Made You Think
Un pódcast de Neil Soni, Nat Eliason, and Adil Majid
120 Episodo
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59: Eternal Human Psychology: The Laws of Human Nature by Robert Greene
Publicado: 23/4/2019 -
58: Psychedelics and Self-Discovery. Food of the Gods by Terence McKenna
Publicado: 31/1/2019 -
57: Update Episode January 2019
Publicado: 18/1/2019 -
56: What Is It Like To Be A Bat by Thomas Nagel
Publicado: 25/9/2018 -
55: The Qur'an
Publicado: 18/9/2018 -
54: Never Forget Anything. Moonwalking with Einstein by Joshua Foer
Publicado: 11/9/2018 -
53: The Devil is in The Data: How to Lie with Statistics by Darrell Huff
Publicado: 4/9/2018 -
52: Privilege is Being Understood. The Tower - Hotel Concierge
Publicado: 28/8/2018 -
51: The War on Weed: Smoke Signals by Martin A. Lee
Publicado: 21/8/2018 -
50: Your Fate Belongs to You. The Myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus
Publicado: 14/8/2018 -
49: The Power of Serendipity. Happy Accidents by Morton A Meyers
Publicado: 7/8/2018 -
48: UBI Q&A. A Conversation with Presidential Candidate Andrew Yang
Publicado: 31/7/2018 -
47: Free Money for All. The War On Normal People By Andrew Yang
Publicado: 24/7/2018 -
46: To Die Rich is to Die Disgraced. The Gospel of Wealth by Andrew Carnegie
Publicado: 17/7/2018 -
45: More Knowledge, More Problems. The Beginning of Infinity by David Deutsch
Publicado: 10/7/2018 -
44: Virtue is a Habit. The Nichomachean Ethics by Aristotle
Publicado: 3/7/2018 -
43: Recap Time #2! Our Favorite Lessons from Episodes 22-42
Publicado: 26/6/2018 -
42: Yeezus Walks. The College Dropout by Kanye West
Publicado: 19/6/2018 -
41: Hidden Motives in Everyday Life. The Elephant in the Brain by Kevin Simler and Robin Hanson
Publicado: 12/6/2018 -
40: Slaughterhouse Capitalism. The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
Publicado: 5/6/2018
Made You Think is a podcast by Nat Eliason, Neil Soni, and Adil Majid where the hosts and their guests examine ideas that, as the name suggests, make you think. Episodes will explore books, essays, podcasts, and anything else that warrants further discussion, teaches something useful, or at the very least, exercises our brain muscles.
