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Modern Wisdom
Modern Wisdom•October 27, 2025

#1012 - Alex O’Connor & Joe Folley - Is Being Smart Worth the Depression?

A lively exploration of philosophy's practical applicability, consciousness, and ethics, featuring deep dives into panpsychism, emotivism, and the challenges of understanding human experience through intellectual discourse.
Learning How to Learn
Critical Thinking & Logic
Contemporary Philosophy
Alex O'Connor
Albert Camus
Aristotle
Joe Folley
David Benatar

Summary Sections

  • Podcast Summary
  • Speakers
  • Key Takeaways
  • Statistics & Facts
  • Compelling StoriesPremium
  • Thought-Provoking QuotesPremium
  • Strategies & FrameworksPremium
  • Similar StrategiesPlus
  • Additional ContextPremium
  • Key Takeaways TablePlus
  • Critical AnalysisPlus
  • Books & Articles MentionedPlus
  • Products, Tools & Software MentionedPlus
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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.

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Podcast Summary

This fascinating conversation explores the depths of philosophical thought with Alex O'Connor and Joe Folley, delving into how ancient wisdom applies to modern life. The discussion covers the evolution from practical ancient philosophy to today's more specialized academic approach, questioning whether modern philosophy has lost its way in intellectual abstraction. (02:34) The conversation examines why stoicism has gained popularity while other valuable philosophical schools remain overlooked, explores some of philosophy's darkest and most challenging ideas, and investigates cutting-edge theories about consciousness and panpsychism.

  • Core themes include the practical applicability of philosophy, the relationship between ancient and modern philosophical approaches, consciousness studies, and the ethical implications of being a philosophy influencer in the digital age.

Speakers

Alex O'Connor

Alex O'Connor is a prominent YouTuber, writer, and podcaster who creates content exploring philosophical and religious topics. He has built a significant following through his thoughtful analysis of complex philosophical ideas and their practical applications to modern life.

Joe Folley

Joe Folley is a philosopher, writer, and host of the Unsolicited Advice YouTube channel. He brings academic philosophical training to accessible content creation, focusing on how philosophical insights can inform everyday decision-making and personal development.

Key Takeaways

Reconnect Ethics with Metaphysics for Deeper Understanding

Modern philosophy often strips away the foundational beliefs that originally supported ethical systems. (02:37) Ancient philosophers like the Stoics grounded their ethics in comprehensive worldviews about the nature of reality itself. When we adopt only the ethical conclusions without understanding their metaphysical foundations, we're left with superficial life advice rather than transformative wisdom. For example, Stoic acceptance isn't just a psychological technique - it stems from their belief that the universe operates according to rational divine providence. This means genuine philosophical progress requires engaging with the deeper questions about reality that inform our values.

Memory is the Hidden Foundation of Consciousness

The ability to remember even the instant before the current moment is what separates complex consciousness from basic awareness. (81:30) Without memory, you wouldn't know you were a being, couldn't compare your current state to previous ones, and would experience reality like a basic atomic particle - conscious but without identity or continuity. This insight reveals that many features we associate with consciousness (self-awareness, decision-making, communication) are actually sophisticated functions that emerge when memory-capable consciousness becomes complexly arranged, much like how simple materials can form the Empire State Building when properly organized.

Moral Debates are Usually Factual Disputes in Disguise

Most ethical disagreements aren't actually about fundamental values but about empirical facts that inform those values. (93:53) When people argue about gun control, they're typically debating statistics, effectiveness of policies, and causal relationships - not whether innocent people dying is bad. The underlying moral emotions ("boo innocent people dying") often align, but people disagree on which policies will actually prevent harm. This means productive moral discussion focuses on getting facts right rather than trying to convince someone to change their emotional responses to clear moral situations.

Embrace Philosophical Agnosticism for Intellectual Growth

The most intellectually honest approach to philosophy involves maintaining uncertainty even about your strongest convictions. (113:54) Rather than planting your feet firmly in philosophical ground, acknowledge that complex questions deserve nuanced, evolving answers. This doesn't mean lacking opinions, but holding them lightly enough to change when presented with better arguments or evidence. A 26-year-old philosophy communicator claiming absolute certainty on fundamental questions would be "completely batshit insane" - intellectual humility opens doors to genuine learning and prevents the dogmatism that stifles philosophical progress.

Philosophy's Greatest Success is Creating New Fields of Knowledge

Philosophy's historical achievement isn't solving eternal questions but giving birth to new domains of systematic inquiry. (10:30) Mathematics, physics, economics, psychology, and linguistics all emerged from philosophical investigation. When philosophical questions become sufficiently well-defined and methodologically rigorous, they spin off into independent disciplines. This means philosophy serves as intellectual R&D, exploring the frontiers of human understanding until specific areas mature enough to become specialized fields. Rather than seeing this as philosophy "losing" territory, it represents philosophy's core function: expanding the boundaries of what can be systematically studied.

Statistics & Facts

  1. Chrysippus, an ancient Stoic philosopher, wrote "reams and reams of parchment" on Stoic logical systems, demonstrating the mathematical rigor of early philosophical schools. (05:27)
  2. It takes Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead approximately 200-300 pages to prove that one plus one equals two in their foundational mathematical work "Principia Mathematica." (56:00)
  3. The China brain thought experiment would require billions and billions of people - far more than China's population - to simulate the neural activity of a single human brain. (77:11)

Compelling Stories

Available with a Premium subscription

Thought-Provoking Quotes

Available with a Premium subscription

Strategies & Frameworks

Available with a Premium subscription

Similar Strategies

Available with a Plus subscription

Additional Context

Available with a Premium subscription

Key Takeaways Table

Available with a Plus subscription

Critical Analysis

Available with a Plus subscription

Books & Articles Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

Products, Tools & Software Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

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