Notas del episodio
What if the real danger in the world isn’t ignorance… but certainty?
In this episode, we step inside the mind of Bertrand Russell — the philosopher who believed that most human suffering comes not from evil, but from unexamined beliefs held with confidence.
Why did Russell think clarity was a moral act? Why did he distrust certainty more than doubt? And what happens to your life when you stop believing things simply because they’re popular, comforting, or inherited?
This is not just a biography — it’s a confrontation with how you think, why you believe what you believe, and whether your ideas are truly yours.
If you’ve ever wondered:
- How language distorts truth
- Why intelligent people fall into dogma
- Or whether thinking clearly is still possible in a noisy world
Palabras clave
philosophybertrand russellclarity