All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Euclid’s Optics

    • February 4, 2024
    • PBS

    What are the limitations and possibilities of perception—and what do ancient mathematics and modern literature have to say about this question?

  • S01E02 Family Drama: From Oedipus to Ozu

    • February 11, 2024
    • PBS

    This episode searches for insights into the nature of family, the tension between the safety and anxiety that family creates, and the rich and multiple ways that different artists, works, cultures, and mediums express these insights.

  • S01E03 The Ideal Community: The Adventure to Try

    • February 18, 2024
    • PBS

    Can an ideal human community ever be achieved? A conversation on Plato’s Republic, Du Bois’ The Souls of Black Folk, and the conflict between the ideals that America was founded upon and the lived reality of life.

  • S01E04 Pursuing the Eternal Present

    • February 25, 2024
    • PBS

    Does a contemplative life bring us closer to the divine, as Aristotle believed? Is it the highest form of human life or is it self-centered and lived at the expense of others? Can one lead a contemplative life while living in the real world?

  • S01E05 The Pillow Book of Sei Shōnagon

    • March 3, 2024
    • PBS

    What is it to write? What roles do ceremony, beauty, and material play in the act of writing? Not only is the Pillow Book of Sei Shōnagon an early classic of Japanese literature, written in the 10th century, it is also the world’s first sustained portrayal of an individual self as she lives, thinks, and feels from day to day.

  • S01E06 What is Freedom and How Do We Cultivate It?

    • March 10, 2024
    • PBS

    Liberal education is education for freedom. What kind of freedom does it or should it cultivate? A probing conversation into the nature of freedom, the ways in which individuals and communities can cultivate it, and the need for self-discipline in tempering our freedoms.

  • S01E07 Home and Hunger: The Crossroads of Food and Thought

    • March 17, 2024
    • PBS

    This episode, rich in metaphor and poetry, connects gastronomy, language, thought, and community to a theme to which all humans can relate: wanting to know and be at home in the world.

  • S01E08 Sophrosyne: In Search of Moderation

    • March 24, 2024
    • PBS

    Sophrosyne is the ancient Greek word for moderation, one of the four classical virtues. But what does Socrates’ definition of moderation really mean and how is it connected to another virtue: courage?

  • S01E09 Can A Book Be A Friend?

    • March 31, 2024
    • PBS

    Is a book dead or alive? Can one be friends with a book, or with the author behind the book? This episode explores the very personal relationships that humans have with books, and the complex questions they bring up in all of us.

  • S01E10 Lincoln's New Birth of Freedom

    • April 7, 2024
    • PBS

    How did the Civil War bring about a new birth of freedom? What about the lynchings, segregation, and deep economic inequalities that followed? Did Lincoln foresee the nation would need multiple new births to maintain its ideals and opportunities for all citizens? How has—and hasn’t—the nation realized Lincoln's vision at Gettysburg?

  • S01E11 The Thrill of Literature—and of the Universe

    • April 14, 2024
    • PBS

    Is it important to feel when we read literature? Or when we learn math and science? On a related front, what is the role of order and disruption in literature, in life, and in our observation of the universe?

  • S01E12 The Fool's Paradise: To Where Does Travel Lead?

    • April 21, 2024
    • PBS

    Why do writers travel? Why do some authors write their most influential works in foreign countries? Does the unknown bring new insights and transformation, or do new lands provide nothing more than romantic myths for the imagination?

  • S01E13 Science as a Liberal Art

    • April 28, 2024
    • PBS

    In this episode, a conversation on St John's College' unique approach to scientific and mathematical study. Authors touched upon include Galileo, Leibniz, Maxwell, Thompson, Schrödinger, Bohr, Einstein, Heisenberg, Faraday, and Descartes.

  • S01E14 Practicing for Death: Integrating Mind and Body

    • May 5, 2024
    • PBS

    Through the writings of the 13th-century Japanese author Dogen and the 16th-century French author Montaigne—explore how physical presence and pain can take us out of our minds and into a practice that prepares us for the vicissitudes of life and the certainty of death through an integration of mind, body, and soul.

  • S01E15 The Challenge of Translation

    • May 12, 2024
    • PBS

    In this episode, we discuss the complexities of translation, including the role of interpretation and emotion, as humans attempt to understand and communicate ideas across linguistic boundaries through literary translation and dialogue with each other.

  • S01E16 Vanquishing the Enemy: Sports, War and Seminar?

    • May 19, 2024
    • PBS

    What is the relationship between sports and war? And what is seminar's relationship to both? From conversational cooperation to sportsmanlike competition to brutal war, this episode takes us on a journey through the best and worst of human nature.

  • S01E17 We, the Terrible Listeners

    • May 26, 2024
    • PBS

    This episode discusses the importance of learning to hear and understand the language of those who are unlike us, of supporting quieter and less represented voices in conversation, and building true community through the committed practice of listening.

  • S01E18 Can War be Beautiful?

    • June 2, 2024
    • PBS

    Can killing and dying in war be beautiful? Is a just cause required for glory to be gained? Is war a courageous way of fulfilling human nature and, ultimately, of embracing the reality that death awaits us all?