The Journey Begins (Plus Blind Ranking Philosophers): Difference between revisions
More actions
m Text replacement - " The preroll contains the standard disclaimer and theme_music." to "" |
m Text replacement - "{{StructuredQuote" to "{{Opening_Quote" |
||
| (10 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
| release_date = November 25, 2025 | | release_date = November 25, 2025 | ||
| length = 01:29:41 | | length = 01:29:41 | ||
| listen = | | listen = [[File:Episode-321-the-journey-begins-plus-blind-ranking-philosophers.mp3]] | ||
| quote_source = | | quote_source = | ||
| opening_subject = | | opening_subject = | ||
| Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
| previous_episode = [[Forgive Me (Kafka's "A Hunger Artist")]] | | previous_episode = [[Forgive Me (Kafka's "A Hunger Artist")]] | ||
| next_episode = [[A Theater of Simultaneous Possibilities (William James' "The Stream of Thought")]] | | next_episode = [[A Theater of Simultaneous Possibilities (William James' "The Stream of Thought")]] | ||
}} | }}<!-- | ||
-->'''{{PAGENAME}}''' is the 321st episode of the [[Very Bad Wizards]] podcast, released on November 25, 2025. | |||
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' is the 321st episode of the [[Very Bad Wizards]] podcast, released on November 25, 2025. | |||
== Opening Quote == | == Opening Quote == | ||
{{ | {{Opening_Quote | ||
| text = | | text = | ||
| speaker = | | speaker = | ||
Latest revision as of 18:06, 21 March 2026
The Journey Begins (Plus Blind Ranking Philosophers) is the 321st episode of the Very Bad Wizards podcast, released on November 25, 2025.
Opening Quote
edit edit source
Show Notes
edit edit sourceDavid and Tamler begin their long journey home to Homer's Odyssey, the tale of king Odysseus' 10 year journey home after the Trojan war (maybe the greatest story ever told). We dive into the first two books, which focus on Odysseus' 20-year-old son Telemachus, the swarm of suitors who have descended on Odysseus' house during his long absence in the hopes of marrying his clever and beautiful wife Penelope, and the goddess Athena, whose plan to get Odysseus home to Ithaca is finally set into motion. (Much more to come on this monumental work for our beloved Patreon supporters). Plus for all you Homer haters, David makes Tamler blind rank a list of (pre-1950) philosophers. The Odyssey [wikipedia.org] The Odyssey (transl. by Emily Wilson) [amazon.org affiliate link]