<p>Scientists agree that dogs evolved from wolves and were the first domesticated animals. But exactly how that happened is hotly contested.<em> IDEAS</em> contributor Neil Sandell examines the theories and the evolution of the relationship between dogs and humans.<em> *This episode originally aired on March 1, 2021.</em></p>
Aug 01, 2024•54 min
<p>Feeling the weight of a world? A lecture on hope might be a much needed balm. Scholar Shannon Murray shares lesson in hope, patience, empathy and 'freudenfreude,' and how Shakespeare’s words have become the narrative soundtrack of her life. <em>*This episode originally aired on Nov. 13, 2023.</em></p>
Jul 31, 2024•54 min
<p>Living in modern society is hard and so people often turn to the "mystical marketplace" where Westerners consume Eastern traditions to find some kind of healing balm for the ailments of modernity.<em> *This episode won a Wilbur Award for broadcast excellence on spiritual issues and themes. It originally aired on Jan. 27, 2021.</em></p>
Jul 30, 2024•54 min
<p>The burning of fossil fuels causes the past, present and future to collide in destructive ways. In her fourth Massey Lecture, Astra Taylor tells us that as the climate alters, evolved biological clocks erratically speed up or slow down, causing plants and animals to fall out of sync. In a world this out of joint, how could we possibly feel secure? But there is a path forward.</p>
Jul 29, 2024•1 hr 4 min
<p>Our series, looking at pivotal years in recent history, continues as we focus on the year 1963. Martin Luther King, Jr. leads a march on Washington, the Pan-African movement ushers in a new era for Africa, President Kennedy is assassinated, and the war in Vietnam heats up. <em>*This episode originally aired on Jan. 24, 2024.</em></p>
Jul 26, 2024•54 min
<p>English may have a reputation for being a "linguistic imperialist," pushing local languages into obscurity but linguist Mario Saraceni argues English should be viewed as a global language with multiple versions existing on equal footing. <em>*This episode originally aired on May 19, 2023.</em></p>
Jul 25, 2024•54 min
<p>Négritude was a Francophone movement to rethink what it meant to be Black and African. Scholar Merve Fejzula explores the dynamic debates happening in the early-to mid-20th century among Négritude thinkers, how they disseminated their ideas, and how all this changed what it meant to be part of a public. <em>*This episode originally aired on March 8, 2023.</em></p>
Jul 24, 2024•54 min
<p>A cotton sack from the time of slavery bears the first names of a mother and her daughter, who was sold at the age of nine. Harvard historian Tiya Miles scours the historical documentary record to discover who these women were and reveals their story of love in her book,<em> All That She Carried </em>— winner of the 2022 Cundill History Prize. <em>*This episode originally aired on Feb. 20, 2023.</em></p>
Jul 23, 2024•54 min
<p>It’s a paradox — we live in the most prosperous era in human history, but it’s also an era of profound insecurity. Massey Lecturer Astra Taylor suggests that history shows that increased material security helps people be more open-minded, tolerant, and curious. But rising insecurity does the reverse — it drives us apart.</p>
Jul 22, 2024•1 hr 4 min
<p>On the eve of the Second World War, Hitler annexes Austria and escalates antisemitic persecution, Japan wages war on China, and the parallel collapse of democracy in both the East and West sets the stage for war. <em>This is the second episode in our series exploring five years that have shaped the world. It originally aired on Jan. 23, 2024.</em></p>
Jul 19, 2024•54 min
<p>Tested is a new podcast series from CBC and NPR that asks the question, who gets to compete?&nbsp; Since the beginning of women’s sports, there has been a struggle over who qualifies for the women’s category. Tested follows the unfolding story of elite female runners who have been told they can no longer race as women, because of their biology. As the Olympics approach, they face hard choices: take drugs to lower their natural testosterone levels, give up their sport entirely, or fi...
Jul 18, 2024•39 min
<p>How should we fill our time, and what is most important to remember? Giller Prize-winning novelist and poet Ian Williams looks at the meaning of life, work and the relationship between the past and future, inspired by the Crow's Theatre's production of Anton Chekhov's classic drama,&nbsp;<em>Uncle Vanya</em>.<em> *This episode originally aired on March 11, 2024.</em></p>
Jul 18, 2024•54 min
<p>For nearly five years, Turkey imprisoned one of its most significant writers. Fifty-one Nobel laureates called for his release. Now free, the resilient Ahmet Altan reflects on the meaning of freedom, inside and out.</p>
Jul 17, 2024•54 min
<p>Celebrated Turkish writer Ahmet Altan spent almost five years in jail. He wrote his memoir which was smuggled out on bits of paper. This episode aired while he was still in prison. It won an Amnesty International Canada Media Award for outstanding human rights reporting. Tomorrow <em>IDEAS</em> features a conversation with CBC producer Mary Lynk and the now-freed Ahmet Altan.</p>
Jul 16, 2024•54 min
<p>In Astra Taylor's second Massey Lecture, she argues our social order runs on insecurity. But we’re also guaranteed the right to “security of the person.” The wealthy barons of the past and present have defined what security means for themselves — but the rest of us, ordinary commoners, have fought for something else instead.</p>
Jul 15, 2024•59 min
<p>After the First World War, the Western powers create new borders and carve out spheres of influence, leaders from the Global South fight for self-determination, and the League of Nations and the Communist International are formed. In this series, <em>IDEAS </em>explores five years in the 20th century that have shaped our world today. <em>*This episode originally aired on Jan. 22, 2024.</em></p>
Jul 12, 2024•54 min
<p>Arthur Schafer taught ethics to medical students in 1972. His 50-year career put the philosopher at the heart of major ethical debates like MAID. Schafer discusses the role of philosophers in addressing the increasingly complex ethical dilemmas confronting individuals and society as a whole. <em>*This episode originally aired on May 16, 2024. </em></p>
Jul 11, 2024•54 min
<p>Christina Sharpe's award-winning book, <em>Ordinary Notes</em>, explores the complexity of Black life — blending memoir, history, cultural and political critique. She argues that the experience of Black people is misunderstood — but can be contested, and healed, by Black creativity, and community.</p>
Jul 10, 2024•54 min
<p>Insecurity has become a "defining feature of our time," says CBC Massey lecturer Astra Taylor. The Winnipeg-born writer and filmmaker explores how rising inequality, declining mental health, the climate crisis, and the threat of authoritarianism originate from a social order built on insecurity. In her first lecture, she explores the existential insecurity we can’t escape — and the manufactured insecurity imposed on us from above.</p>
Jul 08, 2024•1 hr
<p>For award-winning poet and bestselling author Ross Gay, joy and delight aren’t frivolous or a privilege. He argues they’re absolutely essential to a meaningful life — especially in the face of grief, sadness and suffering.&nbsp;</p>
Jul 05, 2024•54 min
<p>2018 Massey Lecturer Tanya Talaga reflects on the legacy of cultural genocide, and on how the stories of Indigenous peoples offer lessons for Canada today. <em>*This episode is part of a series of conversations with — and about — former Massey Lecturers to mark the 60th anniversary of Massey College, a partner in the CBC Massey Lectures.</em></p>
Jul 03, 2024•54 min
<p>Championship soccer games provide some of the most dramatic moments in all of sports. And when the stakes are high, some people choke. IDEAS contributor Peter Brown looks at why our skills desert us when it matters most, and what can be done to avoid the dreaded performance “choke.”</p>
Jul 02, 2024•54 min
<p>We have laws against genocide, defined as "the deliberate attempt to erase a national, ethnic, religious or racial group." But how do we make them stick? <em>IDEAS </em>host Nahlah Ayed speaks with scholar William Schabas about the history of the UN Genocide Convention and what needs to change.</p>
Jun 28, 2024•54 min
<p>In his Massey Lectures, Iranian-Canadian lawyer Payam Akhavan recounts the courage and spirit of his childhood friend, Mona Mahmudnizhad. Mona was executed for defying Iranian authorities and speaking out about religious freedom. Her example compelled Payam to make it his mission to fight for justice for people who have suffered at the hands of human rights abusers. <em> </em></p>
Jun 27, 2024•54 min
<p>Human rights lawyer Payam Akhavan gave the 2017 Massey Lectures, called<em> In Search of a Better World</em>. As part of the Massey at 60 series, marking six decades of the Massey Lectures, he explains how the themes explored in his lectures have taken on even more relevance in today's divided, conflict-ridden world.</p>
Jun 26, 2024•54 min
<p>Identity is a hot topic in our era, but also a complex reality. Five literary writers — all of them winners of 2023 Governor General’s Literary Awards — read from new poems, essays, and stories that consider the ways that seemingly solid identities can be altered, questioned, or entirely subverted.</p>
Jun 25, 2024•54 min
<p>What does it mean to seek belonging in a new place, while also being a good guest on Indigenous lands? Can you ever truly "arrive"? Novelist and immigration and refugee lawyer Jamie Chai Yun Liew explores how to cultivate new forms of belonging.&nbsp;</p>
Jun 20, 2024•54 min
<p>David R. Samson argues that political tribalism is an existential threat to humanity. But the evolutionary anthropologist also sees ‘tribe drive’ as an essential instinct that can be channeled for good. His book <em>Our Tribal Future</em> won the 2023 Balsillie Prize for Public Policy award.</p>
Jun 19, 2024•54 min
<p>Two experts who got financially scammed. Two ex-Fundamentalist Christians who researched the psychology of conspiracy belief. Each describes their experience, and explains why credulity is a universal and persistent human tendency.<em> *This episode originally aired on April 20, 2023.</em></p>
Jun 18, 2024•54 min
<p>Artificial intelligence could make some of us rich — but leave some behind. In part two of the BBC Reith Lectures, Oxford professor Ben Ansell argues that AI can increase inequality, while appearing to increase prosperity, leading to skepticism about democracy.</p>
Jun 17, 2024•54 min