

Episode 146, The Philosophy of Comedy (Part II - The Ethics of Humour)
Aug 24, 2025
The podcast delves into the provocative intersection of humor and ethics. It wrestles with the implications of controversial jokes, like Jimmy Carr's Holocaust quip, questioning where the line should be drawn in comedy. The discussion explores comic amoralism and the evolving audience perceptions of humor, particularly relating to sensitive topics. It also touches on the ethics of roasting and the significance of incongruity in eliciting laughter, revealing how humor can simultaneously challenge societal norms and provoke necessary conversations.
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Jimmy Carr's 'Career Ender' Controversy
- The episode opens with Jimmy Carr's Holocaust joke that called Nazis' murder of 'Gypsies' a 'positive' and provoked international outrage.
- Public bodies and politicians labelled the joke 'abhorrent' and demanded its removal from Netflix.
Comedy Depends On Context And Intention
- Comic amoralism claims jokes are beyond moral judgment and that intent and context determine blame.
- Noel Carroll and others stress speaker intention, audience, and context matter for moral assessment.
Separate The Joker From The Joke
- David Benatar's framework separates agent defects from humor-type defects when judging jokes.
- This clarifies whether we criticise the joker or the category of joke itself.