In Weaver and Loom, we unravel the wonderment of the spiritual, natural, fate, and the divine through mythic and sacred story, biblical parables, ancient fables, and Christ-haunted narratives--getting lost in the mysteries of the our human creation so that we might grope our way to Christ and become illuminated in midsts of the mundane and sufferings of life.
We continue the discussion with Dr. Weikart about his book The Death of Humanity: and the Case for Life: https://amzn.to/3laeHzb (affiliate link).
We ask one big question in this episode: does my wo…
Richard Weikart is Professor of History at California State University, Stanislaus. He completed his Ph.D. in modern European history at the University of Iowa in 1994, receiving the biennial prize o…
Today we are joined by Kevin Monroe, podcaster and business coach . . . and most importantly my doppelgänger!
In this second episode we continue our conversation and discuss why faithfulness in more i…
Today we are joined by Kevin Monroe, podcaster and business coach . . . and most importantly my doppelgänger!
That is right--when I came across Kevin's podcast I was blow away to find someone who talk…
We finish up this three part answer from a question from the audience with discussing an important framework that enables us to understand and sort highly complex issues in culture and society.
We've…
We continue to answer a question from a listener like you were we cover:
In this episode we field a question from the audience from Episode 160 on Social Justice.
With that question we cover:
Fear and Love are to core drivers to boundaries. Fear causing us to run from negative consequences and love driving us towards positive relationship and outcomes.
One without the other produces toxic…
Rights, Entitlements . . . and boundaries? And how our conflation of these terms are creating a toxic environment.
Rights and Entitlements, strangely enough we are going to tie this into our interper…
Words matter. The meaning of our words matter. And understanding their meaning is critical to understanding our world and acting within it.
In this episode we discuss justice and how it contrasts wit…
The nuclear family is under attack maybe more than every before in history—Today we discuss why some are working to erode family values, and why we must defend it . . .
In this episode we talk about:
During the Chinese Cultural Revolution Totalitarian control was carried forth by undermining traditional morality, the family unit and public displays of violence through struggle session to strike t…
French Revolution began 150 years of chaos, war, bloodshed, revolution…. Each movement being eaten by the next…
France in the 1789 had LOTS of problems: high tax on poor, Rich, oppression etc. CLEARL…
There are six traits of totalitarian cults:
1) Control of the environment
2) A system of rewards and punishments
3) Creating a sense of powerlessness
4) Fear and dependency
5) Reforming the follower’s be…
In this episode, I break down some of my thoughts from a previous episode with Dr Egnor (E153).
If you see a group movement or state that denies the individual's though, variety of opinion, agency and…
How can we take responsibility for the pain in our lives and not pass that pain on?
Our words have the potential to release us from the perpetual pain of traumatic experiences.
In the second part of my…
Did you know your usage of pronouns and prepositions might reveal parts of your personality that you’re not even aware of? Language is powerful, even the words you don’t even think about, like pronou…
In part two of my discussion with Dr. Michael R. Egnor, we continue our discussion about neurophilosophy.
In this episode, Dr. Egnor brings attention to the importance of embracing the free will of hu…
Dr. Michael R. Egnor discusses the intersection of philosophy and neuroscience in today’s episode.
He is a research professor of Neurosurgery and Pediatrics at the State University of New York.
As an a…
In this episode, Dr. Stephen Hicks (@SRCHicks) and I continue our conversation about the fruits of radical Marxism.
He elaborates on the danger of prioritizing the collective over the individual and e…