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The Weight of Meaning: Horizons, Thresholds and The Unfinished - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

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Manage episode 501695039 series 3604075
Content provided by The Deeper Thinking Podcast. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Deeper Thinking Podcast or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The Weight of Meaning: Horizons, Thresholds and The Unfinished.

The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.

For those drawn to liminality, ethical responsiveness, and the quiet power of the pause.

#Liminality #Suspension #Bridges #EthicalResponsiveness #PoliticalPhilosophy #HannahArendt #JudithButler #GiorgioAgamben #PhilosophyOfCare

What if the most revealing moments were the ones in which nothing seemed to move? This episode dwells within suspension, the felt space between action and arrival. Drawing on the imagery of bridges, thresholds, and interrupted rhythm, we explore how the in-between becomes not an absence of meaning, but its deepened expression. Between past and future, memory and becoming, the pause speaks. And within that pause, ethics takes form.

Rather than seek immediate resolution, this episode traces a politics of responsiveness, one that takes seriously the role of orientation, relationality, and moral attention. Through conversation with the works of Hannah Arendt, Judith Butler, and Giorgio Agamben, we consider how suspension can be a space of agency, not through action alone, but through the cultivation of ethical listening and shared becoming.

What emerges is not a theory of delay, but an invitation to inhabit the world more slowly, more attentively, more alive to what lingers between the visible contours of change. Ethics, here, is not commandment. It is choreography. Not doctrine, but posture. Not speed, but rhythm.

Reflections

This episode reflects on how the in-between becomes a ground for ethical life. It is a meditation on how form does not restrict, but enables, and how uncertainty, held carefully, might become a resource rather than a threat.

Here are some reflections surfaced along the way:

  • Suspension is not absence, it is tension, becoming, and charge.
  • Ethics without attentiveness is performance; ethics within suspension is response.
  • To cross a threshold is to be changed, even by the pause before the step.
  • Slowness can be fidelity, not hesitation.
  • The bridge is never just structure, it is a way of being between.
  • Responsiveness is not agreement , it is willingness to be affected.
  • Ethical action requires not speed, but rhythm attuned to others.
  • Even endings carry resonance; closure is never total.
  • The space between can become the site of ethical imagination.

Why Listen?

  • Explore how liminality shapes moral experience
  • Engage with Arendt on beginnings, Butler on precarity, and Agamben on potentiality
  • Rethink action as something shaped by pauses, not just movements
  • Hear how ethics, suspension, and shared thresholds can reorient political and personal life

Listen On:

Support This Work

If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee

Bibliography

Suspension, Judgment & Time Ethics, Thresholds & Liminality Primary Texts by Hannah Arendt
  • Arendt, H. (1958). The Human Condition. University of Chicago Press.
  • Arendt, H. (1961). Between Past and Future. Viking Press.
  • Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking Press.
  • Arendt, H. (1976). The Origins of Totalitarianism. Harcourt Brace. (Original work published 1951)
  • Arendt, H. (2003). Responsibility and Judgment (J. Kohn, Ed.). Schocken Books.
  • Yeatman, A. (Ed.). (2011). Action and Appearance: Ethics and the Politics of Writing in Hannah Arendt. Continuum.
Arendtian Secondary Literature
  • Hannah Arendt: Her account of natality, beginnings, and political appearance underpins the essay’s engagement with emergence.
  • Judith Butler: Central for understanding precarity, relationality, and the ethics of responsiveness within social frames.
  • Giorgio Agamben: Provides a conceptual foundation for suspension, potentiality, and the politics of the threshold.

The pause is not what interrupts meaning. It is what gives it space to speak.

#Suspension #EthicalResponsiveness #PoliticalPhilosophy #BridgesAndThresholds #Liminality #JudithButler #HannahArendt #GiorgioAgamben #CareEthics #DeeperThinking #DigitalPhilosophy #CivicEthics #RhythmOfEthics #InhabitingThePause #DeeperThinkingPodcast #RelationalPolitics #AttentionAsEthics

  continue reading

207 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 501695039 series 3604075
Content provided by The Deeper Thinking Podcast. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Deeper Thinking Podcast or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The Weight of Meaning: Horizons, Thresholds and The Unfinished.

The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.

For those drawn to liminality, ethical responsiveness, and the quiet power of the pause.

#Liminality #Suspension #Bridges #EthicalResponsiveness #PoliticalPhilosophy #HannahArendt #JudithButler #GiorgioAgamben #PhilosophyOfCare

What if the most revealing moments were the ones in which nothing seemed to move? This episode dwells within suspension, the felt space between action and arrival. Drawing on the imagery of bridges, thresholds, and interrupted rhythm, we explore how the in-between becomes not an absence of meaning, but its deepened expression. Between past and future, memory and becoming, the pause speaks. And within that pause, ethics takes form.

Rather than seek immediate resolution, this episode traces a politics of responsiveness, one that takes seriously the role of orientation, relationality, and moral attention. Through conversation with the works of Hannah Arendt, Judith Butler, and Giorgio Agamben, we consider how suspension can be a space of agency, not through action alone, but through the cultivation of ethical listening and shared becoming.

What emerges is not a theory of delay, but an invitation to inhabit the world more slowly, more attentively, more alive to what lingers between the visible contours of change. Ethics, here, is not commandment. It is choreography. Not doctrine, but posture. Not speed, but rhythm.

Reflections

This episode reflects on how the in-between becomes a ground for ethical life. It is a meditation on how form does not restrict, but enables, and how uncertainty, held carefully, might become a resource rather than a threat.

Here are some reflections surfaced along the way:

  • Suspension is not absence, it is tension, becoming, and charge.
  • Ethics without attentiveness is performance; ethics within suspension is response.
  • To cross a threshold is to be changed, even by the pause before the step.
  • Slowness can be fidelity, not hesitation.
  • The bridge is never just structure, it is a way of being between.
  • Responsiveness is not agreement , it is willingness to be affected.
  • Ethical action requires not speed, but rhythm attuned to others.
  • Even endings carry resonance; closure is never total.
  • The space between can become the site of ethical imagination.

Why Listen?

  • Explore how liminality shapes moral experience
  • Engage with Arendt on beginnings, Butler on precarity, and Agamben on potentiality
  • Rethink action as something shaped by pauses, not just movements
  • Hear how ethics, suspension, and shared thresholds can reorient political and personal life

Listen On:

Support This Work

If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee

Bibliography

Suspension, Judgment & Time Ethics, Thresholds & Liminality Primary Texts by Hannah Arendt
  • Arendt, H. (1958). The Human Condition. University of Chicago Press.
  • Arendt, H. (1961). Between Past and Future. Viking Press.
  • Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking Press.
  • Arendt, H. (1976). The Origins of Totalitarianism. Harcourt Brace. (Original work published 1951)
  • Arendt, H. (2003). Responsibility and Judgment (J. Kohn, Ed.). Schocken Books.
  • Yeatman, A. (Ed.). (2011). Action and Appearance: Ethics and the Politics of Writing in Hannah Arendt. Continuum.
Arendtian Secondary Literature
  • Hannah Arendt: Her account of natality, beginnings, and political appearance underpins the essay’s engagement with emergence.
  • Judith Butler: Central for understanding precarity, relationality, and the ethics of responsiveness within social frames.
  • Giorgio Agamben: Provides a conceptual foundation for suspension, potentiality, and the politics of the threshold.

The pause is not what interrupts meaning. It is what gives it space to speak.

#Suspension #EthicalResponsiveness #PoliticalPhilosophy #BridgesAndThresholds #Liminality #JudithButler #HannahArendt #GiorgioAgamben #CareEthics #DeeperThinking #DigitalPhilosophy #CivicEthics #RhythmOfEthics #InhabitingThePause #DeeperThinkingPodcast #RelationalPolitics #AttentionAsEthics

  continue reading

207 episodes

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