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In his essay ‘The Possible and the Real’ (1930), the French philosopher Henri Bergson argued that perhaps the most foundational question of metaphysics – ‘Why is there something instead of nothing?’ – is poorly conceived, reflecting a mistaken view that ‘there is less in the idea of void than in the idea of fullness’. Building from this starting point he suggests – to put it all a bit simply – a metaphysics sprung instead from the fullness of the evolving reality in which we ceaselessly find ourselves. This experimental video essay from Epoché Magazine pairs text excerpted from ‘The Possible and the Real’ with archival imagery and original music. Drawing out Bergson’s themes in unexpected ways, the short gives Bergson’s influential words a curious new life nearly a century after they were first published.
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Bioethics
What a 1970 experiment reveals about the possibility and perils of ‘head transplants’
6 minutes
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Beauty and aesthetics
Can you see music in this painting? How synaesthesia fuelled Kandinsky’s art
10 minutes
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Knowledge
Why it takes more than a lifetime to truly understand a single meadow
11 minutes
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Political philosophy
The radical activist couple who fought for social change in the courtroom
21 minutes
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Human rights and justice
Can providing humanitarian aid be illegal? A troubling case from the US-Mexico border
17 minutes
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Information and communication
Coverage of the ‘balloon boy’ hoax forms a withering indictment of for-profit news
17 minutes
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Meaning and the good life
Wander through the English countryside with two teens trying to make sense of the world
10 minutes
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Personality
A ‘dumpster archeologist’ reconstructs strangers’ stories via what they’ve discarded
14 minutes
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Meaning and the good life
A Japanese religious community makes an unlikely home in the mountains of Colorado
9 minutes