Philosophy and Pop Culture
Aug 03, 2008From Star Trek and the Grateful Dead to South Park and Stephen Colbert, philosophical questions are everywhere in popular culture: Is time travel possible?
We are posting this thought-provoking, yet entertaining summary of Theodor Adorno's work on his 114th birthday, although he's not around to celebrate. Adorno was the influential founder of the Frankfurt School, a now prolific philosophical powerhouse. His writings on culture, capitalism, and fascism are as timely as when they were written.
Enjoy the video! A link to it can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YGnPgtWhsw
From Star Trek and the Grateful Dead to South Park and Stephen Colbert, philosophical questions are everywhere in popular culture: Is time travel possible?
The ideas of Karl Marx vie with those of Rousseau, Locke and Jefferson for shaping the politics of the twentieth century.
Despite the crass commercialism that drives the production of many movies, there's no doubt that film is a distinctive and distinctively powerful art form.
From Star Trek and the Grateful Dead to South Park and Stephen Colbert, philosophical questions are everywhere in popular culture: Is time travel possible?
The ideas of Karl Marx vie with those of Rousseau, Locke and Jefferson for shaping the politics of the twentieth century.
Despite the crass commercialism that drives the production of many movies, there's no doubt that film is a distinctive and distinctively powerful art form.