Very Bad Wizards – Details, episodes & analysis

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Podcast Very Bad Wizards

Very Bad Wizards

Tamler Sommers & David Pizarro

Society & Culture
Society & Culture

Frequency: 1 episode/15d. Total Eps: 339

Hosting podcast Libsyn
Very Bad Wizards is a podcast featuring a philosopher (Tamler Sommers) and a psychologist (David Pizarro), who share a love for ethics, pop culture, and cognitive science, and who have a marked inability to distinguish sacred from profane. Each podcast includes discussions of moral philosophy, recent work on moral psychology and neuroscience, and the overlap between the two.
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Score global : 63%


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Episode 320: Forgive Me (Kafka's "A Hunger Artist")

Episode 320

mardi 11 novembre 2025Duration 01:29:19

David and Tamler return to one of their favorites, Frans Kafka, this time on his beautiful and distressing short story "The Hunger Artist," a story that brims with metaphorical possibilities but also implores us to accept it on its own mysterious terms. Plus gooning.

The Goon Squad by Daniel Kolitz [harpers.org]

"Gooning" definition [urbandictionary.com]

A Hunger Artist [wikipedia.org]

A Hunger Artist (full text) [kafka-online.info]

 

Episode 319: The Shadow of the Object (Freud's "Mourning and Melancholia")

Episode 319

mardi 28 octobre 2025Duration 01:35:10

David and Tamler transfer their libidinal energy to Freud's 1917 article "Mourning and Melancholia," in which he tries to understand what's going on with depression, attempts to distinguish it from normal grief, and arrives at some ideas that laid the groundwork for his later theory of normal human development. Plus, another blind ranking segment--this time Tamler gives David a list of rappers to rank blindly. Finally, in between segments we make an announcement about the topic of our next bonus series (it's gonna be epic). 

Freud's "Mourning and Melancholia" [wikipedia.org] 

The Odyssey (translated by Emily Wilson) [amazon.com affiliate link]

Episode 310: Bayes, Brains, and Buddhists

Episode 310

mardi 10 juin 2025Duration 01:14:45

David and Tamler try to wrap their heads around the predictive processing theory of the mind and brain function and talk about a paper that applies the framework to meditation practices. But first a new Psychological Science article expresses skepticism about the existence of people who have no inner voice. So is David a new kind of human or is he just making up this condition to get attention?

Assistant Editor's note: When Tamler says he doesn't talk to his dog "weirdly often," he is lying.  

Lind, A. (2024). Are There Really People With No Inner Voice? Commentary on Nedergaard and Lupyan (2024). Psychological Science, 09567976251335583.

Laukkonen, R. E., & Slagter, H. A. (2021). From many to (n) one: Meditation and the plasticity of the predictive mind. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 128, 199-217.

Episode 223: The Hopeless Dream of Being (Bergman's "Persona")

Episode 223

mardi 19 octobre 2021Duration 01:28:28

David and Tamler dive into Ingmar Bergman's 1966 masterpiece Persona, a film about two (?) women, Elisabet, a famous stage actress who has stopped speaking, and Alma the chatty young nurse assigned to care for her at an island cottage. What happens when the roles we play as parents, spouses, friends, and colleagues start to feel like dishonest performances, an endless series of desperate lies? Can we escape to an inner sanctum of truth and authenticity? Or is that putting on another mask, playing yet another part, telling a different set of lies? We offer some tentative interpretations of this rich and baffling film. Get that boy a normal sized sheet! 

Plus we share some thoughts about the Chappelle special… 

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Episode 222: Choosing Sartre for All Mankind

Episode 222

mardi 5 octobre 2021Duration 01:37:49

Episode 221: Granite Cocks vs Robot Overlords

Episode 221

mardi 21 septembre 2021Duration 01:50:55

David and Tamler wind their way through the long-requested "Meditations on Moloch" by Scott Alexander, a comprehensive account of the coordination problems (personified by Allan Ginsberg's demon-entity Moloch) that lead to human misery and values tossed out the window. Does Alexander's rationalist conception of human nature ignore the work of VBW favorites like Joe Henrich and Robert Frank? Is he a little too friendly to the neo-social Darwinism view of some guy named Nick Land? And oh no, why does he have to go transhumanist at the end?! Plus, we talk about the unique comic vision of Norm Macdonald and why we loved him.

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Episode 219: Multiplied by Mirrors

Episode 219

mardi 17 août 2021Duration 01:45:10

It's a Borges bonanza! David and Tamler dive into two stories: "Emma Zunz" and "Borges and I." The first seems like a straightforward daughter revenge story (Tamler's favorite genre), but Borges being Borges there are layers of doubt and fuzziness about what exactly is going on. "Borges and I" may be less than a page, but it has us questioning our identity, the relationship between private and public selves, and what happens to when you release a work out into the world.

Plus, back to social psychology. Are you a picky eater? Then people think you suck at sex. We are not sure who is recording this podcast.

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Episode 218: ...But You Can't Hide (Michael Haneke's "Caché")

Episode 218

mardi 3 août 2021Duration 01:59:24

David and Tamler go deep on Michael Haneke's unnerving psychological thriller Caché. An upper middle class French intellectual couple receives mysterious videotapes of the exterior of their house, forcing them to confront their past and present. Can we run from our history? Or will it always find a way to break through? And who's sending the tapes? Plus, VBW does conceptual analysis - what does it mean to be "corny"?

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Episode 217: Dropping Paradigms (Kuhn's "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions")

Episode 217

mardi 20 juillet 2021Duration 02:06:00

David and Tamler hit the books and cram for their beloved Patreon listener-selected episode – this time on Thomas Kuhn's "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions." David thinks Kuhn is a great sociologist of science but recoils at the relativistic tenor of the final chapters. Tamler loves anything that makes David recoil.

Plus, should we give more weight to the advice of people on their deathbed? Or should we nod politely and get back to working for that promotion…

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