Episodes 41
Avg. Duration 1h 27m
Activity Declining
Apple Rating 5.0 (1)
Since May 2023
Latest Episode Feb 2026

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About This Podcast

Coffee table conversations with people thinking about foundational issues.  Multiverses explores the limits of knowledge and technology.  Does quantum mechanics tell us that our world is one of many?  Will AI make us intellectually lazy, or expand our cognitive range? Is time a thing in itself or a measure of change? Join James Robinson as he tries to find out.

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Recent Episodes

S1E41 A Story For Humanity — Minhyong Kim on Why Maths Will Never End

Feb 09, 2026 1h 12m

Gauss famously described mathematics as the queen of the sciences. But how should we think of this discipline? Is it an aloof ruler, mysteriously governing the laws of nature? A vital tool for…

S1E40 Molecules & Mirrors —Vanessa Seifert on the Philosophy of Chemistry

Dec 05, 2025 1h 9m

Why do molecules have a "handedness" when the physics that determines their structure does not?*  This is a question emblematic of the philosophy of chemistry; at times, it has been used to argue…

S1E39 Consciousness is not Computation — Christof Koch

May 02, 2025 1h 2m

Christof Koch is a pioneering neuroscientist and one of the most prominent advocates of a scientific approach to consciousness. He has spent decades working at the intersection of neuroscience,…

S1E38 Where Does It End? — Adrian Moore on The Infinite

Mar 14, 2025 1h 16m

Infinity may seem simple, just the absence of limits. But the closer we examine it, the more it unravels into paradox and mystery. Can some infinities be larger than others? How can an infinite hotel…

S1E37 37| Mind-Wandering — Kalina Christoff Hadjiilieva on the Science of Spontaneous Thought

Jan 31, 2025 1h 38m

Mind-wandering is often dismissed as a distraction, an idle drift away from productive thought. But what if this spontaneous movement of the mind is not just a quirk of cognition but a fundamental…

S1E36 36| History of Science: Mythmaking & Contingency — Patricia Fara

Dec 23, 2024 1h 29m

Scientific discoveries can often be codified in simple laws, neatly stated in textbooks with directions on applying them. But the enterprise of science is embedded in society. It depends on…

S1E35 35| Hypercomputation: Why Machines May never Think Like Humans — Selmer Bringsjord

Nov 08, 2024 1h 39m

AI can do many things equally well as humans: such as writing plausible prose or answering exam questions. In certain domains, AI goes far beyond human capabilities — playing chess for instance.We…

S1E34 34| Animal Minds — Kristin Andrews on why assuming consciousness would aid science

Aug 27, 2024 1h 14m

There is no consensus on what minds are, but there is plenty of agreement on where they can be found: in humans. Yet human consciousness may account for only a small proportion of the consciousness…

S1E33 33| Taking Chance Seriously — Alastair Wilson on Quantum Modal Realism

Jul 19, 2024 1h 25m

Things happen. Or they don’t. How then should we make sense of claims that something might happen?If all these claims do is express doubt, then the puzzle can be easily resolved. But if the claims…

S1E32 AI Moonshot — Nell Watson on the Near & Not So Near Future of Intelligence

Jun 21, 2024 1h 11m

The launch of ChatGPT was a "Sputnik moment". In making tangible decades of progress it shot AI to the fore of public consciousness. This attention is accelerating AI development as dollars are…

S1E31 Do Electrons Exist? — Céline Henne: Physicist's Views on Scientific Realism & Instrumentalism

Jun 04, 2024 1h 38m

Physics helps get stuff done. Its application has put rockets in space, semiconductors in phones, and eclipses on calendars. For some philosophers, this is all physics offers. It is a mere…

S1E30 30| Thinking Beyond Language — Anna Ivanova on what LLMs can learn from the brain

May 15, 2024 1h 39m

It can be tempting to consider language and thought as inextricably linked. As such we might conclude that LLM's human-like capabilities for manipulating language indicate a corresponding level of…

S1E29 29 | What are words good for? — Nikhil Krishnan on Ordinary Language Philosophy

Apr 12, 2024 1h 37m

Words. (Huh? Yeah!) What are they good for? Absolutely everything.At least this was the view of some philosophers early in the 20th century, that the world was bounded by language. ("The limits of my…

S1E28 28| Music Evolution & Empirical Aesthetics — Manuel Anglada Tort

Mar 28, 2024 1h 36m

Music may be magical. But it is also rooted in the material world. As such it can be the subject of empirical inquiry. How does what we are told of a performer influence our appreciation of the…

S1E27 27| Why Knowledge is Not Enough — Jessie Munton

Mar 14, 2024 1h 24m

If all my beliefs are correct, could I still be prejudiced?Philosophers have spent a lot of time thinking about knowledge. But their efforts have focussed on only certain questions. What makes it…

S1E26 26| Networks, Heartbeats & the Pace of Cities — Geoffrey West

Feb 29, 2024 1h 54m

Why do whales live longer than hummingbirds? What makes megacities more energy efficient than towns? Is the rate of technological innovation sustainable?  Though apparently disparate the answer to…

S1E25 25| Peter Nixey — AI: Disruption Ahead

Feb 15, 2024 1h 17m

It's easy to recognize the potential of incremental advances — more efficient cars or faster computer chips for instance. But when a genuinely new technology emerges, often even its creators are…

S1E24 24| How Philosophy Serves Science — David Papineau

Feb 01, 2024 1h 16m

Are philosophy and science entirely different paradigms for thinking about the world? Or should we think of them as continuous: overlapping in their concerns and complementary in their tools?David…

S1E23 23| Paulina Sliwa — Moral philosophy as puzzles of daily life

Jan 18, 2024 1h 11m

Why do men do less housework? What happens when an apology is offered? What are we looking for when we ask for advice?These are the sorts of problems drawn from everyday experience that Paulina Sliwa…

S1E22 22| Sean McMahon — Astrobiology: what is life & how to know it when we see it?

Jan 04, 2024 1h 20m

Life. What is it? How did it start? Is it unique to Earth, rare or abundantly distributed throughout the universe?While biology has made great strides in the last two hundred years, these…

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MULTIVERSES has published 41 episodes since May 2023, covering topics in Philosophy, Physics.

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MULTIVERSES is currently declining with new episodes monthly. Average episode length is 1h 27m.

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