Embrace The Void

A podcast by Embrace The Void

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300 Episodes

  1. Luckpilled Chapter Two: Psychology of Luck

    Published: 10/24/2024
  2. Luckpilled Chapter One: Philosophy of Luck

    Published: 10/12/2024
  3. Luckpilled: A New Pedagogy of Luck Introduction

    Published: 9/20/2024
  4. Understanding and Countering Fascist Movements with Joan Braune

    Published: 8/3/2024
  5. Round We Dance with Mark Green

    Published: 7/15/2024
  6. Moral Antirealism with Lance Bush

    Published: 6/17/2024
  7. Universal Salvationism with RJ

    Published: 6/1/2024
  8. Man Bear Discourse with Callie Wright

    Published: 5/7/2024
  9. Street Epistemology with Anthony Magnabosco

    Published: 3/27/2024
  10. What's Left of Meritocracy with Gil Morejón

    Published: 3/16/2024
  11. Debating Moral Realism with Chris Kavanagh

    Published: 2/29/2024
  12. Camp Omni with Megan Pike

    Published: 2/21/2024
  13. The Secular Paradox with Joseph Blankholm

    Published: 1/25/2024
  14. Warhammer 40k and Gamergate with Danny Fortuna

    Published: 12/30/2023
  15. Conspiratorial Thinking and Just World Belief with MRX Dentith

    Published: 12/20/2023
  16. AI in Medicine with Bryce Eakin

    Published: 11/10/2023
  17. Embracing the Manosphere with Debbie Ging

    Published: 10/20/2023
  18. Professional Surrogacy with Barbie Dangond

    Published: 9/28/2023
  19. Triangle Freethought Society with Matthew Krevat

    Published: 9/8/2023
  20. Possible Worlds and Other Stories with Rachel Handley

    Published: 8/9/2023

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Welcome friends, to a podcast for a darker timeline. Maybe the darkest of all timelines. Definitely not one of the good timelines. Maybe it’s always been a dark timeline, maybe the Hadron collider screwed us over. Science may never know. What we do know is that we live in the void. The void, a place where a chittering mass of void crabs can infest a person suit and win the presidency. The void, a place where we're just clever enough to know that climate change is happening, but not quite clever enough to do anything about it. The void seems terrible and cruel, but it loves you, in its own ironic way.