Stoic philosophers described anger as a temporary madness and argued that we should eliminate it wherever possible. More recently Martha Nussbaum has argued for keeping anger out of political debates. In this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast, in contrast, Myisha Cherry makes the case for rage in some specific circumstances. She discusses rage with Nigel Warburton.
Skye Cleary on Authenticity
Peter Railton on AI and Ethics
Clare Chambers on the Unmodified Body
Peter Singer on Consequentialism
Cecile Fabre on the Ethics of Spying
Ro Khanna on Digital Dignity
Benjamin Lipscomb on 4 Women Philosophers
Paul Bloom on Psychological Hedonism,
Agnes Callard on Complaint
Arash Abizadeh on Thomas Hobbes' Ethics
Steven Nadler on Spinoza on Free Speech
Suki Finn on the Metaphysics of Nothing
Peter Salmon on Derrida on Deconstruction
David Bather Woods on Schopenhauer on Compassion
Samantha Rose Hill on Hannah Arendt on Pluralism
David Edmonds on Undercover Robot
Steven Nadler on Spinoza on Death
Kate Manne on Misogyny and Male Entitlement
Liam Bright on Verificationism
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