<p>From curses to charms to incantations and evocations, speaking thrice gives power — today, and in the ancient past. As our number series continues, we enter the powerful and spiritual realm of three. <em>*This episode originally aired on Sept. 27, 2023.</em></p>
Jan 01, 2025•54 min
<p>It's a time of reflection and looking ahead. Host Nahlah Ayed invites <em>IDEAS </em>producers into the studio to share ideas they are working on for 2025. You’ll hear about income inequality, Nietzsche, the power of itch, the intrigue of the yellow traffic light and the fascinating story of Henry Box Brown — an enslaved man from Virginia who mailed himself to freedom.</p>
Dec 31, 2024•45 min
<p>It's nothing — and it's everywhere. Zero has confounded humanity for thousands of years. On IDEAS, we explore the infinite danger and promise of the void in a series called <em>The Greatest Numbers of All Time. *This episode originally aired on Sept. 26, 2023.</em></p>
Dec 30, 2024•54 min
<p>A childhood full of Christmasses in Wales has left <em>IDEAS </em>producer Tom Howell pining for a certain kind of nostalgic poem this winter. So he turns to poets to put into words a strange feeling of homesickness, nostalgia, and yearning. <em>*This episode originally aired on December 17, 2020.</em></p>
Dec 27, 2024•54 min
<p>A profile of the legendary jazz drummer and composer Jerry Granelli who passed away in 2021. Over his career, he accompanied many of the greats: Mose Allison, Sly Stone and The Grateful Dead. Most famously, he was a member of the Vince Guaraldi Trio that recorded the iconic album: <em>A Charlie Brown Christmas.</em> <em>*This episode originally aired on December 21, 2021.</em></p>
Dec 26, 2024•54 min
<p>Christmas is a minefield of deep philosophical quandaries, like — is it ethically correct to lie to children? Who does a gift really benefit the giver, or receiver? How do we really know Santa exists, or doesn't? Join us on a dramatic journey through the philosophy of Christmas. <em>*This episode originally aired on December 23, 2020.</em></p>
Dec 24, 2024•54 min
<p>Modern mystic Thomas Merton helped to bring contemplative spirituality to the fore during the convulsions of the 20th century. He spins us a powerful, prophetic Christmas story that we don’t often hear, but one that is central to our modern self-understanding.</p>
Dec 23, 2024•54 min
<p>CBC's investigative documentary program, <em>The Fifth Estate</em>, turned 50 this year. To commemorate this golden anniversary, a panel of distinguished journalists take us behind the stories and to the current threats facing their profession. As the media landscape continues to shrink, who will hold the powerful to account?</p>
Dec 20, 2024•54 min
<p>For 14 years, Syrian poet Faraj Bayrakdar was imprisoned and tortured in a series of prisons. He found refuge in writing poetry. Now, the poems he wrote imagining the fall of the regime are a reality. He tells host Nahlah Ayed how the freedom within is greater than any prison.</p>
Dec 19, 2024•54 min
<p>The Huarochirí Manuscript is one of the few surviving records of Quechua worldviews in the early modern era. It was once used by the Catholic Church to identify and eradicate “idolatries.” But today, for philosophy professor Jorge Sanchez-Perez, the manuscript is a tool for reconstructing and revitalizing Andean metaphysics. <em>*This episode originally aired on Feb. 6, 2023.</em></p>
Dec 18, 2024•54 min
<p>Each year, a cohort of scholars with research careers of "sustained excellence" are honoured with the Killam Prize — seen by some as Canada's version of the Nobel. <em>IDEAS</em> hears from Engineering winner Clement Gosselin, who has developed an innovative robotic arm. Natural Sciences laureate Sylvain Moineau is making breakthroughs using basic science research, and Medical Sciences winner Gerard Wright fights the growing global threat posed by antibiotic resistance.&...
Dec 17, 2024•54 min
<p>Our homes hold our memories and hopes for the future. But today, our homes have become commodities. Leilani Farha, the former UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Housing, considers what happens when humanity is stripped out of housing — and what it means for us to collectively ‘return home.’ <em>*This episode is part of our IDEAS at Crow’s Theatre series.</em></p>
Dec 16, 2024•54 min
<p>We think nothing today of calling healthcare workers “front line workers,” engaged in a “battle” against disease. But the roots of the war metaphor in medicine go way back — entrenched by pop culture icons like the TV show M*A*S*H and Hawkeye’s army. Dr. Jillian Horton explores a less heroic but healthier way forward for doctors and health professionals. <em>*This episode originally aired on Feb. 21, 2023.</em></p>
Dec 13, 2024•54 min
<p>Right now, more than 55% of the world's population live in cities. In a few decades, that percentage will rise to 70%. But with rising sea levels and mass migration, not to mention the state of geopolitics, where does all this leave cities of the future?&nbsp;Three experts weigh in.</p>
Dec 12, 2024•54 min
<p>It's the world's most prominent climate case in history. Iranian-Canadian human rights lawyer Payam Akhavan discusses the legal arguments he made before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on behalf of Bangladesh and small island states. The hearings seek to establish the legal obligations of states to mitigate climate change and the damage done by it — and the legal consequences for states which don’t fulfil those obligations.</p>
Dec 11, 2024•54 min
<p>In part two of our series about the 1970s journalistic experiment known as the Non-Aligned News Agencies Pool, <em>IDEAS</em> turns to journalists who continue to grapple with the challenges that were first highlighted more than five decades ago. Their concerns and critiques about representation and fairness at the heart of those conversations persist in newsrooms today.&nbsp;</p>
Dec 10, 2024•54 min
<p>In the 1970s, countries in what became known as the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) embarked on an ambitious journalistic experiment to create a new kind of journalism — decolonizing the flow of information. The project came with a utopian promise, internal tensions and fierce opponents in the West. <em>IDEAS</em> explores its history and afterlife today in a two-part series.&nbsp;</p>
Dec 09, 2024•54 min
<p><em>IDEAS</em> takes a deep dive into <em>Fate Is the Hunter</em>, Ernest K. Gann's celebrated memoir of flying and the capricious hand of fortune. The book is a nail-biting account of his early days in aviation. Gann wonders: why did I survive when so many other pilots perished?<em> *This episode originally aired on Nov. 28, 2022.</em></p>
Dec 06, 2024•54 min
<p>They were known as school cars and schools on wheels.&nbsp;Trains that brought the classroom to children in the most isolated communities of Northern Ontario.&nbsp;It was a novel six-month experiment that lasted 40 years, from 1926 to 1967.&nbsp;<em>IDEAS </em>producer Alisa Siegel explores remote education, homeschooling and nation-building. <em>*This episode originally aired on January 9, 2023.</em></p>
Dec 04, 2024•54 min
<p>The celebrated writer M.G. Vassanji argues that there’s a more fundamental and even slipperier endeavour than establishing one’s identity, and that’s how — if ever — can we establish a sense of belonging? For many, he says, our true home is nowhere... exactly.</p>
Dec 03, 2024•54 min
<p>She’s one of Canada’s most decorated journalists, having won a Pulitzer Prize, a Peabody and a Columbia-Dupont Prize for her podcast series, <em>Stolen: Surviving St. Michael’s</em>. Yet Connie Walker had been reluctant to feature stories about her family in her journalism. Until she realized her family's survival in residential schools embodies the defining reality for virtually all Indigenous Peoples in Canada. She discusses this with Nahlah Ayed at the Samara Centre for D...
Dec 02, 2024•54 min
<p>One of the most important roles of a university is to advance research that benefits society. Meet two winners of the prestigious 2024 Killam Prize. Humanities winner Janine Marchessault's work looks at the crisis in Canada’s film and video archives, and Social Sciences winner Tania Li examines how the good intentions of international development affects the rural people of Indonesia. (Pt 1 of 2)</p>
Nov 29, 2024•54 min
<p>A Danish geneticist who found camels in Greenland meets the Irish author excavating a thousand tales from the streets of Cork, Ireland. This year’s Beatty Lecture is a double-act. Both Eske Willerslev and Cònal Creedon draw from their contrasting expertise and share their personal tales of discovery.&nbsp;</p>
Nov 28, 2024•54 min
<p>Medieval Irish tales are sexier, funnier, and bloodier than any of the better-known myths of the medieval era. They reveal a world full of mighty demi-gods, shapeshifting beauties, and determined heroes. In her book, <em>Otherworld</em>, Lisa M Bitel retells Irish tales of wonder and romance, acting as our guide in the tradition of ancient storytelling.</p>
Nov 26, 2024•54 min
<p>Digital assistants, in your home or on your phone, are usually presented as women. In this documentary, IDEAS traces the history of the feminized, non-threatening machine, from Siri and Alexa to the "women computers" of the 19th century. <em>*This episode originally aired on Oct. 26, 2022.</em></p>
Nov 14, 2024•54 min
<p>In an era of rampant commodification of life-saving medicines, healthcare must be secured as a global public good, argues health justice advocate Fatima Hassan. In her Boehm Lecture on Public Health she explores ideas of solidarity and leadership in pandemic, epidemic and war responses.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
Nov 13, 2024•54 min
<p>The world is full of problems — our broken healthcare, out-of-reach housing, a democracy in shambles and a dying planet. Is it actually possible to fix this mess? <em>IDEAS</em> hears from people working to fix our most intractable problems at a time when it can feel easier to just give up. <em>*This episode originally aired on Sept. 21, 2023.</em></p>
Nov 12, 2024•54 min
<p>Canada’s veterans have a conflicted relationship with Remembrance Day, an idea that may be shifting as older war vets leave us. In a two-part series, IDEAS continues exploring postwar experiences from The Canadian War Museum’s oral history project called <em>In Their Own Voices. *This is part two of a two-part series. </em></p>
Nov 11, 2024•54 min
<p>Even when wars end, they go on — transforming the people who fought them, their families, and even society. More than 200 veterans were interviewed for a project by the Canadian War Museum called <em>In Their Own Voices</em>. The initiative explores the profound changes that come after veterans return home. <em>*This is part one of a two-part series.</em></p>
Nov 08, 2024•54 min
<p>Doris Lessing addressed Canadian audiences with her CBC Massey Lectures in 1985, warning warn us against groupthink and what she called the intellectual “prisons we choose to live inside." Now, a response from the present day: Professor Miglena Todorova reflects on Lessing’s message and puts it into the context of today’s politics.</p>
Nov 07, 2024•54 min