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In Other Words

In Other Words

By: Tyler Smith
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About this listen

In Other Words is a podcast about how we know what we know—and why it matters. The stories we inherit, the systems we trust, and the “truths” we repeat are rarely as simple as they seem. Most have been shaped, spun, and repackaged until the lines between fact and narrative blur.


This show peels back those layers. Each episode looks at the assumptions beneath our politics, history, and culture, tracing how they took shape and what they leave out.


In other words, come unlearn with us.

© 2026 In Other Words
Philosophy Science Social Sciences World
Episodes
  • We teach in stories
    Feb 1 2026

    The episode moves from developmental neuroscience to curriculum politics, showing how the United Daughters of the Confederacy helped normalize the Lost Cause through textbooks and monuments, and how modern textbook markets and state standards can still standardize sanitized history at national scale through bodies like the Texas State Board of Education. The throughline is epistemology: children learn through simplicity because complexity is cognitively expensive, and institutions exploit that necessity by deciding which “simple story” becomes default. The result is a public trained for narrative coherence before it is trained for verification, which leaves democracy vulnerable when persuasion starts replacing method.

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    1 hr and 36 mins
  • Once reality becomes optional, so does democracy
    Jan 1 2026

    Democracy depends on shared reality: facts that can be checked, institutions that can correct themselves, and a public willing to ask how something is known. This episode follows what happens when verification gets replaced by narrative performance, and when emotion and identity start functioning as evidence. Once people lose a common method for sorting truth from persuasion, debate becomes theater, accountability dissolves, and power no longer needs to justify itself. In Other Words, once reality becomes optional, so does democracy.

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    1 hr and 20 mins
  • The method is all we have
    Dec 1 2025

    This episode examines how every civilization relies on a process for deciding what counts as real. It follows the evolution of method from early systems of logic to the rise of experimentation, and shows how communities learned to test their assumptions instead of trusting tradition or authority. It traces the shift from inherited belief to evidence-seeking practice, and why that shift remains the backbone of science, law, journalism, and democratic decision-making. It looks at how institutions protect or erode this process, and how individuals navigate a world where information is abundant but verification is uneven. Method is the only safeguard for a society trying to understand itself, because without a way to question and revise, conviction hardens faster than truth can emerge. In other words, the method is all we have.

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    1 hr and 45 mins
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