Episodes

  • A Reality Check on Reality TV
    Oct 4 2024

    Twenty-five years ago, reality TV exploded in popularity, and the media panicked. But could shows like Love Is Blind and their like actually help make us more media literate? IDEAS examines the culture, morality, and philosophy of unscripted television. *This episode originally aired on May 6, 2024.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • Masseys at 60: How physicist Ursula Franklin's prescient ideas live on
    Oct 3 2024

    Technology is much more than a tool. Physicist Ursula Franklin argued that it’s a system — one so powerful that it can shape our mindset, our society and our politics. Her observations were prescient when she delivered her Massey Lecture in 1989 and they are all the more relevant today. Ursula Franklin’s friend and collaborator Jane Freeman reflects on the power of Franklin’s message.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • Making Justice Imaginable: Lawyer Lex Gill
    Oct 2 2024

    "We must mend what has been torn apart, make justice imaginable again in a world so obviously unjust," wrote Albert Camus. In a lecture delivered at Crow's Theatre, lawyer Lex Gill considers how social and cultural movements can nudge the evolution of law and explores how to keep working for justice, regardless of the odds.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • Left Is Not Woke: Susan Neiman
    Oct 1 2024

    In recent years, the word "woke" has evolved from a catchphrase into a political ideology — and a catch-all pejorative routinely wielded on the right against its left-leaning adherents. But in her book, Left Is Not Woke, moral philosopher Susan Neiman argues that the "woke" ideology represents a fundamental break from traditional leftist ideals. *This episode originally aired on April 12, 2023.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • How Indigenous survival offers a blueprint for everyone’s future: Jesse Wente
    Sep 30 2024

    The future we want has already existed — we just need to recover it, says Jesse Wente. In a talk, the Anishinaabe arts leader explains how the best of this past gives everyone a blueprint for a better future. "We are evidence that cultures can withstand global systems change: adapt, and rebuild." *This episode originally aired on June 21, 2024.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • Slowing Down in Urgent Times: A Lesson in Hope
    Sep 27 2024

    Educators are wired for hope, according to professor Jessica Riddell. In her lecture delivered at the University of Prince Edward Island, she underscores the importance of slowing down in urgent times, and urges educators to to teach hope, share it, and imagine a better future.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • Deliberation in a Time of Anger: Making Space for Collective Decision-Making
    Sep 26 2024

    At a time of ever-growing polarization, where people are less and less likely to cross paths with those who don’t agree with them, what does it take to deliberate? IDEAS producer Naheed Mustafa explores whether there’s space for collective decision-making in an era marked by anger and disagreement.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • Gaston Bachelard's The Poetics of Space: A Place to Dream
    Sep 25 2024

    It's been 60 years since French thinker Gaston Bachelard’s The Poetics of Space made its English-language debut. It’s a hard-to-define book — part architecture, philosophy, psychoanalysis, memoir. And it continues to feed our ongoing need for purposeful solitude and wide-open fields for our imagination.*This episode originally aired on March 7, 2022.

    Show more Show less
    54 mins