
In this episode, award-winning historian and author Hindol Sengupta speaks to Professor Gautam Desiraju, one of India’s most cited living scientists on Desiraju’s book Bharat: India 2.0 and why the scientist at the hallowed Indian Institute of Science believes India needs a new constitution based on Dharma.
Nov 13, 2022
37 min

Award-winning historian Lavanya Vemsani strives to unravel old myths about ancient India and its culture and show what really happened and what colonial theories got wrong.
Oct 8, 2020
43 min

In this pathbreaking conversation Dr. Johannes Kleiner, a mathematician and physicist at the Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy. He works at the cutting edge of an ever urgent question - is the universe conscious? It could well be.
Jun 4, 2020
17 min

How is the ancient science of well-being, yoga, being globalised, and is it working? The answers from Dr. Bhaswati Bhattacharya who was trained as a doctor at Cornell, Harvard and Columbia and has a PhD from the Benaras Hindu University.
May 21, 2020
26 min

In this episode the renowned professor of religious studies, Jeffery D. Long, talks about how the coronavirus pandemic has forced us to look within, and how, if we cared to, we could find true happiness within ourselves.
May 10, 2020
25 min

Turning away from the excesses of monotheism, more and more people are turning to ancient faiths which treasure openness and the environment. This is a very special episode from Iceland, on how it rediscovered its ancient faith which is now growing very fast. We speak to its chief priest Hilmar Hilmarsson.
Jun 19, 2019
23 min

Gabriella Burnel read Sanskrit, the language India’s most ancient Hindu philosophical texts, including its great epics, the Ramayan and the Mahabharat, at Oxford and has gone on to became one of the most loved Sanskrit singers in the world. But the knowledge of Sanskrit brought her more than just knowledge and fame - it brought her freedom and a sense of everyday bliss. It taught her how to live, and how to accept the reality of death. It gave her lessons in living that freed her from the anxiety of ambition and consumption. In this podcast, she talks about the universal lessons of Sanskrit.
May 14, 2019
30 min

Did the ancient world, Greek and Hindu, imagine robots and technology that are coming true today? Dr. Adrienne Mayor at Stanford University, a research scholar in classics, history and the philosophy of science, says yes. She has written a wonderful new book called Gods and Robots: Myths, Machines, and Ancient Dreams of Technology and spoke in this podcast about the nature of technology, whether human use and abuse of technology and whether artificial intelligence (AI) could ever develop the conscience for mercy, or even crack a dark joke.
Apr 10, 2019
22 min

Prof. Pankaj Jain at the University of North Texas is a renowned expert in philosophy and religion and especially in the philosophy of non-violence espoused by Jainism. In this episode he talks of how to eradicate every day acts of violence from our lives including the violence we commit on the environment and in our food habits.
Apr 5, 2019
28 min

Braja Sorensen is an Australian writer and poet. About 20 years ago, she moved to lived in the village of Mayapur in the eastern state of Bengal in India. Mayapur is the village which has been one of the most influential centres for the Vaishnavite tradition in Hinduism for more than 500 years. It is also the headquarters of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, more commonly known by the acronym ISKON. In this episode she talks about why she chose the spiritual life and what that decision has meant for her. (Editors note: There is a slight echo in a small portion of this conversation due to the shaky internet and voice connection from the village of Mayapur.)
Apr 2, 2019
24 min
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