EPISODE · Feb 8, 2026 · 52 MIN
Logic For Everyone
from Philosophy Talk · host Philosophy Talk
Logic may seem like a dry, abstract discipline that only the nerdiest of philosophers study. After all, logic textbooks are full of weird symbols and proofs about abstruse entities, like “the set of all sets.” On the other hand, don’t we all try to think logically, at least in some contexts? Why do we believe, for example, it’s bad to contradict yourself and good to be coherent? And what’s the connection between the abstract rules of logic and the everyday practice of poking holes in each other’s arguments? Josh and Ray entail their guest, Patrick Girard from the University of Auckland, author of Logic in the Wild.
What this episode covers
Logic may seem like a dry, abstract discipline that only the nerdiest of philosophers study. After all, logic textbooks are full of weird symbols and proofs about abstruse entities, like “the set of all sets.” On the other hand, don’t we all try to think logically, at least in some contexts? Why do we believe, for example, it’s bad to contradict yourself and good to be coherent? And what’s the connection between the abstract rules of logic and the everyday practice of poking holes in each other’s arguments? Josh and Ray entail their guest, Patrick Girard from the University of Auckland, author of Logic in the Wild.
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Logic For Everyone
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