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The Deeper Thinking Podcast

The Deeper Thinking Podcast

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The Deeper Thinking Podcast The Deeper Thinking Podcast offers a space where philosophy becomes a way of engaging more fully and deliberately with the world. Each episode explores enduring and emerging ideas that deepen how we live, think, and act. We follow the spirit of those who see the pursuit of wisdom as a lifelong project of becoming more human, more awake, and more responsible. We ask how attention, meaning, and agency might be reclaimed in an age that often scatters them. Drawing on insights stretching across centuries, we explore how time, purpose, and thoughtfulness can quietly transform daily existence. The Deeper Thinking Podcast examines psychology, technology, and philosophy as unseen forces shaping how we think, feel, and choose, often beyond our awareness. It creates a space where big questions are lived with—where ideas are not commodities, but companions on the path. Each episode invites you into a slower, deeper way of being. Join us as we move beyond the noise, beyond the surface, and into the depth, into the quiet, and into the possibilities awakened by deeper thinking.Copyright 2024 All rights reserved. Philosophy Science Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Autism: Complete As We Are - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
    Aug 1 2025

    Autism: Complete As We Are

    The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.

    For those who sense that truth is not what’s said the loudest—but what survives unedited.

    What happens when autistic truth is told without translation? This episode steps outside diagnosis, explanation, or accommodation and enters the lived, rhythmic world of autistic embodiment—on its own terms. Through narrative fragments, sensory precision, and ethical refusal, we follow voices that don’t want to be explained. They want to be heard.

    This is not about awareness or overcoming. It’s about neurodiversity as presence, rhythm, resistance. Drawing from thinkers like Frantz Fanon, Sylvia Wynter, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Carl Rogers, we explore the ethics of legibility, the damage done by misinterpretation, and what it means to speak in loops, silence, or signal.

    This episode is not structured to explain autism. It is paced to be autistic. To speak, slowly. To arrive, precisely. To remain, whole.

    Reflections

    • Autism is not a delay. It’s a different unfolding of time.
    • Refusal is not resistance to truth. It is a demand for it.
    • Being misread is not benign. It’s a kind of erasure.
    • Some truths do not survive translation. They must be held intact.
    • Communication is not sound. It is rhythm, pattern, signal.
    • The demand to “make sense” is often a demand to become someone else.
    • There is no such thing as non-communication. Only unreceived signal.
    • To be complete is not to be finished. It is to be uncut.

    Why Listen?

    • Reframe autism as rhythm, embodiment, and relational truth
    • Explore how refusal, pacing, and silence speak powerfully
    • Encounter lived autistic presence as clarity—not lack
    • Engage with Fanon, Wynter, Merleau-Ponty, and Rogers on language, legibility, and embodiment

    Listen On:

    • YouTube
    • Spotify
    • Apple Podcasts

    Support This Work

    If this episode stayed with you, you can support more work like this here: Buy Me a Coffee.

    Bibliography

    • Fanon, Frantz. Black Skin, White Masks. Grove Press, 2008.
    • Wynter, Sylvia. Selected Essays. Various Publications.
    • Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. Phenomenology of Perception. Routledge, 2012.
    • Rogers, Carl. A Way of Being. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.

    Bibliography Relevance

    • Frantz Fanon: Illuminates the political and racial stakes of being misread and overinterpreted.
    • Sylvia Wynter: Reframes the human as plural, contested, and beyond normative legibility.
    • Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Grounds perception in bodily presence and sensory truth.
    • Carl Rogers: Centers the relational ethic of unconditional regard and safe self-expression.

    To be autistic is not to be lacking. It is to carry truth in a form the world hasn’t yet learned to receive.

    #Autism #Neurodiversity #CarlRogers #FrantzFanon #MerleauPonty #SylviaWynter #Embodiment #Communication #RelationalEthics #Presence #Refusal #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast

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    38 mins
  • Žižek: The Cruelty of Enjoyment. The light was always green but no one moved. - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
    Aug 1 2025

    Žižek: The Cruelty of Enjoyment

    The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated

    For anyone drawn to philosophical dissonance, tonal recursion, and the ethics of unresolved desire.

    In this episode, we enter the tonal and philosophical architecture of Slavoj Žižek, where desire doesn’t disappear through repression, but flattens through surplus. What happens when enjoyment becomes a mandate, when the super-ego no longer says “no,” but whispers, “why aren’t you thriving?” We explore the affective contradictions of late-capitalist life, where the injunction to glow, optimize, and narrate meaning becomes a subtler cruelty than prohibition ever was.

    This is not an exposition of theory, but a psychoanalytic performance of it. Structured recursively, the episode loops through emotional, ethical, and symbolic breakdown, not to resolve contradiction, but to inhabit it. With careful nods to Jacques Lacan on the subject as formed through lack and symbolic failure, and drawing from post-ideological critique and tonal ethics, we follow the subject not toward freedom, but into tonal instability, where rhythm stands in for truth, and form becomes the last place coherence survives.

    Reflections

    This episode stages a contradiction. It doesn’t try to fix the cruelty of enjoyment, it performs it. It doesn’t seek closure—it loops, breaks, returns.

    • Desire didn’t disappear. It collapsed under abundance.
    • The super-ego no longer punishes. It motivates, optimizes, and demands to be pleased.
    • What used to be repression is now ambient guilt, reframed as failure to thrive.
    • We aren’t free to enjoy—we’re obliged to enjoy well.
    • There is no symbolic outside. Only recursion.
    • Insight, here, is tonal. It’s what cracks when speech won’t land.
    • To ask “Am I wasting my life?” is not a crisis. It’s the default loop of post-narrative culture.
    • This isn’t analysis. It’s architecture, structuring a feeling that can’t be stabilized.

    Why Listen?

    • Explore Žižek’s theory of surplus enjoyment and the cruelty of post-ideological subjectivity
    • Understand Lacan’s idea of the subject as formed through lack, and the ethics of the symptom
    • Rethink desire not as absence, but as saturation and pressure
    • Encounter tonal ethics, when truth no longer lands through clarity, but through recursive form

    Listen On:

    • YouTube
    • Spotify
    • Apple Podcasts

    Support This Work

    If this episode resonated, you can support the continuation of these deep dives here: Buy Me a Coffee.

    Bibliography

    • Žižek, Slavoj. The Parallax View. MIT Press, 2006.
    • Žižek, Slavoj. Living in the End Times. Verso, 2010.
    • Lacan, Jacques. The Ethics of Psychoanalysis. Routledge, 1992.
    • Han, Byung-Chul. Psychopolitics: Neoliberalism and New Technologies of Power. Verso, 2017.

    Bibliography Relevance

    • Slavoj Žižek: Central to this episode’s theoretical framework on surplus enjoyment and ideological recursion.
    • Jacques Lacan: Grounds the episode’s psychoanalytic view of lack, desire, and symbolic failure.
    • Byung-Chul Han: Informs the psychopolitical framing of ambient guilt and optimization culture.

    In the end, the cruelty isn’t that we’re denied enjoyment. It’s that we’re never allowed to stop.

    #SlavojŽižek #JacquesLacan #ByungChulHan #Psychoanalysis #SurplusEnjoyment #SuperEgo #Subjectivity #Desire #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #LateCapitalism #FormAsTruth #Contradiction #RecursiveStructure #TonalEthics

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    18 mins
  • Collapse as Protocol: The System Stopped Pretending
    Jul 30 2025

    Collapse as Protocol: The System Stopped Pretending

    The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digiitally narrated.

    For listeners seeking slow clarity, structural insight, and the human cost of engineered systems.

    In a world accelerating toward automation, abstraction, and ambient collapse, what happens when the systems we built to serve begin to discard us? This episode traces how platforms, markets, and institutions now operate less as tools of care or governance—and more as recursive structures of optimization, exclusion, and survival. We examine the eerie quiet of a machine that hasn’t failed, but stopped pretending it was ever meant to help.

    Drawing from critical theory, accelerationism, and surveillance capitalism, this episode explores how financial systems detach from need, how automation severs work from meaning, and how collapse has become not a failure—but an interface. With quiet nods to Adorno, Mark Fisher, and Michel Foucault, we interrogate what remains when structure outlives purpose, and when visibility becomes a filter for survival.

    This is not a lament. It’s a systems meditation on filtering, optimization, and the logic of recursive harm. It asks what it means to be human inside a loop that monetizes collapse and calls it efficiency. And it wonders: if the system can no longer pretend, what must we stop pretending too?

    Reflections

    • Collapse doesn’t always announce itself. Sometimes it arrives as protocol, disguised as progress.
    • Efficiency without care is not speed—it’s erasure.
    • What we call disruption may be displacement refined beyond recognition.
    • When systems stop filtering for meaning, they start filtering for silence.
    • Automation doesn’t kill purpose. It forgets to ask why it mattered.
    • In jackpot culture, you don’t just fail—you disappear.
    • The most dangerous systems aren’t the ones that break. They’re the ones that keep going.

    Why Listen?

    • Explore how collapse is increasingly formatted as efficiency
    • Learn why filtering and automation shape not just access, but legibility
    • Understand platform logic through the lens of Foucault and Zuboff
    • Reflect on the philosophical stakes of a world optimized for speed, not care

    Listen On:

    • YouTube
    • Spotify
    • Apple Podcasts

    Support This Work

    If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so gently here: Buy Me a Coffee. Thank you for being part of this slower conversation.

    Bibliography

    • Fisher, Mark. Capitalist Realism. London: Zero Books, 2009.
    • Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish. New York: Pantheon, 1977.
    • Zuboff, Shoshana. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism. New York: PublicAffairs, 2019.
    • Adorno, Theodor. Minima Moralia. London: Verso, 2005.
    • Aletheion Vimarśanātha, @Aletheion1, Youtube, 2025

    Bibliography Relevance

    • Mark Fisher: Offers a lens on systemic exhaustion, surface culture, and the enclosure of political imagination.
    • Michel Foucault: Illuminates how power shapes visibility, access, and control through systemic design.
    • Shoshana Zuboff: Frames how digital platforms commodify behavior and engineer consent.
    • Theodor Adorno: Grounds the episode’s critique of instrumental reason and hollowed cultural forms.

    The system didn’t break. It optimized away its purpose.

    #CollapseAsProtocol #CriticalTheory #Foucault #MarkFisher #Adorno #SurveillanceCapitalism #SystemicCritique #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #PlatformLogic #Automation #SlowPhilosophy #RecursiveSystems #AmbientCollapse

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    25 mins
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