Dr. Stephan R.C. Hicks Archives - Possibly Correct https://possiblycorrect.com/tag/dr-stephan-r-c-hicks/ Possibly Correct Media Network Wed, 23 Mar 2022 01:08:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://i0.wp.com/possiblycorrect.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cropped-PC_LOGO.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Dr. Stephan R.C. Hicks Archives - Possibly Correct https://possiblycorrect.com/tag/dr-stephan-r-c-hicks/ 32 32 194854143 EP #23 – Is Postmodernism Neo-Marxist? Yes, No & Sort Of. https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-23-is-postmodernism-neo-marxist-yes-no-sort-of/ Tue, 30 Jul 2019 18:46:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1642 Professor Jordan B. Peterson is perhaps most famous for the neo-Marxist label “Postmodern Neo-Marxism.” Although Dr. Peterson recommends Explaining Postmodernism by Dr. Hicks, their analysis on this issue differs in some important ways.

The post EP #23 – Is Postmodernism Neo-Marxist? Yes, No & Sort Of. appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
Professor Jordan B. Peterson is perhaps most famous for the neo-Marxist label “Postmodern Neo-Marxism.” Although Dr. Peterson recommends Explaining Postmodernism by Dr. Hicks, their analysis on this issue differs in some important ways.

The post EP #23 – Is Postmodernism Neo-Marxist? Yes, No & Sort Of. appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1642
EP #17 | C. S. Lewis Christian Socialism https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-17-c-s-lewis-christian-socialism/ Mon, 22 Apr 2019 17:34:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1682 Should Christians be socialist and was C.S. Lewis a socialist? What are the basic themes and commitments that are common to all forms of christianity?

Clive Staples Lewis was a British writer and theologian. He held academic positions in English literature at both Oxford University and Cambridge University He is best known for his works of fiction, especially The Screwtape Letters, The Chronicles of Narnia, and The Space Trilogy and for his non-fiction Christian apologetics, such as Mere Christianity, Miracles and The Problem of Pain.

Dr. Stephen R.C. Hicks expands on many of the views, philosophy and influence of C.S. Lewis in this episodes of The Open College podcast.

The post EP #17 | C. S. Lewis Christian Socialism appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
Should Christians be socialist and was C.S. Lewis a socialist? What are the basic themes and commitments that are common to all forms of christianity? Clive Staples Lewis was a British writer and theologian. He held academic positions in English literature at both Oxford University and Cambridge University He is best known for his works of fiction, especially The Screwtape Letters, The Chronicles of Narnia, and The Space Trilogy and for his non-fiction Christian apologetics, such as Mere Christianity, Miracles and The Problem of Pain. Dr. Stephen R.C. Hicks expands on many of the views, philosophy and influence of C.S. Lewis in this episodes of The Open College podcast.

The post EP #17 | C. S. Lewis Christian Socialism appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1682
EP 13 | Postmodernism’s Moral Low Ground https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-13-postmodernisms-moral-low-ground/ Wed, 20 Feb 2019 15:13:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1710 Intellectual battles are the cognitive lifeblood of a healthy society. Life is complicated and the stakes are high, so thoughtful and passionate people have lots of arguments. Only by argument can we sort out the facts about complicated matters, however postmodernists seem not to fight by the same rules as the rest of society.

The post EP 13 | Postmodernism’s Moral Low Ground appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
Intellectual battles are the cognitive lifeblood of a healthy society. Life is complicated and the stakes are high, so thoughtful and passionate people have lots of arguments. Only by argument can we sort out the facts about complicated matters, however postmodernists seem not to fight by the same rules as the rest of society.

The post EP 13 | Postmodernism’s Moral Low Ground appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1710
EP #12  | Being The Entrepreneur of Your Life https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-12-being-the-entrepreneur-of-your-life/ Mon, 11 Feb 2019 21:24:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1729 It can seem like entrepreneurs are a breed apart. But they’re not. All of us are born with the ability to take risks, think creatively and challenge the everyday way of doing things. That is to say, we’re all born with the entrepreneurial capacity.

The post EP #12  | Being The Entrepreneur of Your Life appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
It can seem like entrepreneurs are a breed apart. But they’re not. All of us are born with the ability to take risks, think creatively and challenge the everyday way of doing things. That is to say, we’re all born with the entrepreneurial capacity.

The post EP #12  | Being The Entrepreneur of Your Life appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1729
EP #10 | Bhopal: Government Subsidized Chaos https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-10-bhopal-government-subsidized-chaos/ Tue, 08 Jan 2019 02:35:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1746 Bhopal is a city in central India, and late in 1984 chemicals in large quantities spilled out of an industrial plant there, killing, maiming, and damaging tens of thousands of people.
The long-term estimated death toll from the 1984 Bhopal disaster in India is about 16,000 people, making it the worst human-caused environmental disaster in history.
In the high-tech society we strive to be, it is essential that we learn the causes of disasters so that we can correct our mistakes. Technology lessens many of life’s risks, but handled badly it can add other serious risks.

The post EP #10 | Bhopal: Government Subsidized Chaos appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
Bhopal is a city in central India, and late in 1984 chemicals in large quantities spilled out of an industrial plant there, killing, maiming, and damaging tens of thousands of people. The long-term estimated death toll from the 1984 Bhopal disaster in India is about 16,000 people, making it the worst human-caused environmental disaster in history. In the high-tech society we strive to be, it is essential that we learn the causes of disasters so that we can correct our mistakes. Technology lessens many of life’s risks, but handled badly it can add other serious risks.

The post EP #10 | Bhopal: Government Subsidized Chaos appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1746
EP #9 | Envy’s Moral Psychological Challenge https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-9-envys-moral-psychological-challenge/ Wed, 02 Jan 2019 03:17:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1752 The puzzle of envy and how it impacts our lives. Why does envy cause some of us to do destructive things? How do envy differ from jealousy?

The post EP #9 | Envy’s Moral Psychological Challenge appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
The puzzle of envy and how it impacts our lives. Why does envy cause some of us to do destructive things? How do envy differ from jealousy?

The post EP #9 | Envy’s Moral Psychological Challenge appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1752
EP #8 | Love Canal https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-8-love-canal/ Tue, 18 Dec 2018 03:35:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1758 Did government contribute to one of America’s greatest environmental disasters? What is eminent domain? Were any politicians or government officials prosecuted for criminal neglect?

The post EP #8 | Love Canal appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
Did government contribute to one of America’s greatest environmental disasters? What is eminent domain? Were any politicians or government officials prosecuted for criminal neglect?

The post EP #8 | Love Canal appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1758
EP #6 | Nietzsche’s Sister and The Will to Power https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-6-nietzsches-sister-and-the-will-to-power/ Tue, 20 Nov 2018 00:40:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1768 The story of the The Will to Power has the makings of a dramatic documentary film. It has a tormented genius, Friedrich Nietzsche, already recognized as one of the great minds of his generation, but forced to retire early for health problems. Living an itinerant life wandering Europe on a meager pension, he nonetheless working vigorously on his iconoclastic philosophy, to culminate in a work he suggested would be his greatest. But he collapses on the streets of Turin -- only 44 years old -- losing his mental faculties and most of his grip on reality. It's speculated that he caught syphilis from consorting with prostitutes, but more likely he has a slow-developing brain tumor. Nonetheless, the damaged philosopher is confined to an institution for the last decade of his life. But what of his final work, the unfinished manuscript he'd been working on -- maybe his magnum opus? What would be its fate?

The post EP #6 | Nietzsche’s Sister and The Will to Power appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
The story of the The Will to Power has the makings of a dramatic documentary film. It has a tormented genius, Friedrich Nietzsche, already recognized as one of the great minds of his generation, but forced to retire early for health problems. Living an itinerant life wandering Europe on a meager pension, he nonetheless working vigorously on his iconoclastic philosophy, to culminate in a work he suggested would be his greatest. But he collapses on the streets of Turin — only 44 years old — losing his mental faculties and most of his grip on reality. It’s speculated that he caught syphilis from consorting with prostitutes, but more likely he has a slow-developing brain tumor. Nonetheless, the damaged philosopher is confined to an institution for the last decade of his life. But what of his final work, the unfinished manuscript he’d been working on — maybe his magnum opus? What would be its fate?

The post EP #6 | Nietzsche’s Sister and The Will to Power appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1768
EP#5 | Conservatives Get Out of The Dark Ages https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep5-conservatives-get-out-of-the-dark-ages/ Mon, 12 Nov 2018 01:54:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1770 It's a faux pas in some intellectual circles -- mostly conservative ones -- to say that there was a Dark Ages in European history.
But the mainstream view has been that the Middle Ages were a dark period in Western history. What were the "Middle Ages" in the middle of? Between the Greco-Roman era and the Renaissance. Roughly a millennium. The evaluative claim is that the glories of Greece and Rome and the achievements of the Renaissance and early Modernity were outstanding. By contrast, the Middle Ages look dimmer or actually dark.

The post EP#5 | Conservatives Get Out of The Dark Ages appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
It’s a faux pas in some intellectual circles — mostly conservative ones — to say that there was a Dark Ages in European history. But the mainstream view has been that the Middle Ages were a dark period in Western history. What were the “Middle Ages” in the middle of? Between the Greco-Roman era and the Renaissance. Roughly a millennium. The evaluative claim is that the glories of Greece and Rome and the achievements of the Renaissance and early Modernity were outstanding. By contrast, the Middle Ages look dimmer or actually dark.

The post EP#5 | Conservatives Get Out of The Dark Ages appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1770
EP #2 | Violent Politics: Lesson of Marxist Philosophy https://possiblycorrect.com/podcast/ep-2-violent-politics-lesson-of-marxist-philosophy/ Tue, 23 Oct 2018 01:07:00 +0000 https://possiblycorrect.com/?post_type=podcast&p=1791 Our topic is the long history of violent far-left, especially Marxist, activism. Is it a coincidental that so much brutality emerged from Marx-inspired activists? Or is it accidental by-product of well-intentioned theory? Or is it a necessary and intended consequence of its principles? Leon Trotsky on Joseph Stalin in 1940: "Under all conditions well-organized violence seems to him the shortest distance between two points." Not just what the Marxist theoreticians and politicians said, what they did. A large number of intellectuals in the West, are aware of the atrocities but accept on them. Why?

The post EP #2 | Violent Politics: Lesson of Marxist Philosophy appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
Our topic is the long history of violent far-left, especially Marxist, activism. Is it a coincidental that so much brutality emerged from Marx-inspired activists? Or is it accidental by-product of well-intentioned theory? Or is it a necessary and intended consequence of its principles? Leon Trotsky on Joseph Stalin in 1940: “Under all conditions well-organized violence seems to him the shortest distance between two points.” Not just what the Marxist theoreticians and politicians said, what they did. A large number of intellectuals in the West, are aware of the atrocities but accept on them. Why?

The post EP #2 | Violent Politics: Lesson of Marxist Philosophy appeared first on Possibly Correct.

]]>
1791