is the only good fight left. You may not be rewarded for your wisdom, but you will be rewarded by your wisdom. “The Laughing Philosopher” is Robert M. Khoury, Ph.D., a scholar and writer with a lifetime of teaching and learning at the intersection of sociology and philosophy.
Episodes
Thursday Feb 25, 2021
“Why do we believe what we know is absurd?”
Thursday Feb 25, 2021
Thursday Feb 25, 2021
“We have a profound desire to believe because we fear the uncertainty of not-knowing, and the not-knowing makes any belief, no matter how absurd, feel more likely to be true. The idea of God is a logically incoherent mess, but it is preferable to the doubt and the uncertainty of not-knowing.”
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