
Walden Pod
Walden Pod is a philosophy and science podcast with an emphasis on the philosophy of religion and philosophy of mind. Hosted by Emerson Green of the Counter Apologetics Podcast and the Emerson Green YouTube Channel.
Latest episodes

Mar 8, 2023 • 18min
63 - How can panpsychists sleep?
“On panpsychism, how can there ever be unconsciousness, like in the case of dreamless sleep?” As far as objections go, this is a pretty weak one, but I decided to take the opportunity to talk about death, sleep, states of unconsciousness, and how panpsychists see the mind and its place in nature.
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Consider supporting the show on Patreon here or Counter Apologetics here
Listen to our sister show, Counter Apologetics here
Transcript
Twitter @waldenpod @OnPanpsychism
linktr.ee/emersongreen

Feb 23, 2023 • 1h 54min
62 - What's the Best Explanation of Psychophysical Harmony? w/ Philip Goff & Dustin Crummett
Philip Goff and Dustin Crummett debate psychophysical harmony, God, axiarchism, pan-agentialism, natural teleology, and explore some neglected terrain between theism and the hypothesis of indifference. What are our options in explaining the fine-tuning of consciousness?
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Twitter @waldenpod @Philip_Goff @dustin_crummett
Dustin's Channel
Mind Chat
Music by ichika Nito & Whalers. Used with permission.
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Dec 20, 2022 • 26min
61 - The Vagueness Argument Against Physicalism
When did consciousness first evolve? If physicalism is true, we’d expect it to have evolved gradually, just as other complex biological phenomena evolved gradually. But the transition from feeling nothing to feeling something couldn’t have been gradual. No matter how minimal a conscious experience is, if it’s “like something” to exist – anything at all – it’s not like nothing at all. On reflection it seems hard to imagine anything other than a sharp border between non-experiential reality and experiential reality. On the other hand, complex physical states are not sharp: they admit borderline cases. If we remove one atom at a time from a given brain state, it will eventually be vague or indeterminate whether or not the organism is still in that physical brain state. So if consciousness is just a kind of physical state, we’d expect consciousness to follow suit. Since it seems impossible that there could be a borderline case of consciousness – it’s either like something for a creature or like nothing – we have reason to think that physicalism is false.
Michael Tye - Vagueness and the Evolution of Consciousness
David Papineau’s review of Vagueness and the Evolution of Consciousness in NDPR
Nino Kadic - Phenomenology of Fundamental Reality
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Listen to our sister show, Counter Apologetics here
Support at patreon.com/counter or patreon.com/waldenpod
Music by ichika Nito and used with permission.
Transcript
Twitter @waldenpod @OnPanpsychism
linktr.ee/emersongreen
/ timestamps /
00:00 The vagueness argument
04:18 Which creatures are conscious?
06:18 The sharpness of consciousness
10:09 The vagueness of biological phenomena
12:41 The sharpness of consciousness (cont.)
20:14 Weak emergence
21:42 The advantage of vagueness arguments

Dec 8, 2022 • 36min
60 - Why I Support Abolition of the Death Penalty
In many ways, I'm the ideal audience for apologists of capital punishment. I believe in free will, I think human beings are responsible for their actions, I’m not opposed to retribution in all cases, I believe there are virtuous qualities to revenge, and I think some people deserve to die. However, none of that is enough to justify the death penalty system.
First, arguing that some people deserve to die is not sufficient to show that any particular institution (e.g. the state) should have the power and legitimacy to carry out executions. Second, capital punishment is not reconcilable with the principle of remedy: when mistakes are inevitably made, the punishment for the wrongly convicted cannot be brought to an end and they cannot be given damages. Third, the application of the death penalty will inevitably be morally arbitrary in some cases – either due to the morally arbitrary nature of the laws themselves, the enforcement of the law, or the imperfect determination of guilt. Since this is unavoidable, we cannot have the death penalty without murdering innocents. And since saving innocent life is far more important than ending the lives of the guilty, this should dissuade us from maintaining a death-penalty system. Finally, the virtuous qualities of revenge are absent in the death penalty system.
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Support at patreon.com/waldenpod & patreon.com/counter
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Transcript
Listen to our sister show, Counter Apologetics here
Music by ichika Nito and used with permission.
Twitter @waldenpod

Oct 3, 2022 • 56min
Sentientism Interview (pt. 2)
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Subscribe on YouTube
Consider supporting the show on Patreon here or Counter Apologetics here
Listen to our sister show, Counter Apologetics here
Music by ichika Nito and used with permission.
Full interview on the Sentientism podcast
Twitter @waldenpod @OnPanpsychism

Sep 30, 2022 • 1h 16min
Sentientism Interview (pt. 1)
linktr.ee/emersongreen
Subscribe on YouTube
Consider supporting the show on Patreon here or Counter Apologetics here
Listen to our sister show, Counter Apologetics here
Music by ichika Nito and used with permission.
Full interview on the Sentientism podcast
Twitter @waldenpod @OnPanpsychism

Sep 21, 2022 • 2h 3min
59 - Metaethics & Moral Realism w/ Michael Huemer
Dr. Michael Huemer joins me to discuss moral realism vs. antirealism, ethical intuitionism, phenomenal conservatism, moral disagreement, and much else in moral philosophy.
Ethical Intuitionism
Knowledge, Reality, and Value: A Mostly Common Sense Guide to Philosophy
William Lane Craig vs. Erik Wielenberg
Linktree
/ The Five Metaethical Positions /
Noncognitivism/expressivism: Moral statements are neither true nor false. Evaluative predicates do not even
purportedly refer to any sort of property, nor do evaluative statements assert propositions.
Error theory/nihilism: Moral statements (that imply that something has an evaluative property) are all false.
Subjectivism: Some moral statements are true, but not objectively. For a thing to be good is for some individual or group to (be disposed to) take some attitude towards it.
Moral Naturalism: There are objective moral properties, but they are reducible. Evaluative truths are reducible to descriptive truths. Additionally, moral statements can be justified empirically.
Moral Non-Naturalism/Intuitionism: There are objective moral properties, and they are irreducible. Evaluative truths are not reducible to descriptive truths. Additionally, at least some moral truths are known intuitively.
/ Timestamps /
00:00 Introduction
01:05 Objective vs. Subjective
06:45 Five Metaethical Views
36:45 Fictionalism
50:40 Phenomenal Conservatism, Scientism, Skepticism
1:15:00 Moral Disagreement
1:25:00 Theism and Moral Realism
1:41:00 Companions in Innocence
1:46:30 Evolutionary Debunking Arguments
2:00:00 Huemer’s soul is not in Colorado nor is it in Michigan

Aug 31, 2022 • 37min
Call In Show #2 - Intelligent Theists, Ultimate Justice, Necessity
Is the intellectual tradition of theism evidence in favor of it? What about the atheistic tradition? ... Does atheism sap your moral motivation? Do Christians even believe in ultimate justice? ... Do contingency arguments succeed? What does it mean for something to be necessary?
Leave a voicemail at (734) 707-1940
(I'm only taking 3-4 calls per episode, so if you've already left one and haven't heard it yet, don't worry)
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Twitter @waldenpod @OnPanpsychism
Patreon.com/waldenpod
linktr.ee/emersongreen

Aug 19, 2022 • 43min
58 - Defending Libertarian Free Will w/ Necessary Being & John Buck
I'm joined by two proponents of libertarian free will to discuss determinism, the phenomenology of free choices, how "ought implies can" could prove we have the ability to do otherwise, and much else.
linktr.ee/emersongreen
YouTube
Support the podcast at patreon.com/waldenpod or /counter
Listen to our sister show, Counter Apologetics here
Music by ichika Nito and used with permission.
Twitter @waldenpod @OnPanpsychism
Darren (Necessary Being) w/ Bread of Life
Necessary Being on Free Will
Critiquing arguments against free will from neuroscience | The Analytic Christian & Dr. Matthew Flummer (of The Free Will Show)

Aug 12, 2022 • 3h 3min
57 - Is Utilitarianism the Only Good Ethical Theory? w/ Matthew Adelstein
I'm joined by Matthew Adelstein of Deliberation Under Ideal Conditions for Utilitarianism 101. We also talk about a few basic things everyone needs to know to be conversant in moral philosophy.
YouTube
Matthew's Channel
Matthew's Blog (Bentham's Bulldog)
Consider supporting the show on Patreon here or Counter Apologetics here
Listen to our sister show, Counter Apologetics here
Music by ichika Nito and used with permission.
Twitter @waldenpod @OnPanpsychism
linktr.ee/emersongreen