

The Ralston College Podcast
Ralston College
The Ralston College Podcast delivers a series of conversations and lectures aimed at fostering a deeper, livelier, and freer intellectual culture for us all.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jan 28, 2026 • 1h 35min
Founding an Empire: Lessons from Augustus with Dr Barry Strauss
Dr Barry Strauss, historian and classicist who wrote extensively on Augustus and Roman warfare, explores how Octavian became Rome’s founder of imperial order. He traces youthful ambition, battlefield gambits, political settlements, cultural branding, and the tradeoff between republican freedom and imperial stability. Short, vivid portraits of Actium, propaganda, succession, and the making of the Pax Romana.

Jan 20, 2026 • 1h 24min
Universities and the Future of Civilization: In Conversation with Iain McGilchrist
Iain McGilchrist, a prominent writer, psychiatrist, and philosopher, discusses the pivotal role of universities in shaping civilization. He warns against the dangers of excessive specialization and mechanistic thought, advocating for a return to education that prioritizes wisdom, tradition, and creativity. McGilchrist emphasizes the importance of lived experience in developing true understanding and critiques trends that prioritize information over meaning. He also questions the impact of AI on human intelligence and urges a revival of cultural inheritance and moral values.

Dec 30, 2025 • 55min
Taking Up Your Inheritance: A Philosophical Conversation Between Student and Teacher
In this conversation, Jay Morris speaks with Dr James Bryson about the modern crisis of meaning and the difficulty of remaining spiritually oriented in a world shaped by reductionist accounts of mind, body, and nature. They reflect on the psychological and cultural repercussions of a scientific picture that brackets teleology and final causes, leaving many modern people disembodied, disenchanted, and uncertain about purpose. While acknowledging the genuine success of modern science, Dr Bryson argues that its limits must be faced honestly, especially where questions of meaning, value, and the human heart are concerned. The discussion then turns to education and the experience of intellectual disinheritance. Dr Bryson reflects on his own formation through a liberal arts education and the humbling discovery of the vast conversation that constitutes the Western tradition. Reading Plato, Dante, and Hegel not as isolated figures but as interlocutors across time, he emphasizes that tradition is a lineage we already inhabit, whether consciously or not. To read historically, he suggests, is not to retreat into the past, but to become aware of the forces shaping our thinking and to take responsibility for them. The conversation culminates in a meditation on teaching, love, and the philosophical life. Dr Bryson argues that education at its best does not impose conclusions, but kindles desire, granting students permission to pursue the questions that genuinely move them. Drawing on Plato's understanding of eros, he describes philosophy as an act of midwifery, helping ideas come to birth rather than dictating outcomes. In an age marked by spiritual malaise and intellectual fragmentation, the conversation offers a hopeful vision of education as the recovery of orientation, enchantment, and the shared pursuit of wisdom. Applications for Ralston College's MA in the Humanities are now open. Learn more and apply today at www.ralston.ac/apply Authors, Artists, and Works Mentioned in this Episode: Plato Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit Blaise Pascal Dante Plotinus Homer Virgil Alfred North Whitehead Arthur O. Lovejoy Aristotle Johann Gottlieb Fichte Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling Will Durant's The Story of Philosophy An Outline of European Architecture by Nikolaus Pevsner Dante's Paradiso The Ring of Truth by Roger Scruton The Magician's Nephew by C.S. Lewis

Nov 25, 2025 • 1h 45min
Drs Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying in Conversation with Ralston College's Students
In this wide-ranging conversation with students at Ralston College, evolutionary biologists Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying reflect on how to live well in the modern world, biologically, philosophically, and spiritually. Moving from Aristotle's De Anima to the ethics of diet and the future of civilization, they explore the body not as an obstacle to overcome but as the very substrate through which consciousness takes form. From lineage and the long arc of life on Earth to nutrition, parenthood, grief, and the challenges of modern medicine, the discussion reveals an integrated vision of human flourishing rooted in both biology and meaning. Applications for Ralston College's MA in the Humanities are now open. Learn more and apply today at www.ralston.ac/apply Subscribe for updates at: www.ralston.ac/subscribe Authors and Works Mentioned in this Episode: Aristotle's De Anima

Nov 4, 2025 • 1h 15min
The Sophia Lectures With Bret Weinstein - Lecture 4: The Relationship Between Culture and Genes
Bret Weinstein, an evolutionary biologist, and his wife Heather Heying join for captivating discussions on how culture and genes shape humanity. They dive into dual inheritance, exploring how our long childhoods foster cultural learning and unleash creative potential. Weinstein emphasizes consciousness as a tool for novel problem-solving and storytelling, highlighting its role in societal evolution. The couple also warns of cultural mismatch in our fast-paced world, advocating for sustainable practices and the nurturing of craftsmanship to reconnect with our values and nature.

Oct 28, 2025 • 1h 1min
The Sophia Lectures With Heather Heying - Lecture 3: The Usual Suspects
Heather Heying, an evolutionary biologist, explores the emergence of sentient consciousness across species. She reveals common traits in intelligent beings, like long childhoods and social behaviors, drawing parallels among primates, dolphins, and corvids. Heying discusses how play enhances learning and describes innovative behaviors from dolphins using tools to crows refining their tool designs. She connects these insights to broader themes of culture, empathy, and the beauty of natural patterns, challenging conventional views of intelligence in animals.

Oct 21, 2025 • 1h 20min
The Sophia Lectures With Bret Weinstein - Lecture 2: Biological Nature to What End?
Bret Weinstein, an evolutionary biologist, and his wife, Heather Hying, join the discussion to explore the intersection of evolution and human culture. They delve into why life emerges from nonlife, critique the conflation of data collection with science, and emphasize the importance of predictive models. The couple also discusses how adaptation shapes human purpose and morality, suggesting humans uniquely reason about survival. The conversation spans the value of language, the relationship between the arts and sciences, and enduring cultural traditions.

Oct 15, 2025 • 57min
The Sophia Lectures With Heather Heying - Lecture 1: Foundations
Dr. Heather Heying, an evolutionary biologist and public intellectual, dives into the foundations of scientific inquiry, blending biology and philosophy. She challenges dogma, advocating for free inquiry as essential to scientific discovery. Heying distinguishes between biotic and abiotic origins, revealing how evolution impacts everything from molecular structures to human artifacts. Her discussion touches on the nature of universals, the importance of diverse evidence in understanding evolution, and the humility required in scientific exploration. A thought-provoking invitation to view science as a living inquiry!

25 snips
Oct 6, 2025 • 1h 37min
Making Sense of Complex Systems with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying
Join Bret Weinstein, an evolutionary biologist and cultural critic, and Heather Heying, also an evolutionary biologist with a knack for pedagogy, as they explore the nature of learning and curiosity. They discuss the importance of mentorship and play in education, tackling the complexities of modern technology and hyper-novelty. With insights on fostering genuine intellectual engagement, they emphasize the need for humility in science and bridging connections between science and the humanities. Their engaging stories about nature reveal why they’re passionate about evolutionary biology.

Aug 25, 2025 • 1h 14min
Katabasis and Return: A Conversation With Mari Otsu About Her Time at Ralston College
Mari Otsu joins Stephen Blackwood for a deeply personal conversation about her journey through the wounds of materialism, ideology, and spiritual forgetting, and her return to the soul through the beauty of the humanities. Reflecting on her years at NYU and the Grand Central Atelier, Mari speaks of a longing that nothing in the modern, politicized worldview could satisfy, and how she found healing in therapy, classical painting, and, most profoundly, the living philosophical community of Ralston College. Engaging with the works of Plotinus, Boethius, and Dante, she discovered a path of purification and ascent that restored her sense of meaning and inspired her to share these treasures with others. This conversation explores the roots of today's meaning crisis and the redemptive power of beauty, thought, and imagination to heal the soul. Subscribe to receive the latest Ralston College updates at www.ralston.ac/sign-up. Authors and Works Mentioned in this Episode: Plotinus' Enneads Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy Augustine's Confessions Plato Dante's Divine Comedy Monique Wittig's The Straight Mind Chapters 00:00 - Introduction 01:29 - Conversation Begins 02:18 - About Mari 6:00 - Βrief Review of Mari's time at Ralston 8:00 - Mari's Descent into Anguish and Fragmentation 15:20 - The Ideological Component: NYU 23:30 - Leaving Blame Behind 27:20 - Fear as a Symptom of a Spiritual Pathology 29:00 - The Role of Therapy and Right Relationship 34:00 - The Power of Art 44:16 - Moving from Beauty to Contemplation 46:51 - Beginning at Ralston 1:00:00 - Plotinus Moving Beyond Beauty 1:08:00 - Wrapping It All Up 01:11:01 - Exit Music and Fade


