• Zombies

  • Mar 12 2024
  • Length: 1 hr
  • Podcast
  • Summary

  • Who’s afraid of zombification? Apparently not analytic philosophers. In episode 99 of Overthink, Ellie and David talk all about zombies and their unfortunate legacy in the thought experiments of academic philosophy. Their portrait as brain-eating and consciousness-lacking mobs is a far cry from their origins in the syncretic sorcery at the margins of Haitian Voodoo. This distance means that the uncanny zombie raises provocative questions about the problematic ways philosophy integrates and appropriates nonwestern culture into its canon. Your hosts probe beyond limits of the tradition when they explore zombification in animals, in reading, in Derrida, and beyond.

    Check out the episode's extended cut here!

    Works Discussed

    Ellie Anderson, “Derrida and the Zombie”
    David J. Chalmers, The Conscious Mind
    Wade Davis, The Serpent and the Rainbow
    Descartes, Meditations
    Leslie Desmangles, The Faces of the Gods
    Daniel C. Dennett, "The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies" & Consciousness Explained
    Zora Neale Hurston, Tell my Horse
    Edgar Allan Poe, “The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar”
    Justin Smith-Ruiu, “The World as a Game”

    The Last of Us (2023)
    Night of the Living Dead (1968)
    Get Out (2017)

    Overthink, Continental Philosophy: What is it, and why is it a thing?

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