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    The McMaster Department of Philosophy has now put together the following notice commemorating Barry: Barry Allen: A Philosophical Life Barry…

Philosophy through sound and story

Tomorrow will mark the release of the 8th episode out of 10 for Hi-Phi Nation, which is my attempt at bridging many different genres with philosophy; documentaries, journalism, narrative storytelling, and sound design. As a guest blogger this week, I'm going to talk about the backstory behind the making of some of these episodes, as well as the interesting challenges I faced as a trained academic philosopher trying to create something so different from what we're trained to create (essays not audio, arguments not narratives.)

Episodes 2 and 3 were the first pieces I produced a little over a year ago. When I first met Major Ian Fishback in Ann Arbor, I already recorded with Jeff McMahan, Helen Frowe, Michael Robillard, and many faculty at USMA at West Point on just war and revisionist just war theory, as well as Mike's work on moral exploitation. But because the show wasn't just going to be a highly-produced piece of audio philosophy, I needed a good story. You can't "turn stories into ideas" without story. I knew Ian's story from the archived media reports about his whistle-blowing in the Army, so I assumed that I was coming into a story about a man who opposed torture, and we were going to have a show about torture in war. But that made up less than a third of what we ended up talking about. Ian and I spoke on tape for over three hours. The real story behind his military career was almost a perfect snapshot of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, from the hopeful and almost easy days of the early push against Al Qaeda and the Taliban (remember the Northern Alliance?) to the chaos in the initial years in Iraq, all the way to the height of the surge and the limited successes and ultimate failure of the counterinsurgency campaign, leading to the rise of ISIS. If you haven't already listened, the bonus content for the episodes is just gold, I wish I could've included them. Ian's story and current philosophical reflections on his experiences did not disappoint. How could a philosopher who spent over a decade of his life in combat not have interesting things to say about the ethics and law of war? My conversations with Ian and the pieces that were finally released set the structure for how I approached the rest of the season.

Even though it was my first and certainly not the most polished piece, I knew from it that story-driven philosophy could be something special.

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3 responses to “Philosophy through sound and story”

  1. jtismael@u.arizona.edu

    these are amazing. thank you so much for posting them. i love what you are doing. it must take an enormous amount of time and effort, but it seems extremely valuable.

  2. Christopher Pynes

    Professor Lam —

    I believe you podcasts are fantastic. The most valuable parts of these is the story telling. The important aspect of explaining the value of philosophy through story cannot be over hyped. Being able to tell someone a story with philosophical ideas is ideal and goes to the heart of how we can convince people of things. It's one natural way we can make philosophy relevant to them. It seems obvious that we have obligations to the dead when it comes to the money they have earned. But look what can happen. It's a story that everyone can now explain and talk about in a way that might have been unrecognizable if it were introduced in some other way.

    Philosophy through story telling has a long tradition including some of our greats: Plato, Hume, Berkeley. We often use stories in our arguments. I particularly like Van Fraassen's "The Tower and The Shadow" from _The Scientific Image_. I'm sure everyone has their favorite argumentative stories. You, however, have taken it up a notch.

    I certainly hope you can continue making these for the good of all those who listen.

  3. I just wanted to second the previous commenters, though as a scientist with philosophy envy I can only comment as a nonprofessional. In any case given the fairly wide range of recent offerings re. bringing philosophical thinking to a wider audience (The Stone, Philosophy Talk, Philosophy Bites,…), all, in my opinion, well done, Hi-Phi Nation really stands out for me. Given the extremely well done combination of story telling, philosophical insight, and great editing (hard to imagine how labor intensive that must be), Hi-Phi Nation just stands head and shoulders above anything else re. delivering topical, philosophical insight. It seems a downright crime to me that huge numbers of people aren't listening to these (one of the only times that not having much of a megaphone has bothered me !).

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