4.6 • 2.3K Ratings
🗓️ 27 July 2020
⏱️ 68 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Continuing on Alia Al-Saji’s “A Phenomenology of Hesitation” (2014) and other things with guest Phil Hopkins.
Can we restructure our (and the police's) reactions and live with each other? We further explore the psychology of habit and Al-Saji's notion of hesitation. How does it compare to other types of heistation recommended by philosophies and religions?
Start with part one, or get the full, ad-free Citizen Edition. Includes a preview of our Citizen Hang.
End song: "Every Man's Burden" by Dusty Wright, as interviewed on Nakedly Examined Music #89.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | The partially examined life relies on your support. |
0:02.5 | To find out how to help in ways that are cheap or even free, |
0:05.4 | please visit partiallyexaminedlife.com slash support. |
0:16.5 | Hey, you're listening to the partially examined life episode 248 Part 2. |
0:21.5 | We've been discussing several sources, |
0:23.4 | where the Ponty's phenomenology perception a little bit from that. |
0:25.9 | We have now moved largely onto Alia Alsages, |
0:29.6 | a phenomenology of hesitation from 2014. |
0:33.4 | We're also as needed bringing in Linda Martina Alcov's |
0:36.8 | some sections from visible identities. |
0:39.2 | So I think one of the points we had just closed on was |
0:42.1 | we're trying to think about the extent to which racism is embedded in us, |
0:47.3 | not as subconscious beliefs, |
0:50.2 | but as habits and method brought up cognitive behavioral therapy. |
0:55.2 | One of the things I really value about dialectical behavioral therapy, right? |
0:58.9 | Is it just really doesn't care about diagnosis very much, right? |
1:02.2 | I mean, it doesn't really want to sort of analyze, |
1:05.2 | okay, what caused this problem, right? |
1:07.3 | Or what condition do you have? |
1:09.0 | It wants to look at what it often likes to call strategies |
1:13.2 | for acting in the world and reformulate those strategies |
1:17.0 | so that they work better for you. |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Mark Linsenmayer, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Mark Linsenmayer and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.