Marshall Madow
Notions of Progress
The idea of progress — that humanity advances through time toward something better — has been a contested assumption throughout history. The question of whether we as a species, a nation, or as individuals are progressing is being interrogated with a renewed urgency that the present moment demands. Whether that advancement is real, illusory, unevenly distributed, or simply beside the point depends on who is asking, from where, and by what measure. Notions of Progress is a podcast that takes those questions seriously, tracing how the idea of progress has been understood, contested, and reimagin...
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Episodes
Aristotle, Telos, and the Good Life: What Human Flourishing Actually Means pt. 1 29.06.2026 11:14
In the last three episodes, Matt Ehret argued that the history of progress is a contest between two competing visions of civilization: one that develops its internal capacities, and one that manages and depletes them. At the center of that argument was a framework introduced in Episode 11 — the open system and the closed system. That framework raised a question we deliberately set aside: what exac...
Interview with Matt Ehret Pt. 3: Plato vs. Aristotle: The Divide That Still Shapes How We Think 15.06.2026 10:41
What if the divide between Plato and Aristotle is not a chapter in the history of philosophy — but a structural fault line that still determines how civilizations think about knowledge, progress, and discovery? In the final part of his three-part conversation, Matt Ehret presents his argument that this ancient divide carries forward as a kind of civilizational operating system — one whose conseque...
Interview with Matt Ehret Pt. 2: The Allegory of the Cave 01.06.2026 30:35
What if the most cited passage in Western philosophy has been deliberately misread — by both its critics and its supposed followers? In Part 2 of his conversation with Matt Ehret, Marshall examines the Allegory of the Cave, the Sophist movement, and a lineage of misuse running from ancient Athens to Leo Strauss and the neoconservative movement. Ehret argues that the Republic is not the blueprint f...
Interview with Matt Ehret - Plato vs. Aristotle: The Flame, the Vessel, and the Fate of Human Progress 18.05.2026 38:28
Matt Ehret argues that the divide between Plato and Aristotle is not a historical curiosity confined to the ancient world — it is a living fault line that continues to shape how civilizations understand learning, discovery, and human advancement. In this first of three episodes with Ehret, he makes the case that the Platonic method — learning as recollection, knowledge as something awakened from w...
Aristotle vs. Plato: Two Theories of Progress — and the Institution That Produced Both 04.05.2026 19:24
The Academy was built on a wager: that philosophy could be institutionalized, accumulated, and transmitted across generations. Episode 10 asks whether the bet paid off — and finds the answer in the man Plato trained himself. This episode traces Aristotle’s intellectual break with Plato, the philosophical distance between their two theories of human advancement, and the founding of the Lyceum as a...
How Did Plato’s Academy Teach What Could Not Be Taught? 20.04.2026 29:26
Plato named philosophy. But naming it was only the first move. The harder question was whether an institution could be built to make the progress he was wagering on actually work. Episode 9 examines the Academy — not as an idea, but as a place, a community, and a method. Drawing on Prof. W.K.C. Guthrie’s account in A History of Greek Philosophy (Vols. IV and VI), Prof. Werner Jaeger’s Paideia: The...
The Word and the Wager: How Plato Named and Claimed Philosophy | Ep. 8 pt 1 06.04.2026 16:38
About This Episode Where did the word “philosopher” come from — and who got to decide what it meant? In Episode 8, Part 1 of Notions of Progress, we trace the moment Plato took a word that had begun as a mocking label and transformed it into an institutional claim. Prof. Christopher Moore’s Calling Philosophers Names (Princeton University Press, 2020) shows us how the coining of philosophos was no...
Plato vs. the Sophists: Rhetoric, Power, and the Making of Callicles | Ep. 7 pt 2 23.03.2026 31:49
About This Episode Can rhetoric make better citizens — or does it simply make better manipulators through the art of persuasion? In Part 2 of the Plato vs. the Sophists arc, Notions of Progress follows Plato’s argument from the Meno to the Gorgias to answer that question. Building on Part 1’s examination of the Cave allegory and the doctrine of recollection, this episode turns to Plato’s two remai...
Plato vs. the Sophists: The Allegory of the Cave As His Answer On Progress | Ep. 6 pt 1 09.03.2026 20:37
In this episode of Notions of Progress — the first of a two-part examination of Plato — we ask what happens to the Sophists’ theory of progress once Plato is done with it. The Sophists had argued that human beings advance through the accumulation of teachable skill: collectively, cumulatively, and through the civic power of persuasion. Plato systematically dismantled each of those claims. This epi...
The Sophists: Fifth Century Enlightenment? | Ep. 5 Pt.1 24.02.2026 22:16
About This Episode In this episode of Notions of Progress — the first of a two-part solo series — we ask a deceptively simple question: were the ancient Greek Sophists the original enlightenment-like thinkers of human progress? These were the famous and sought-after educators of fifth-century Athens. They charged fees, itinerant, and claimed that human excellence could be developed, not just inher...
Five Faces of Progress: The Road to Anti-Progress |Prof. Tyson Retz Pt.2 | Ep. 4 09.02.2026 44:35
About This Episode In this episode of Notions of Progress - Part Two, we continue exploring the fascinating evolution of progress thinking with Professor Tyson Retz, author of "Progress in the Scale of History" (Cambridge University Press, 2022). In this episode, Professor Retz discusses categories 3-5 of his framework: Relative Progress, Everybody’s Progress and Anti-Progress. He starts this open...
Five Faces of Progress: A Conceptual Framework for Historical Change |Prof. Tyson Retz | Ep. 3 Pt.1 26.01.2026 31:36
About This Episode In this episode of Notions of Progress, we explore the fascinating evolution of progress thinking with Professor Tyson Retz, an intellectual historian at the University of Stavanger in Norway and author of "Progress and the Scale of History" (Cambridge University Press, 2022). Professor Retz introduces his innovative five-category framework that traces various conceptions of pro...
The Promethean Question: : Greek Views on Technological Progress | Ep. 2 13.01.2026 21:16
In Episode 2 of Notions of Progress, we explore the "Promethean Question" - examining Greek antiquity's perspectives on technological progress from 700-300 BCE. Did the ancient Greeks view technology as a divine gift or a dangerous curse? SUBSCRIBE & LISTEN: → YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@notionsofprogress?sub_confirmation=1 → Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/notions-...
Show Trailer - The Long Road To Progress | Ep. 1 18.12.2025 12:26
In "Notions of Progress," host Marshall Madow explores the concept of progress through history, examining technological advancements and philosophical ideas. This trailer delves into themes like AI, transhumanism, and technological determinism, tracing progress from ancient Greece to modern times. It questions the assumptions behind progress and its impact on human life, offering a glimpse of what...
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