Five g towers were going up right when cove had started, you know. So for a little bit there, people were like, well, obviously five gee is a little like mooks,. For a while everyone was like, this is the future. And then every and everyone was likelike, pa, we knew we wouldn't like this, and we don't. We're back. Aa, absolutely. We aw so happy. It's just, like, i left the public consciousness that at least i have access to. Like, it's weird, like wike were, i guess we don't have it in houston. Or maybe we do. I have no idea
David and Tamler continue their discussion of Leo Tolstoy’s 'Confession.' When we left him last time, the famous author had bottomed out just years after writing two of the greatest novels ever written. Our eventual death, Tolstoy thought, strips life of all meaning and purpose – all answers to the question “so what?”. How does he emerge from this state of suicidal depression? What role does faith or “irrational knowledge” play in his account? What’s the meaning of the cryptic dream at the conclusion of the memoir?
Plus, bombarded with this recommendation, we were going to talk about a certain article that came out in Qualitative Research about masturbating to Japanese shota comics – we even had a guest – but had to scrap it. Instead, we discuss a recent study on conspiracy theories that shows that liberals are just as likely to believe in them as conservatives. Mostly we just talk about the conspiracies.
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Links:
- Enders, A., Farhart, C., Miller, J., Uscinski, J., Saunders, K., & Drochon, H. (2022). Are Republicans and Conservatives More Likely to Believe Conspiracy Theories?. Political behavior, 1-24.
- A Confession - Wikipedia