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EPISODE ARCHIVES
TTBOOK is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show about big ideas from the great minds of our time.DANGEROUS IDEAS
The atom bomb is a literal dangerous idea. But there are other kinds of dangerous ideas — ideas that are contrarian, counterintuitive or just plain unconventional. In Dangerous Ideas, we ask guests to challenge conventional wisdom with a solution to a problem or an interpretation of the world that might seem confusing and scary, but just might also make perfect sense. LISTENING TO THE CITY Listening To Trees As Fellow Citizens. Photo Gallery. Biologist David Haskell has been listening to and recording the sounds of urban trees. Haskell can identify leaves by sound, and talks about listening as a way of doing science. He explains why nature/culture is a falsedichotomy.
THE WEIRD, WILD WORLD OF MUSHROOMS The Soil-Cleaning, Insect-Warding, Smallpox-Curing Power of Mushrooms. Paul Stamets may be the most passionate mycologist on the planet. He tells Steve why new medicines and technologies derived from mushrooms might save life as we know it. THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF TREES Trees talk to each other, and even form alliances with other trees or other species. Some are incredibly old — the root mass of aspens might live 100,000 years. In this hour, we explore the science andhistory of trees.
RELIGION WITHOUT DOCTRINE Personal Loss and the Religious Imagination of Scholar Elaine Pagels. Audio. The religion scholar Elaine Pagels introduced the world to the ancient Gnostic Gospels. 25 years later, she's finally ready to talk about how her own grief — after the deaths of her young son and husband — shaped her religious imagination.SECRETS OF ALCHEMY
When anthropologists Jason Pine traveled to Rural Missouri, he wound up spending a lot of time observing underground meth labs and he came to a startling conclusion that the meth cooks of the Ozarks are today's alchemists, turning base metals into gold. His book, The Alchemy of Meth, is a brutal look at the process. DECOLONIZING THE MIND Steve Paulson ( 04:44 ): Because so many contemporary debates are actually debates about the legacy of colonialism and its racist underpinnings. Issues like identity, history, language, policing, what should or should not be taught in school, these are all debates about decolonizing the mind, about confronting our past. TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE TTBOOK is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show about big ideas from the great minds of our time. TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE Quan Barry on 'White Fang'. Bookmarks. "White Fang" by Jack London is a classic outdoor adventure story about a wild wolf-dog's struggle to survive in the Yukon Territory during the 1890's Gold Rush. Writer Quan Barry read it for the first time at age 11EPISODE ARCHIVES
TTBOOK is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show about big ideas from the great minds of our time.DANGEROUS IDEAS
The atom bomb is a literal dangerous idea. But there are other kinds of dangerous ideas — ideas that are contrarian, counterintuitive or just plain unconventional. In Dangerous Ideas, we ask guests to challenge conventional wisdom with a solution to a problem or an interpretation of the world that might seem confusing and scary, but just might also make perfect sense. LISTENING TO THE CITY Listening To Trees As Fellow Citizens. Photo Gallery. Biologist David Haskell has been listening to and recording the sounds of urban trees. Haskell can identify leaves by sound, and talks about listening as a way of doing science. He explains why nature/culture is a falsedichotomy.
THE WEIRD, WILD WORLD OF MUSHROOMS The Soil-Cleaning, Insect-Warding, Smallpox-Curing Power of Mushrooms. Paul Stamets may be the most passionate mycologist on the planet. He tells Steve why new medicines and technologies derived from mushrooms might save life as we know it. THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF TREES Trees talk to each other, and even form alliances with other trees or other species. Some are incredibly old — the root mass of aspens might live 100,000 years. In this hour, we explore the science andhistory of trees.
RELIGION WITHOUT DOCTRINE Personal Loss and the Religious Imagination of Scholar Elaine Pagels. Audio. The religion scholar Elaine Pagels introduced the world to the ancient Gnostic Gospels. 25 years later, she's finally ready to talk about how her own grief — after the deaths of her young son and husband — shaped her religious imagination.SECRETS OF ALCHEMY
When anthropologists Jason Pine traveled to Rural Missouri, he wound up spending a lot of time observing underground meth labs and he came to a startling conclusion that the meth cooks of the Ozarks are today's alchemists, turning base metals into gold. His book, The Alchemy of Meth, is a brutal look at the process. DECOLONIZING THE MIND Steve Paulson ( 04:44 ): Because so many contemporary debates are actually debates about the legacy of colonialism and its racist underpinnings. Issues like identity, history, language, policing, what should or should not be taught in school, these are all debates about decolonizing the mind, about confronting our past. SERIES | TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE Series. On To the Best of Our Knowledge, we have deep conversations with a wide array of people about the things that inspire them and the big ideas they draw from that inspiration. In our regular series—Bookmarks, Deep Tracks, and Dangerous Ideas—we ask those individuals to describe their ideas and the inspirations that drivethem in their
ABOUT US | TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE To The Best Of Our Knowledge is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show that is curious about everything and aims makes your world bigger. We have conversations with novelists and poets, scientists and software engineers, journalists and historians, filmmakers and philosophers, artists and activists—anyone with a big idea and a passion to have a creative and MINISTERS OF LONELINESS While COVID-19 is dangerous and mysterious, a parallel pandemic, loneliness, is in some ways even scarier. Loneliness is quieter and its symptoms can be nearly invisible. Enter the vital moment of the international "Ministers of Loneliness." Around the world, countries are officially tapping people to tackle this cultural disease. The United Kingdom has led the way, having aREADING WHILE YOUNG
Quan Barry on 'White Fang'. Bookmarks. "White Fang" by Jack London is a classic outdoor adventure story about a wild wolf-dog's struggle to survive in the Yukon Territory during the 1890's Gold Rush. Writer Quan Barry read it for the first time at age 11 and learned just how powerful a book can be.WHY DO WE MEET?
When We Gather, We Need Rituals. Staff meetings, family reunions, dinner parties — even with all the digital ways we have to connect, face-to-face gatherings are still a regular part of our lives. Priya Parker thinks we need new traditions to make those gatheringsmeaningful.
EYE-TO-EYE ANIMAL ENCOUNTERS Anne Strainchamps ( 26:22 ): There's another famous story, a contemporary story, about an eye to eye encounter, and it was also at a moment of the death of an animal. It's a story that eco warrior, Paul Watson, tells about looking into the eyes of a dying whale. Actually, it occurs to me now that that experience also marked aseminal moment in
DECOLONIZING THE MIND Steve Paulson ( 04:44 ): Because so many contemporary debates are actually debates about the legacy of colonialism and its racist underpinnings. Issues like identity, history, language, policing, what should or should not be taught in school, these are all debates about decolonizing the mind, about confronting our past. WHAT SPARKS CREATIVITY? A Neuroscientist and a Novelist Put Creativity Under a Microscope. Novelist Siri Hustvedt knows how the creative process feels. Neuroscientist Heather Berlin knows what it looks like in the brain. Together with Steve, they explore the emerging science of creativity. 'EACH OTHER'S HARVEST' Poet Gwendolyn Brooks, in honor of activist, actor and musician Paul Robeson, wrote: “We are each other's harvest: we are each other's business: we are each other’s magnitude and bond.” Those lines inspired the title of a new book out this spring, “We Are Each Other’s Harvest: Celebrating African American Farmers, Land and Legacy,” by Natalie Baszile. On the cover is a THE ART OF REINVENTING YOURSELF Rashid Johnson is a rising star in the art world. Using signature materials like shea butter and black soap, he explores themes of race, yearning and escape, and grapples with what it means to come of age as a black artist and intellectual. TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE TTBOOK is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show about big ideas from the great minds of our time. SERIES | TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE Series. On To the Best of Our Knowledge, we have deep conversations with a wide array of people about the things that inspire them and the big ideas they draw from that inspiration. In our regular series—Bookmarks, Deep Tracks, and Dangerous Ideas—we ask those individuals to describe their ideas and the inspirations that drivethem in their
TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE Quan Barry on 'White Fang'. Bookmarks. "White Fang" by Jack London is a classic outdoor adventure story about a wild wolf-dog's struggle to survive in the Yukon Territory during the 1890's Gold Rush. Writer Quan Barry read it for the first time at age 11EPISODE ARCHIVES
TTBOOK is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show about big ideas from the great minds of our time.DANGEROUS IDEAS
The atom bomb is a literal dangerous idea. But there are other kinds of dangerous ideas — ideas that are contrarian, counterintuitive or just plain unconventional. In Dangerous Ideas, we ask guests to challenge conventional wisdom with a solution to a problem or an interpretation of the world that might seem confusing and scary, but just might also make perfect sense. THE WEIRD, WILD WORLD OF MUSHROOMS The Soil-Cleaning, Insect-Warding, Smallpox-Curing Power of Mushrooms. Paul Stamets may be the most passionate mycologist on the planet. He tells Steve why new medicines and technologies derived from mushrooms might save life as we know it. LISTENING TO THE CITY Listening To Trees As Fellow Citizens. Photo Gallery. Biologist David Haskell has been listening to and recording the sounds of urban trees. Haskell can identify leaves by sound, and talks about listening as a way of doing science. He explains why nature/culture is a falsedichotomy.
THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF TREES Trees talk to each other, and even form alliances with other trees or other species. Some are incredibly old — the root mass of aspens might live 100,000 years. In this hour, we explore the science andhistory of trees.
RELIGION WITHOUT DOCTRINE Personal Loss and the Religious Imagination of Scholar Elaine Pagels. Audio. The religion scholar Elaine Pagels introduced the world to the ancient Gnostic Gospels. 25 years later, she's finally ready to talk about how her own grief — after the deaths of her young son and husband — shaped her religious imagination. HOPE: HOW DO YOU MAKE IT? Hope is deeply embedded in our spiritual traditions. It's one of the three cardinal virtues. And for a lot of people belief in God is what gives them hope. Well, Serene Jones is the first woman to head the historic Union Theological Seminary in New York, and she says hope isalso a
TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE TTBOOK is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show about big ideas from the great minds of our time. SERIES | TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE Series. On To the Best of Our Knowledge, we have deep conversations with a wide array of people about the things that inspire them and the big ideas they draw from that inspiration. In our regular series—Bookmarks, Deep Tracks, and Dangerous Ideas—we ask those individuals to describe their ideas and the inspirations that drivethem in their
TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE Quan Barry on 'White Fang'. Bookmarks. "White Fang" by Jack London is a classic outdoor adventure story about a wild wolf-dog's struggle to survive in the Yukon Territory during the 1890's Gold Rush. Writer Quan Barry read it for the first time at age 11EPISODE ARCHIVES
TTBOOK is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning radio show about big ideas from the great minds of our time.DANGEROUS IDEAS
The atom bomb is a literal dangerous idea. But there are other kinds of dangerous ideas — ideas that are contrarian, counterintuitive or just plain unconventional. In Dangerous Ideas, we ask guests to challenge conventional wisdom with a solution to a problem or an interpretation of the world that might seem confusing and scary, but just might also make perfect sense. THE WEIRD, WILD WORLD OF MUSHROOMS The Soil-Cleaning, Insect-Warding, Smallpox-Curing Power of Mushrooms. Paul Stamets may be the most passionate mycologist on the planet. He tells Steve why new medicines and technologies derived from mushrooms might save life as we know it. LISTENING TO THE CITY Listening To Trees As Fellow Citizens. Photo Gallery. Biologist David Haskell has been listening to and recording the sounds of urban trees. Haskell can identify leaves by sound, and talks about listening as a way of doing science. He explains why nature/culture is a falsedichotomy.
THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF TREES Trees talk to each other, and even form alliances with other trees or other species. Some are incredibly old — the root mass of aspens might live 100,000 years. In this hour, we explore the science andhistory of trees.
RELIGION WITHOUT DOCTRINE Personal Loss and the Religious Imagination of Scholar Elaine Pagels. Audio. The religion scholar Elaine Pagels introduced the world to the ancient Gnostic Gospels. 25 years later, she's finally ready to talk about how her own grief — after the deaths of her young son and husband — shaped her religious imagination. HOPE: HOW DO YOU MAKE IT? Hope is deeply embedded in our spiritual traditions. It's one of the three cardinal virtues. And for a lot of people belief in God is what gives them hope. Well, Serene Jones is the first woman to head the historic Union Theological Seminary in New York, and she says hope isalso a
SERIES | TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE On To the Best of Our Knowledge, we have deep conversations with a wide array of people about the things that inspire them and the big ideas they draw from that inspiration.In our regular series—Bookmarks, Deep Tracks, and Dangerous Ideas—we ask those individuals to describe their ideas and the inspirations that drive them in their own words.DANGEROUS IDEAS
The atom bomb is a literal dangerous idea. But there are other kinds of dangerous ideas — ideas that are contrarian, counterintuitive or just plain unconventional. In Dangerous Ideas, we ask guests to challenge conventional wisdom with a solution to a problem or an interpretation of the world that might seem confusing and scary, but just might also make perfect sense. HOPE | TO THE BEST OF OUR KNOWLEDGE Conceptually, hope feels big, amorphous, hard to define exactly. But for the past few months, "To The Best Of Our Knowledge" producers have been trying anyway. Scientists, activists, futurists, theologians, artists, authors all weighed in on what they think when they hear theword "hope." More.
THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF TREES Trees talk to each other, and even form alliances with other trees or other species. Some are incredibly old — the root mass of aspens might live 100,000 years. In this hour, we explore the science andhistory of trees.
HOPE: HOW DO YOU MAKE IT? Hope is deeply embedded in our spiritual traditions. It's one of the three cardinal virtues. And for a lot of people belief in God is what gives them hope. Well, Serene Jones is the first woman to head the historic Union Theological Seminary in New York, and she says hope isalso a
THE CABINET OF ANIMAL CURIOSITIES Sometime in the midst of working on radio shows this past year and a half on vaccines, the election, parenting and other deep and immediate subjects, I read a book about birds. Helen Macdonald’s latest book, “Vesper Flights,” has essays called “The Human Flock,” “Swan Upping,” and “A Cuckoo in the House.” There are non-bird essays, too, but somehow they all fit together. EYE-TO-EYE ANIMAL ENCOUNTERS Anne Strainchamps ( 26:22 ): There's another famous story, a contemporary story, about an eye to eye encounter, and it was also at a moment of the death of an animal. It's a story that eco warrior, Paul Watson, tells about looking into the eyes of a dying whale. Actually, it occurs to me now that that experience also marked aseminal moment in
DECOLONIZING THE MIND Steve Paulson ( 04:44 ): Because so many contemporary debates are actually debates about the legacy of colonialism and its racist underpinnings. Issues like identity, history, language, policing, what should or should not be taught in school, these are all debates about decolonizing the mind, about confronting our past. TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE January 31, 2016. Reading books isn't always the best way to learn. Some things you need to learn from your elders, and their wisdom has often been passed down through the generations. We celebrate traditional ways of knowing - from the Potawatomi knowledge of the plant world to the Norwegian folk wisdom of how to chop and burn wood. WHAT SPARKS CREATIVITY? A Neuroscientist and a Novelist Put Creativity Under a Microscope. Novelist Siri Hustvedt knows how the creative process feels. Neuroscientist Heather Berlin knows what it looks like in the brain. Together with Steve, they explore the emerging science of creativity. Skip to main content Skip to audio player INTELLIGENT. OPTIMISTIC. CURIOUS.Show Navigation
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THE HISTORICAL LESSONS EMBEDDED IN ALCHEMICAL RECIPESArticles
Pamela Smith's science history students spend a semester taking medieval alchemical recipes and re-creating them in a lab.MoreLATEST STORIES
'A $400K CONTAINER FOR A WASHING MACHINE': AN AUTHOR GRAPPLES WITH THE INHERENT ICKINESS OF HOMEOWNERSHIPArticles
In her new book, author Eula Biss reckons with a new phase in her life, moving from an apartment in Chicago to the first house her family owns. While that dream is about as American as the proverbial apple pie, Biss ruminates on the reality that it’s an impossible dream for many people.Length:
11:56
A MUSEUM OF THE MUNDANEArticles
"Museum of Everyday Life" founder and curator Clare Dolan calls it "an ongoing, revolutionary experiment" — a celebration of "the mysterious delight embedded in the banal but beloved objects we toucheveryday.
Length:
12:12
THE MAGNUM OPUS OF POINTLESS STUFFAudio
When Angelo visited the House on the Rock for the first time, at first he saw a testament to one man's obsession and demented imagination. But then he started to think — does he have his own bizarre collection of stuff in his home?Length:
4:33
A PARENTING MOVEMENT EMERGES FROM THE PANDEMICArticles
When the pandemic hit, it laid bare just how precarious parenting arrangements were — especially for single parents, parents who can't work from home, and the unemployed. Working mothers in particular lostjobs
or were forced to quit to take care of children at home. Journalist Alissa Quart spoke with Shannon about why a "parenting revolution" might be on the horizon.Length:
18:53
COLSON WHITEHEAD'S 'THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD'Articles
Colson Whitehead’s novel "The Underground Railroad" won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. Steve Paulson spoke with him about this powerful, sweeping epic.Length:
12:46
THE FIRST JOB, THE POLLING PLACE, THE COMMUNITY SPACE: HOW MCDONALD'S BECAME 'THE CLOSEST THING TO HOME' FOR BLACK COMMUNITIESArticles
Historian Marcia Chatelain found a surprising connection between McDonald's and civil rights history when researching her book "Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America." She writes about the intersection of race, capitalism and fast food.Length:
13:56
COOKING GREENS: A DELICIOUS FAMILY HISTORY LESSONAudio
John Givens invites us into his kitchen where he cooks his family'straditional greens.
Length:
3:34
TWO TAPE RECORDERS AND TWENTY KNIVESAudio
For more than 40 years, Marina Abramovic has been testing what’s permissible — and physically possible — in art.Length:
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SECRETS OF ALCHEMY
We explore the ancient, obscure, occult science and art of alchemy — it turns out to be a lot more relevant to our lives than you’dbelieve.More
THINKING WITH ANIMALS Can we ever get inside the mind of an animal? Can we really know how an octopus or a parrot thinks? Also, the fascinating story of Charles Foster's attempt to act like a badger, when he lived in a hole in the ground and ate worms.MoreBOOKMARKS
ENRIQUE SALMON ON 'THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN' “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” by Mark Twain is one of the most controversial books in the American literary canon, particularly because of its frequent use of the N word. But for Enrique Salmon, a young Native kid trying to master the English language, “Huckleberry Finn” was the book that launched his lifelong love of reading. READ MORE IN OUR BOOKMARKS HUB >Sponsored by:
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A PARENTING REVOLUTION The pandemic has made clear that parents are walking a tightrope with no safety net. Is it time for a parenting revolution? KINSHIP WITH THE MORE-THAN-HUMAN WORLD Human identity cannot be separated from our nonhuman kin. From forest ecology to the human microbiome, emerging research suggests that being human is a complicated journey made possible only by the good graces of our many companions.IDEAS FROM AFRICA
“Ideas From Africa” explores the world of contemporary scholars, writers and artists who are redefining our understanding of Africa’s past and helping to shape its future. Through interviews, personal stories, soundscapes and field recordings, this radio project investigates a series of big ideas and provocative questions.FULL ARCHIVES
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