Naming the Real
Naming the Real
Brandon Cook
In an era of polarization, confusion, and "fake news," discerning and naming what is real—what satisfies, what has substance, what is meaningful—is more important than ever. The Naming the Real Podcast is about doing just that: rightly naming the beliefs, attitudes, practices, and behaviors that will help you transcend our cultural anxiety and lead a flourishing life, for the sake of the world.
The Glimmer Path (Spirituality over Purity Pt. 2)
What if purity culture is not ultimately about morality, but belonging? Brandon Cook explores the inner psychology beneath political, religious, and personal purity systems, revealing how anxiety, inner critics, and the longing for connection shape our lives. He argues that unhurriedness, beauty, and "glimmers" help us transcend binaries and rediscover belovedness.
May 25
12 min
Unitive Centrism & its Enemy (Spirituality over Purity Part I)
Why do we keep dividing the world into "us" and "them"? This episode explores purity culture as the hidden force shaping our religion, politics, and identity—offering certainty and belonging while quietly distorting reality. To move toward unitive centrism, we must first name the systems that keep us stuck.
May 18
12 min
In Dialogue: Growing up Evangelical Part II
Part II continues the conversation with a deeper look at how evangelicalism shaped political imagination and spiritual formation. It explores transactional faith, the loss of moral imagination, and the need for a third way rooted in participation, original blessing, and unitive centrism.
May 4
20 min
In Dialogue: Growing up Evangelical Part I
Brandon Cook, host of Naming the Real, joins The Vining Center to reflect on growing up evangelical, where faith shaped but eventually constrained him. He explores polarization, collective illusion, and spiritual distortion, proposing a "third way"—unitive centrism—grounded in humility, integration, and love beyond tribal divides and reactive certainty.
Apr 27
29 min
Unitive Centrism: Appreciating Right & Left
What if the "other side" actually holds something you need? This episode explores how left and right each protect essential values—individual and communal, past and future—and invites a more human way forward. By appreciating both, we can move beyond outrage, soften division, and discover a wiser, more unitive path together.
Apr 21
12 min
The Case for Unitive Centrism (A Third Way, Pt. 6)
In a culture of distortion and binary thinking, this episode defines "unitive centrism"—the recovery of reality as both/and. Drawing on Aristotle's golden mean, it shows how truth emerges in tension, not extremes, inviting us beyond tribalism toward a third way that restores nuance, humility, and shared reality.
Apr 6
12 min
The Center of Distortion (A Third Way, Pt. 5)
As surrounding culture increasingly finds methods of justifying behavior, the pervasive habit of identifying as the victim in any situation (typically contrary to objective reality) creates an environment that renders discourse, disagreement, or debate impossible. How can we free ourselves from this distorted reality in order to be better friends, neighbors, and whole peolpe?
Mar 30
12 min
World Without Facts (A Third Way, Part IV)
How do we live in a world where everyone sees a different reality? In this episode, Brandon Cook explores the growing crisis of the "post-truth" age—an era where emotional narratives, tribal loyalty, and information overload often overwhelm basic facts. Examining how confusion, spectacle, and the constant flood of information can erode our shared sense of reality. He notes when facts become negotiable, something deeper begins to unravel—not just politics, but our ability to make moral judgments at all. The result is a culture where people increasingly contort themselves to defend what they know isn't true. So how do we live with integrity in a world where truth itself feels unstable?
Mar 23
11 min
When Decency Dies: The Third Moral Fallacy
What happens when basic human decency disappears from public life? When power replaces restraint, the line between stability and chaos grows dangerously thin. In this episode, Brandon Cook explores how tribal loyalty, moral fallacies, and the normalization of cruelty erode the norms that sustain democracy—and keep us connected. Only by naming indecency can we chart a course back to flourishing.
Mar 16
13 min
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