<p>With increasingly diverse societies, the sorting of people into "us" and "them" is inevitable. This sorting brings with it a social and cultural assessment of who does, and does not, deserve social benefits and political rights. The so-called 'deservingness ladder' is shifting as democracies around the world turn towards right-wing populist leaders.&nbsp;</p>
Feb 12, 2025•54 min
<p>Writer and filmmaker Luke Galati says "living with bipolar disorder is tough." He shares the realities of his mental health struggles, what it's like living in a psychiatric hospital and finding a path to wellness. His documentary is both a personal essay and a series of conversations with health-care professionals and others who have bipolar disorder.</p>
Feb 11, 2025•54 min
<p>Inhabit Media are at the forefront of a new era of Inuit literature and film. Since 2006, it’s been working to ensure Arctic voices are heard across Canada. From Iqaluit, <em>IDEAS</em> producer Pauline Holdsworth speaks with writers and illustrators about telling the stories of their home and finding creativity from the land.&nbsp;</p>
Feb 10, 2025•54 min
<p>In 1853, Mary Ann Shadd Cary became the first Black woman publisher in Canada with her newspaper, The Provincial Freeman. As a lawyer, publisher, and educator, she laid the groundwork for Black liberation in Canada. Descendants and other guests share her remarkable story. <em>*This episode originally aired on Dec. 7, 2023.</em></p>
Feb 07, 2025•54 min
<p>Award-winning journalist and author Brandi Morin says reconciliation in Canada is on life support. She's calling for a revolution against the apathy and ignorance that she says keeps Indigenous people from healing and succeeding.</p>
Feb 06, 2025•54 min
<p>Chava Rosenfarb, Holocaust survivor and Canadian Yiddish writer, was born 100 years ago in Łódź, Poland. In 2023, Łódź celebrated “The Year of Chava Rosenfarb." In this episode, producer Allison Dempster revisits a 2001 <em>IDEAS</em> documentary that profiles Rosenfarb’s legacy and the politics of Holocaust remembrance in Poland today. <em>*This episode originally aired on Jan. 29, 2024.</em></p>
Feb 05, 2025•54 min
<p>Maria Chapdelaine — the fictional character from rural Quebec became a global phenomenon in the 1920s, and has inspired movies, plays — even an opera. Yet the book remains far less known in English Canada and the English-speaking world. <em>IDEAS </em>examines the many lives that Maria Chapdelaine has lived, and continues to live.</p>
Feb 04, 2025•54 min
<p>Enslaved in 1840s Virginia, Henry Brown has himself nailed into a postal crate and mailed to a free state. But that’s less than half his story. In freedom, he becomes Henry Box Brown, and uses his escape box as the basis for a subversive magic act that sees him tour the stages of the UK and Canada&nbsp;—&nbsp;his final home.&nbsp;</p>
Feb 03, 2025•54 min
<p>Is group therapy underused in treating mental health? Psychiatrist Molyn Leszcz calls it an “incredibly powerful” approach, where patients heal each other and themselves through support and, sometimes, challenge. Scholar Jess Cotton agrees, tracing the radical roots of an idea that she thinks could hold a greater place today. <em>*This episode originally aired on Dec. 18, 2023.</em></p>
Jan 31, 2025•54 min
<p>As Canadians once again find themselves explaining why their country deserves to exist, a group of proud Quebecers brave the winter in Sherbrooke to raise their nation’s largest-ever flag.<em>&nbsp;IDEAS'</em>&nbsp;Tom Howell joins in, as he continues his series on where the patriotic spirit belongs in people’s lives today.</p>
Jan 30, 2025•54 min
<p>Aaju Peter was 11 years old when she was taken from her Inuk community in Greenland and sent away to learn the ways of the West. She lost her language and culture. The activist, lawyer, designer, musician, filmmaker, and prolific teacher takes<em> IDEAS </em>host Nahlah Ayed on a tour of Iqaluit and into a journey to decolonization that continues still.</p>
Jan 29, 2025•54 min
<p>Is it too late to save the planet? Anthropologist Wade Davis doesn't think so — he's inspired by the ability of nature to adapt, and he thinks people can change, too. He says that means looking for all the information we can get. Part two of<em> IDEAS</em> producer Philip Coulter’s conversation with Wade Davis.&nbsp;</p>
Jan 28, 2025•54 min
<p>How do conversations happen differently in the north? What’s unique about Inuit approaches to silence — and to nation-to-nation conversations?<em> IDEAS</em> explores dialogue from Ian Williams' first Massey Lecture in Iqaluit with lawyer and activist Aaju Peter and actor and producer Simeonie Kisa-Knicklebein.&nbsp;</p>
Jan 27, 2025•54 min
<p>In her final 2024 BBC Reith Lecture,&nbsp;forensic psychiatrist Gwen Adshead assesses how we deal with violent offenders, and assesses the effectiveness and impact of therapeutic interventions with offenders in prisons. <em>*The Reith Lectures originally aired on BBC Radio 4.</em></p>
Jan 24, 2025•54 min
<p>With very rare access, forensic psychiatrist Gwen Adshead gives her&nbsp;third Reith Lecture&nbsp;inside Grendon prison, in England, where she talks to a small number of prisoners and staff, and asks the question: Does trauma cause violence? Does being a victim of violence, in some circumstances, make you more likely to become a perpetrator of violence? <em>*The Reith Lectures originally aired on BBC Radio 4.</em></p>
Jan 23, 2025•54 min
<p>Tech billionaires are on a mission to make the stories of science fiction a reality: space colonization, human/machine bio organisms, and living forever in a state of unhindered bliss. To most of us, this version of a far future utopia comes off as "billionaire boys and their toys" but critics say such a dismissive attitude is naïve.&nbsp;</p>
Jan 22, 2025•54 min
<p>Space exploration is no longer the domain of countries alone. It’s now rapidly becoming the domain of private interests. Astrophysicist Aaron Boley discusses the impact of this on humanity and astronomy in his 2024&nbsp;Dan MacLennan Memorial Lecture in Astronomy.</p>
Jan 21, 2025•54 min
<p>Nineteenth century German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche offers us a method that can help us navigate the highly polarizing discourse that’s afflicting democracies today. <em>IDEAS </em>explores lessons on healthy discourse from a man most popularly associated with nihilism.&nbsp;</p>
Jan 20, 2025•54 min
<p>Is a criminal trial a search for truth? How do we navigate between the trial process and our lived experience in that elusive search for the truth? Former Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour tackles these questions in her 2024 Horace E. Read lecture.</p>
Jan 17, 2025•54 min
<p>In a career spanning over 30 years, Dr. Adshead has heard many of her patients ask: "I have done evil things, but does that mean I am evil? In her&nbsp;second BBC Reith Lecture,&nbsp;Adshead asks if there is such a thing as evil. She argues we all have capacity for 'evil' and says we need to find ways to cultivate societal and individual 'goodness.' <em>*The Reith Lectures originally aired on BBC Radio 4. </em></p>
Jan 16, 2025•54 min
<p>Rome fell, because of... divorce. Or was it immigration? Maybe moral decay. <em>IDEAS </em>producer Matthew Lazin-Ryder explores the political history of 'the fall of Rome' — a hole in time where politicians, activists, and intellectuals can dump any modern anxiety they wish. <em>*This episode originally aired on Jan. 11, 2024.</em></p>
Jan 15, 2025•54 min
<p>What if there was one thing we could do to significantly impact poverty, crime, and climate change. Law professor Adam Benforado believes there is a solution: prioritizing kids. The author of<em> A Minor Revolution</em> argues that if we centred children when enacting law and public policy, we would all benefit.</p>
Jan 14, 2025•54 min
<p>English philosopher Thomas Hobbes believed that life would be "nasty, brutish and short" without a strong government.<em> IDEAS</em> explores how a new take on Hobbes offers a surprising perspective on the recent American election.</p>
Jan 13, 2025•54 min
<p>For the last 20 years, members of ARC Ensemble have dedicated themselves to recovering the forgotten works of exiled composers. Recently, the ensemble revived the works of Frederick Block — music that hasn't been performed publicly in nearly a century.<em> *This episode originally aired on Dec. 19, 2023.</em></p>
Jan 10, 2025•54 min
<p>This month,<em> IDEAS</em>&nbsp;features the 2024 BBC's Reith Lectures by forensic psychiatrist Gwen Adshead. Her four lectures address pertinent questions she has faced in her career. To start, she asks if violence is a normal part of human life — whether we are all capable and tempted by violence — or whether it is an aberration in just some people. <em>*The Reith Lectures originally aired on BBC Radio 4.</em></p>
Jan 09, 2025•54 min
<p>Writers Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and John McWhorter share common concerns about language, race and politics in our polarized society. They discuss the chilling of civic discourse for fear of political censure and how wokeness is condescending to Black people at the 2024 Aspen Ideas Festival.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
Jan 08, 2025•54 min
<p>Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor speaks to Nahlah Ayed about his life’s journey, from growing up in Montreal in the 1930s, his 1991 CBC Massey Lectures, and why he turned to Romantic poetry to re-enchant our sense of the meaning of life in his book, <em>Cosmic Connections.</em></p>
Jan 07, 2025•54 min
<p>Anthropologist Wade Davis has smoked toad, tried ayahuasca, and figured out the zombie cocktail in Haiti. He takes a walk through the forest with <em>IDEAS</em> producer Philip to talk about the wonders of our planet and ideas in his latest book of essays, <em>Beneath the Surface of Things.</em></p>
Jan 06, 2025•54 min
<p>Going the whole nine yards, dressing to the nines, being on cloud nine. In pop culture, in ancient folklore, in music, even in sports the number nine is everywhere. In the last episode of our series, <em>The Greatest Numbers of All Time</em>, we explore nine and its uncanny connections. <em>*This episode originally aired on Sept. 29, 2023. </em></p>
Jan 03, 2025•54 min
<p>Five: a simple, easy number with a diabolical side. As we continue our series, <em>The Greatest Numbers of All Time</em>, meet the Janus-faced figure of five and find out how the number has acquired its personality for people in the arts and sciences. <em>*This episode originally aired on Sept. 28, 2023.</em></p>
Jan 02, 2025•54 min