Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Dante's Divine Comedy
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Is hell forever? The Inferno. Jason Baxter & Mark Vernon on Dante’s film noir | 04 Oct 2024 | 00:59:56 | |
“Circles of hell" has become commonplace in language. But what was Dante trying to show us when he wrote the inferno? What has been lost in translation, with this first canticle in Dante’s trilogy now part of a secular culture? | |||
| Is hell really boring? Rowan Williams & Jesse Armstrong, Dante & William Blake | 11 Jul 2024 | 00:32:44 | |
Rowan Williams and Jesse Armstrong talked at The Idler festival, partly around the idea, caught in the expression, “boring as hell”. But is that right, they asked, when a drama like Succession so clearly appeals to us? | |||
| Dante, cosmology, and a conversation at Rupert Sheldrake's 80th do | 10 Jul 2022 | 00:12:30 | |
Bernard Carr is a leading cosmologist who worked with Stephen Hawking and now investigates time, multidimensionality and consciousness, amongst other things. | |||
| Purgatorio 8 | 02 May 2020 | 00:19:48 | |
Still in the lovely valley of the rulers, angels and a serpent dramatically appear, though oddly no-one's concerned. | |||
| Purgatorio 7 | 28 Apr 2020 | 00:17:57 | |
Virgil and Sordello embrace again, before Sordello explains they must find a safe place for the night. | |||
| Purgatorio 6 | 26 Apr 2020 | 00:22:29 | |
Hassled by agitated souls, Dante asks Virgil if prayers can effect divine laws. A discussion brings a new state of mind. | |||
| Purgatorio 5 | 25 Apr 2020 | 00:23:26 | |
At first distracted by the indolent, they encounter a new group of agitated souls, though keep their focus. | |||
| Purgatorio 4 | 23 Apr 2020 | 00:25:31 | |
Virgil and Dante find the narrow path that leads up, and begin the climb. A break brings another group of souls. | |||
| Purgatorio 3 | 21 Apr 2020 | 00:24:59 | |
Virgil is troubled. They encounter slowly moving souls, and search for an entry onto the mountain. | |||
| Purgatorio 2 | 18 Apr 2020 | 00:20:30 | |
As the sun rises, an angel speeds towards them, bringing a friend and a tense sense of tremendous things. | |||
| Purgatorio 1 | 15 Apr 2020 | 00:25:41 | |
Virgil and Dante are in a world of freshness and hope, sunlight and stars, but also strangeness and novelty. | |||
| Inferno 34 | 07 Apr 2020 | 00:30:52 | |
The last canto of the Inferno sees Dante and Virgil face to face with Lucifer, before a surprising turnaround. | |||
| Inferno 33 | 06 Apr 2020 | 00:19:56 | |
Dante and Virgil encounter Count Ugolino deeper in Cocytus, as well as the souls of the living dead. | |||
| Dante’s Paradiso. Awakening to the Light. A conversation with Rupert Sheldrake | 24 Jun 2022 | 00:44:05 | |
This episode of the Sheldrake-Vernon Dialogues continues Rupert and Mark's exploration of Dante’s Divine Comedy, taking a lead from Mark’s book, Dante’s Divine Comedy: A Guide for the Spiritual Journey. | |||
| Inferno 32 | 04 Apr 2020 | 00:28:10 | |
Seeking heavenly help to find the true words, Dante steps into Cocytus, revealed as a reality of imprisoning, deadening ice. | |||
| Inferno 31 | 02 Apr 2020 | 00:21:01 | |
Virgil and Dante wander into a grey zone, hear an ominous horn, and encounter the terrible giants. | |||
| Inferno 30 | 31 Mar 2020 | 00:26:41 | |
Minds and bodies themselves begin to disintegrate in souls driven rabid and feverish by playing god in life. | |||
| Inferno 29 | 28 Mar 2020 | 00:30:21 | |
Dante and Virgil argue, divided, and then walk to the tenth bolgia. It's infected with the pestilence of denuded nature and humanity. | |||
| Inferno 28 | 26 Mar 2020 | 00:19:28 | |
The ninth bolgia entombs figures Dante sees as schismatic in life, now rent asunder themselves. | |||
| Inferno 27 | 24 Mar 2020 | 00:14:39 | |
Still overlooking the eighth bolgia of Maleboge, a new writhing flame approaches. The soul says he trusted a pope. | |||
| Inferno 26 | 21 Mar 2020 | 00:27:39 | |
The eight bolgia appears almost majestic until Dante understands how its souls are trapped in flames. | |||
| Inferno 25 | 19 Mar 2020 | 00:15:31 | |
They see even more terrible metamorphoses in the seventh bolgia and realise the serpents are human souls too. | |||
| Inferno 24 | 17 Mar 2020 | 00:17:51 | |
Virgil helps Dante climb from the sixth bolgia. They come to the seventh, a melee of serpents chasing souls. | |||
| Inferno 23 | 14 Mar 2020 | 00:14:44 | |
Affection balances fear. Thought counters foolhardiness. They escape to fresh despair in the sixth bolgia. | |||
| Dante's transfiguration of time & love, seeking & suffering, telepathy & transhumanising | 07 Jun 2022 | 00:37:01 | |
Various human experiences are deepened and resolved as Dante travels through hell, purgatory and paradise. The Divine Comedy can be read as an examination of this transfiguring of perception. | |||
| Inferno 22 | 12 Mar 2020 | 00:11:37 | |
Virgil and Dante are escorted by 10 Malebranche demons. Something has gone very wrong. | |||
| Inferno 21 | 10 Mar 2020 | 00:18:16 | |
They meet the demons of Malebranche. Virgil reckons he can outplay them. Dante does not. | |||
| Inferno 20 | 07 Mar 2020 | 00:21:35 | |
Dante is perturbed when they encounter the diviners, an art he practices too. | |||
| Inferno 19 | 05 Mar 2020 | 00:24:00 | |
Dante perceives the bleak bankruptcy of exchanging spiritual gifts for temporal goods. | |||
| Inferno 18 | 03 Mar 2020 | 00:27:08 | |
They are in the eighth circle, the place called Malebolge, as the descent deepens further. | |||
| Inferno 17 | 29 Feb 2020 | 00:26:43 | |
Approaching the cliffs into the deeper reaches of hell, they confront the monster Geryon and souls disfigured by usury. | |||
| Inferno 16 | 28 Feb 2020 | 00:24:46 | |
Ominously tumbling waters. An odd encounter with three trapped souls. And then stranger things happen. | |||
| Inferno 15 | 25 Feb 2020 | 00:22:58 | |
Following the red stream, across burning sands, a gaggle of souls approach them. | |||
| Inferno 14 | 23 Feb 2020 | 00:23:57 | |
On the edge of an expanse of burning sand and falling fire, they speak with a soul cursing Jupiter and see a vision. | |||
| Inferno 13 | 21 Feb 2020 | 00:24:29 | |
They enter an ugly wood to encounter souls who killed themselves. | |||
| Dante on Idealism. Or Dante in dialogue with Bernardo Kastrup and others | 01 May 2022 | 00:45:12 | |
This is a contribution to recent dialogues on idealism between Bernardo Kastrup, John Vervaeke, Matt Segall, Philip Goff and others, including myself. I draw particularly on: - Dante's account and analysis of his journey to the heart of consciousness in all its fullness - source and manifestation - in the Divine Comedy - how minds as we know them not only dissociate but also project and introject, and what meaning this might have for Bernardo's thesis - trinitarian understandings of oneness, and the dynamics of creation. I start with some concerns that I have with Bernardo's account of analytic idealism, much as I value all that he does. They focus on his sense of mind at large, or God, and his use of the phenomenon of dissociation. I'm struck that Dante's discovery of his true nature in God goes hand in hand with the increase of his individuality and personhood. Also, he not only experiences dissociation, or a sense of separateness, but projection and introjection - two further mechanisms that minds deploy, which I think are key. This takes me to trinitarian understandings of oneness, in its eternal and infinite form. In divine life, kenosis is ecstasis; giving is receiving; knowing and unknowing are a mutual unfolding; longing is satisfaction; expansion is the expression of what already is. If the meaning of our life is the discovery of our nature in theosis, that might add to the model. Beatrice conveys this movement to Dante, overcoming his separateness by discerning his projections, and offering them back to him as introjections of the truth of himself, others and God. Finally, I raise questions of suffering, the nature of life, and why we experience separateness at all, before the discussion concludes with the hadith beloved by Sufis, another idealist expression of genius: “I was a Treasure unknown then I desired to be known so I created a creation to which I made Myself known; then they knew Me.” | |||
| Inferno 12 | 18 Feb 2020 | 00:22:42 | |
Descending a steep slope, they see the minotaur, centaurs and a river of boiling blood. | |||
| Inferno 11 | 14 Feb 2020 | 00:22:01 | |
A foul stench prompts illumination of lower hell's subtler entrapments and evils. | |||
| Inferno 10 | 11 Feb 2020 | 00:24:11 | |
Now inside Dis, they meet those who have followed their own way: heretics. | |||
| Inferno 9 | 07 Feb 2020 | 00:17:53 | |
Terrified by the demons that block their path, Dante and Virgil wait. | |||
| Inferno 8 | 07 Feb 2020 | 00:15:42 | |
Still in the fifth circle, they face the river Styx and the terror of Dis. | |||
| Inferno 7 | 04 Feb 2020 | 00:20:57 | |
Virgil and Dante are in the fourth and fifth circles of hell shocked by souls trapped by money and by anger. | |||
| Inferno 6 | 01 Feb 2020 | 00:22:12 | |
The third circle of hell brings filth and muck, Cerberus and Ciacco. | |||
| Inferno 5 | 30 Jan 2020 | 00:21:15 | |
Virgil and Dante enter the second circle of hell and meet those whose love in life has trapped them. | |||
| Inferno 4 | 28 Jan 2020 | 00:20:25 | |
Virgil leads Dante into the first circle of hell where they meet souls who didn't live their lives, as well as pagan poets and philosophers who did. | |||
| Inferno 3 | 25 Jan 2020 | 00:22:10 | |
Dante and Virgil pass through the gates of hell and enter the vestibule to encounter anxious souls. | |||
| Why Paradise? Part 3 of 3 talks on Dante's Divine Comedy | 12 Apr 2022 | 01:01:16 | |
Paradise. Destiny for a chosen few? Dismissed today by many. Or might it be the end for us all? | |||
| Inferno 2 | 25 Jan 2020 | 00:20:56 | |
Dante wavers and Virgil reveals why he is here. | |||
| Inferno 1 | 24 Jan 2020 | 00:15:44 | |
Dante frightened by his plight, terrorised by strange beasts, discovers a guide. | |||
| Why Purgatory? Part 2 of 3 talks on Dante's Divine Comedy by Mark Vernon | 05 Apr 2022 | 01:00:06 | |
The mode of life called purgatorial is a medieval superstition, according to some, and the very purpose of mortal life, according to others. So what did Dante make of Purgatory and what has it to teach us now? | |||