Past Present Future

51
History #203

Past Present Future is a bi-weekly History of Ideas podcast with David Runciman, host and creator of Talking Politics, exploring the history of ideas from politics to philosophy, culture to technology. David talks to historians, novelists, scientists and many others about where the most interesting ideas come from, what they mean, and why they matter.Ideas from the past, questions about the present, shaping the future.New episodes every Thursday and Sunday.

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Recent Reviews
  • Prsopect Farms
    Gift to the World
    I’m very grateful to David Runciman for sharing the fruits of his intellect in an accessible and entertaining way.
  • stzzyncl
    Well deserved
    Got through an hour drive listening to History of Ideas: Virginia Woolf. Thank you for voicing the importance of women in literature. Great podcast voice.
  • PCbnbnbjgg
    Insightful and challenging
    I watched The Zone of Interest three times. David pulled so much out of the film I need to watch it again. I greatly appreciate his effort and dedication to delivering highly intellectual content in an inviting manner.
  • Kishinever
    Best pods
    This is a great pod for 2 reasons. One is because of content. The other is because of delivery. Runciman has a great podcast voice. The best episodes feature him alone; without a guest.
  • smcnall
    Grateful
    A new must listen twice of week. Grateful for your intelligence, insight and creativity.
  • M. 001
    The best history, literary, philosophy, politics etc. podcast running now
    Amazing guests and intriguing topics. David is an excellent interviewer, moderator, interlocutor, and occasional adversary. Cannot recommend enough!
  • Jeff Salzman
    Extremely informative
    Thoughtful, careful analysis of current and past events, ideas, movies, and novels and things that should concern anybody who wants to understand the world around them.
  • Leka debham
    Delighted to discover this
    Has become my favorite podcast in no time. I always learn a lot. Also, Runciman has a great radio voice, making for easy listening.
  • trillionshelper
    BEST LITERARY PODCAST
    Brilliant podcast , thank you. I wish there were more episodes on the greatest novels (such as your sublime two part on Middlemarch ) and great writers (such as your excellent episode on Woolf) and less on topics such as American elections and that stuff .
  • great pdf app!
    The absolutely best podcast available
    I've followed David to this new podcast. He used to produce one with Helen Thompson, which was also fantastic. This podcast is probably even better
  • gordoe72
    Political novels
    When this series resumes you should consider “Neuromancer”
  • film scholar
    material for a number of books
    Superb
  • changagarcia
    Superb!
    🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩
  • Palunargar
    This is my favorite podcast!
    This podcast is perfect for me. The topics of history, literature,philosophy, political science etc combined in an essay is just wonderful. I have listened some episodes but I am planning to listen all of them. The ideas are organized by topics that help me to gain knowledge and understanding of important ideas that have shaped our world until recently. Listening this podcast is time well spent. Thank you!
  • The Scowl of Minerva
    LRB Subscriber
    I do hope listeners appreciate what an exceptional podcast Past/Present/Future is. It certainly helps that David Runciman seems to know everything, but to pair him with guests like Lea Ypi and others approaches perfection. Altogether a remarkable pairing of scholarship and presentation.
  • August Consumer
    Unbearable
    One of those frequent types who loves to hear their own voice & thinks the audience is flattered that they can listen. When Wikipedia is better, why waste time?
  • Hill.ph
    Past Present Future, History of Ideas
    This is the rich and thoughtful graduate course I longed for back in the disappointing days and parade of ‘isms that constituted undergraduate philosophy…and history. Or perhaps it’s just that education is wasted on the young; much better revisited decades later. For this I thank David Runciman, his guests and production team. I love the pace when Runciman is solo and the respectful exchange when he is not. I relisten to episodes, current
  • carterfrancis
    American Elections Series - Game Changer
    An absolutely incredible amount of information that is just not taught as part of civic education. I’ve been a longtime listener but this series takes the show to a new level and is especially important context for this year’s election.
  • incognito82
    History of Ideas
    Amazing.
  • NeverBored.
    Every episode reveals insightful ideas and thoughts
    I look forward to every episode. Thank you.
  • Johal52
    Virginia Woolf
    A friend recommended your podcast on “A Room of One’s Own”. I listened to it this morning and wow, what a great summary/analysis! I am trying to find a transcript of it because you made some great points that I want to make notes on.
  • 小J结构观花宫
    Eliminating!
    Thank you for the consistently thoughtful contents!
  • Britt Hadar
    Best podcast ever made
    Thank you so much for doing this service for humanity.
  • anziayezierska
    A light in dark times
    Imagine the smartest conversation you’ve ever had, multiply the brilliance and thoughtfulness times 10, add a dash of intellectual humility, and you have this podcast. A refuge from the awful politics of now—but a historical one, that shows you where those politics came from and where they might or might not be going.
  • heatseeker
    Unbelievably good
    This podcast is so good, I can’t stop recommending it to people. Engages with ideas with a level of sophistication that I haven’t found with any other podcast, while remaining accessible and entertaining. The “Great Essays” series is the best place to start — some of my favorites include the episodes on Woolf, Weil, Baldwin, and Coates.
  • HodorTheTriumphant
    Quite Simply The Best Podcast About Ideas and Power
    At its best, this podcast will open your eyes to truths you’d never focused on before. The host and his guests wrestle with the biggest crises of our time in attempts to understand where we are, what is right, and what can be done. Absolutely brilliant. It probes the human condition, examines our shared histories, and stares deep into the facets of our problems from many angles. They do not pull punches. It is intellectual, but in a fundamentally creative and critically analytical way. It deals with a wide range of topics, but you will learn important things if you pay attention. If you’re not listening to this, then you’re missing out on the most relevant and penetrating conversation of the current moment. Listen. It’s worth your time and attention.
  • Stourleyk
    Leviacene, really.
    Rather dull to attempt to necklace an ethnicity with what is a univeral. Such reviews are the product of an other's envy, or that of a duped member of that group that the other scorns.
  • msfroh
    Better (?) than Talking Politics
    I loved David's previous program with Helen Thompson, Talking Politics. While I miss Helen, I really enjoy the variety of this program. The interviewa are amazing and Lea Ypi as a recurring guest is brilliant. David has become an incredibly strong interviewer, injecting his opinions as a way of letting the guest express their opinions in opposition. The essays (to me, at least), feel like David interviewing the author through their words. Altogether, it's one of my favorite parts of this week.
  • CryptoYooper
    Leviacene, Really?
    Dear David, While I’m sympathetic to your conclusion, the path you take to it is a crafty pastiche of Eurocentric chauvinism at best. It would be more accurate to label this global mess we find ourselves in the Anglocene. Britain created the Leviathan and exported it around our planet. Human slavery , colonialism, genocide, patriarchy, plantation economics, and plantation politics all to “scale” accompanied it to the Americas where it took root and flourishes to this day in the form of MAGA nuttery. Anthropocentric Leviathanism is absurd and a cruel contradiction. Our world has had enough iterations of this destructive story. We already have a way forward. It’s been here all along. Rather than reinventing Leviathanism, we need to rediscover the sanity, serenity, and wisdom of the cultures that were present in the “New World “ thousands of years prior to that fatal contact in your so-called 15th Century with your Leviathan culture. - Chris 11-3-2023
  • steelebd
    Incredible Series
    Thank you so much for this series. I think the Orwell is the best, but the Didion and Baldwin are up there. If you like this series (and you should!) go over to Mr. Runciman’s “talking politics” podcast and listen to the Weber and, especially, Benjamin Constant episodes. These might change your life (certainly how you see and, likely, approach it). The explication is so great, but the best thing about this series is that it forces you to go to the essays yourself. I know that’s cliche but it’s true. Thank you, again. I’m grateful for this series. Brian
  • Can’t Cant
    Great episode!
    David you definitely perk up under interrogation. Lea is making all the right points about how your account makes too strong a case for the inevitability of corporate/state power as we move forward. The weird thing is that your theory also initially appears to mute cultural context and historical contingency. But it’s so historical! And so English! Hobbes’ Leviathan not possible outside the weird destiny of the English Reformation, of course. Otherwise it would have just been some French divine right nonsense. Having said all that I agree with you because of the context of the Hobbes model which was very historically situated, very British, and perhaps the most successful imperialist model, save Genghis Kahn’s. I was shocked that you didn’t discuss the unique conditions of the Reformation in England with its sovereignty model, and the unusually successful record of British corporations from the embryonic Virginia Company to the truly hegemonic East India Company and its mania for robotic record keeping and standardization. Sometimes I listen to you at night so I may have dozed off at that point. You’re brilliant on the state/corporation assumption of decisions on behalf of the public … how you describe the God-like role of the Leviathan as anticipating the algorithmic takeover of our choice points in daily life including political life … yo bro, that was just excellent and could use a whole new episode. It ties in with that recent essay in LRB about our political sphere now being modeled on fandom, a uniquely algorithmically empowered phenomenon. So yes, another episode, please. Best, Susanna
  • leapingheart
    Orwell episode is a tour de force
    The episode on Orwell’s essay, “The Lion and the Unicorn,” is a tour de force. This one easygoing talk has the dimensions of a whole book about British history and culture. Postscript: Also extraordinary are the episodes on Thoreau and Joan Didion. Runciman is a triple-threat with historical grounding, taste, and a point of view that gives the talks momentum. I don’t think any American understands Thoreau as well as this fine critic, Prof. Runciman, who seems too culturally savvy to be an Oxford professor.
  • nucuplmnjuyh
    Simone Weil
    I have listened with great pleasure to the Virginia Woolf and the Republican Party episodes so far. I’m in the middle of listening to the Simone Weil one. But I have to stop and write this (I do plan to listen to the rest of the episodes, I find your podcast very well researched and insightful). The throwaway phrase that— because she thought that scientists may follow fashion (and I don’t know if she was truly anti-science, I’ve yet to read her posthumous essays On Science, Necessity and the Love of God)— she would be in the 21st century be an anti-vaxxer is preposterous. Just because she saw various Weltanschauungen as pernicious, does not mean that she would oppose the science behind the anti-covid vaccines. Also, she wasn’t a self-hating Jew, she questioned, like you said, the institutionalization of religions. We have to thank Susan Sontag for the charge of antisemitism, and how ironic that Weil in fact influenced Sontag.
  • Decorno
    David Runciman ASMR.
    I loved his History of Ideas series, and now he’s back. I cannot get enough of his brain or voice.
  • # 47
    Intolerably biased from left leaning perspective
    I was hopeful that the presenter would discuss topics in an impartial and historical perspective. The topics are compelling and interesting. However, after listening to three episodes I have become disappointed that the host and guests only seem to be able to view things from the left and cannot be more intellectually fair minded.
  • Jwd51
    Thanks for new history of ideas series
    The episode on Montaigne was especially good. I’m far from having read all of Montaigne’s Essays, but Sarah Bakewell’s book is one of my favorites and this episode gives me so much to think about. Runciman brings out so clearly all the ways Montaigne speaks to today.
  • ChoirGeek💜
    Listen for Wide-ranging Runciman
    Unexpected subject picks for the first three episodes, but I am enjoying that freshness. David Runciman is always good and it’s interesting to hear his takes on more wide-ranging topics. Definitely worth a listen.
  • sidneyhart
    Not off to a good start
    It’s true I’m writing this only three episodes in but in his effort to come up with something different in the crowded world of podcasts David Runciman appears to have stumbled. A discussion of an old political novel with a well known but middlebrow present-day novelist, the societal significance of a racy prime time soap opera from 40 years ago, life behind the Iron Curtain with a guest he’s had before in his earlier podcast, gives this one a rather random feel, as if he’s straining for freshness.
  • Helena Tica
    Great news to have you back David!!!
    Can’t wait to hear your first episode!
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