Bilal Tahir

One Philosopher At A Time

One Philosopher At A Time is a story-driven philosophy podcast that explores the thinkers who shaped how we understand life, truth, morality, power, love, death, and meaning. Each episode focuses on one philosopher: who they were, what they believed, the world they lived in, and why their ideas still matter today. From Socrates and Plato to Nietzsche, Confucius, Simone de Beauvoir, Marcus Aurelius, and beyond, this show makes philosophy clear, human, and useful. No jargon. No academic gatekeeping. Just one thinker, one life, and one big idea at a time. Powered by Jellypod. (Powered by Jellypod...

Autor

Bilal Tahir

Kategorie

Education

Neueste Folge

10. Jul 2026

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Al-Ghazali and the Search for Certainty 11.06.2026

This episode traces Al-Ghazali’s dramatic intellectual crisis, from his rise in Baghdad to his turn toward spiritual discipline and the quest for true certainty. It also explores his critique of philosophy, his arguments about causation and divine knowledge, and why he remains a major thinker on doubt, faith, and the inner life.

Maimonides: Faith, Reason, and the Perplexed Mind 10.06.2026

This episode traces Maimonides’ life from medieval Spain to Egypt and explores how he became a physician, legal codifier, and major philosopher. It also unpacks his ideas on negative theology, biblical interpretation, Aristotle, and the tension between revelation and reason.

Averroes and the Unity of Truth 09.06.2026

Explore how Ibn Rushd became the Commentator, defending Aristotle while arguing that philosophy and revelation can coexist within a disciplined search for truth. The episode also traces his debates with Avicenna and Al-Ghazali, and his lasting influence on Islamic, Jewish, and Latin intellectual traditions.

Avicenna and the Secret of Being 08.06.2026

Explore how Ibn Sina became both a legendary physician and a towering philosopher, shaping medicine, logic, and metaphysics across the Islamic world and medieval Europe. The episode unpacks his distinction between essence and existence, his argument for the Necessary Existent, and why thinkers from Aquinas to Maimonides could not ignore him.

Aquinas and the Reason-Faith Map 07.06.2026

This episode introduces Thomas Aquinas, his Dominican life, and the medieval shockwave caused by Aristotle’s return to Europe. It also unpacks Aquinas’s core ideas on reason and revelation, scholastic method, act and potency, and the essence-existence distinction that shaped his arguments for God and natural law.

Augustine, Desire, and the Restless Heart 06.06.2026

This episode introduces Augustine of Hippo and explores why Confessions is more than autobiography: it is a deep inquiry into memory, desire, sin, and self-knowledge. It also explains his ideas about evil as privation, divided will, free will, grace, and the enduring influence of the City of God.

Heraclitus and the Hidden Order of Change 05.06.2026

This episode explores Heraclitus’s view that reality is always in motion, from rivers and fire to the tension of opposites. It also explains his idea of logos as the underlying pattern that gives change its intelligible structure.

Diogenes and the Art of Living Free 04.06.2026

This episode explores Diogenes of Sinope, the ancient Cynic who turned simplicity, shamelessness, and blunt truth-telling into a philosophy of freedom. It traces how his radical rejection of convention challenged status, comfort, and power, and why his ideas still resonate with Stoicism, satire, and critiques of consumer culture.

Epicurus: Pleasure Without Excess 03.06.2026

This episode explores Epicurus beyond the stereotype of luxury, tracing his modest life, the Garden in Athens, and his radical view that happiness comes from simplicity, friendship, and freedom from fear. It also breaks down his ideas about desire, the gods, and death, showing why his philosophy was really a guide to calm and independence.

Marcus Aurelius, Stoicism, and the Art of Self-Rule 03.06.2026

This episode explores Marcus Aurelius as both Roman emperor and Stoic philosopher, unpacking the historical pressures behind Meditations and the core Stoic ideas of judgment, virtue, duty, and mortality. It also considers the tension in his legacy: a guide to inner discipline shaped by an empire built on power, war, and hierarchy.

The Buddha, the Four Noble Truths, and the Middle Way 31.05.2026

This episode introduces Siddhartha Gautama and the historical uncertainty around his life before unpacking the Buddha’s core diagnosis of dukkha, craving, and liberation. It also explains the Four Noble Truths, the Middle Way, and the Eightfold Path as a practical framework for understanding impermanence, non-self, and disciplined living.

Laozi, Wu Wei, and the Way Behind the World 30.05.2026

This episode explores the legendary figure of Laozi, the origins of the Dao De Jing, and the central ideas of Dao and de. It also breaks down wu wei, water imagery, and Laozi’s upside-down ethics of softness, humility, and effective action.

Confucius, Ren, and the Power of Ritual 29.05.2026

This episode explores Confucius in a time of political breakdown, tracing how ren and li shape humaneness, self-discipline, and trust. It also unpacks the Analects as a teaching tradition and shows why moral formation, not just abstract theory, sits at the heart of Confucian thought.

Aristotle’s Four Causes, Form, and Change 28.05.2026

This episode introduces Aristotle’s life, his break with but debt to Plato, and why his writing feels so systematic and dense. It also breaks down his ideas of four causes, matter and form, and the distinction between potentiality and actuality.

Plato’s Cave, Forms, and the Fight for Truth 28.05.2026

This episode traces how Plato’s experience of Socrates’ death shaped his lifelong project, from the dialogue form and the Academy to his theory of Forms. It also breaks down the Allegory of the Cave and what Plato means by education, reality, and the tension between truth and politics.

Socrates and the Art of Questioning 28.05.2026

Explore how Socrates turned philosophy toward ethics, self-examination, and the search for virtue through relentless questioning. This episode also untangles the challenge of separating the historical Socrates from the portraits left by Plato, Xenophon, and Aristophanes.

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