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Four Thought

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Jan 6, 2016 • 18min

Changing Laws of War

Muna Baig argues that forced displacement should be taken seriously as a war crime.Muna is a lawyer who has spent time working with refugees and with international lawyers. She calls forced displacement the 'cinderella war crime' and argues that despite it being considered a war crime since at least the Second World War, there is little political will to enforce the law. She maintains that only by talking about forced displacement will that change.Producer: Beth Sagar-Fenton.
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Dec 9, 2015 • 19min

Lessons in Development

Alpa Shah argues that tribal people need a better development model.Alpa is an anthropologist who has spent years with tribal Adivasi people, in Jharkhand, in eastern India. In recent years their lands have been identified as some of the most mineral-rich on earth and are being eagerly eyed by mining companies. There are many potential benefits, but Alpa asks whether the world has learned lessons in how to ensure that everyone can share in them.Producer: Beth Sagar-Fenton.
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Oct 14, 2015 • 17min

Trust Me, I'm a Magician

Paul Hyland is a writer and a magician - but, as he explains in this entertaining essay, he is not a trickster. At least, not a dishonest one. "Did the painter trick you when his reclining nude turned out to be no more than a layer of pigments, textures, lines of perspective, light and shade on a flat canvas?" Recorded at the End of the Road music festival.Producer: Richard Knight.
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Oct 10, 2015 • 43min

The Best of Four Thought: Matt Haig, Tim Meek, Adjoa Andoh

Another chance to hear three great talks combining personal stories and new ideas.Adjoa Andoh talks movingly about raising a transgender child, and about what really defines who we are or who we might become. "In too many places today," she says, "and in too many ways, we suffocate our true potential selves at birth."Matt Haig describes how words helped him live with depression. "You have to believe there is a point of there being words, and that they can offer real meaning. Normally this belief is taken for granted, but that is because normally we are taking the world itself for granted. But when your mind crumbles to dust everything you thought you knew suddenly becomes something to question. You have to build reality up again. And the bricks we use to shape our realities are called words." Tim Meek explains why he and his family have left their old life behind them for a year of adventure on the road. "We believe that the real measure of modern success is nothing to do with your bank balance or the size of your house, but instead, the amount of free time you have at your disposal."Presenter: Mark Coles Producer: Sheila Cook Editor: Richard Knight.
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Oct 7, 2015 • 16min

Why Run?

In this thoughtful essay Adharanand Finn provides a subtle answer to a simple question: why do we run? After all, he says, "running is hard. It requires effort. And after all the pain you usually end up right back where you started, having run in a big, pointless circle". With reference to childhood, hunter-gatherers and even the monks of mount Hiei, who run the equivalent of 1,000 marathons in 1,000 days, Adharanand arrives at an answer: running brings us joy. Recorded at the End of the Road music festival.Producer: Richard Knight.
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Sep 30, 2015 • 18min

A Scaredy-Cat's Guide to Moving Abroad

Sarah Bennetto is now an established comedian but, not so long ago, she was a lonely Australian trying - against the odds - to make a new life for herself in London. It wasn't easy. "Heroes find themselves in some pretty sticky situations at the start of a quest," she says. "What a shame that 'sticky' was, in my hostel's case, literal." In this witty and wise essay, Sarah shares her tips for starting a new life in a strange land. Recorded at the End of the Road music festival.Producer: Richard Knight.
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Sep 23, 2015 • 20min

The Unequal Past

Jim Smallman examines the attitude of society to our pasts and argues that men and women are treated very differently. "I am not proud of my past," he says, "I'm massively ashamed of huge swathes of it." But Jim's misdeeds are, he argues, "easily forgivable" because he was "just being a bit of a lad". In contrast, Jim's wife - a former pornographic actress - is not given the same latitude. Too many people, he says, would "use her past to hold her back from the future that she deserves". Recorded at the End of the Road music festival.Producer: Richard Knight.
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Sep 16, 2015 • 21min

Saving the Skyline

Barbara Weiss says we need to act fast to save London's skyline from the indiscriminate building of ugly tower blocks."Many of them are being built in highly inappropriate and sensitive locations, dwarfing the city's historic landmarks and blighting low-rise surroundings for miles, introducing a toxic mix of commercialism and bling that is already greatly compromising the reserved and unique beauty of our capital."Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Sep 9, 2015 • 21min

Cold Calling

Ian McDowell experiences misery working in a cold calling centre to raise money for charities and questions this method of fund-raising."How much of this do the charities, who spend millions of pounds every year on these dubious methods, really know, or want to know, about this sometimes sordid business? And why on earth should their supporters put up with it?"Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Sep 2, 2015 • 22min

The Power of Dreams

Shane McCorristine thinks we are losing out by no longer talking about our dreams, in contrast to our ancestors. "This collapse in the democratic dream-archive may well have implications for the historians of the future, who will have little access to the most amazing stories of our innermost fears and desires."Producer: Sheila Cook.

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