Category: Meaning, Spirituality & Philosophy

Radical Common Sense with Marilyn Ferguson February 7, 2006

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Marilyn Ferguson

What does it mean to think for yourself in a culture built on surface habits and borrowed certainties? Marilyn Ferguson, Author of “The Aquarian Conspiracy” and the new “Aquarius Now,” joins Armand DiMele to argue that true radicalism means going to the roots, that creativity is simply making stuff up, and that today’s political turbulence may be exactly the wake-up call humanity needed.

The Power of Luck January 3, 2006

Host: Armand DiMele

Is luck real, or is it a story we tell ourselves? Armand DiMele argues that so-called unlucky people are often too anxious and narrowly focused to notice opportunities passing by, while exploring how privilege, discipline, attitude, and genuine chance all get confused with luck. Callers share their struggles with lifelong bad luck, revealing the link between perceived misfortune and depression.

We Are Our Relationships with Christian De Quincey December 21, 2005

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Christian De Quincey, Roberta Maria Atti

Philosopher and author Dr. Christian De Quincey argues that relationships are not something individuals enter into but the very source from which individuals emerge. Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti explore how the shift from feeling to reason fractured human connectedness, with reference to Jean Liedloff’s continuum concept.

The Power of Superstition December 8, 2005

Host: Armand DiMele

Why do so many people skip the 13th floor? Armand DiMele traces the hidden origins of common superstitions, from the Last Supper to Roman gazing pools, and argues that superstitions often serve those in power by shaping behavior. Callers share family traditions spanning the West Indies, Ireland, and Santeria.

The Origins of Moral Feeling Undated

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atin

What makes people care about right and wrong, and where does that impulse come from? Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti open with a striking story of a heavily medicated psychiatric patient who offered comfort to his own doctor, then trace morality from biology and genetics through religion, sexuality, taxes, and the tension between inner conviction and externally imposed rules.

Paradoxes of Life Undated

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atti

Every gain hides a hidden loss. Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti work through paradoxes that riddle ordinary life: fame steals privacy, promotion costs friendship, and bariatric surgery that cures overeating often triggers alcoholism. Medical examples extend to antibiotics breeding resistant bacteria and asthma drugs correlating with rising asthma deaths.

The Nature of Genius with Arthur I. Miller Undated

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Arthur I. Miller

What do Einstein and Picasso have in common? Historian of science Arthur I. Miller argues both geniuses solved the same problem of simultaneity, and that true creative focus demands emotional shutdown. Armand and Miller explore whether genius is built on admiration, isolation, or something deeper.

Depression and the Alchemy of Transformation Undated

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atti

Depression is not a problem to be suppressed but a transformative process, like bread being kneaded before it rises. Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti trace alchemy from ancient Egypt and China through religious persecution to its core insight: that destruction and conflict are essential stages on the path to something higher.

Holiday Depression with Dr. Michael B. Schachter Undated

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Dr. Kent Robert Short, Dr. Michael B. Schachter

The holidays bring the year’s highest rates of despair, and Armand DiMele and Dr. Kent Robert Short dig into why: family expectations, economic inequality, and the grief of absences. Dr. Michael B. Schachter, MD, Author, joins by phone to explain how reduced sunlight depletes vitamin D and disrupts melatonin, and what actually helps.

A Year as a Buddhist Nun with Diana Winstead Undated

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Diana Winstead

Diana Winstead spent a year as a shaved-head, robed Buddhist nun in Burma, meditating in near-total silence. Armand DiMele draws out what she learned about sexuality, surrender, and selfhood by removing almost everything modern life is built on, and what happened when she returned.