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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

David Bromberg was once a legendary name in the American folk scene, but then he disappeared. He stopped performing and ultimately discovered a new career as a violin maker and collector. He's since returned to music, put together a quintet, and recorded a Grammy-nominated album. He dropped by our studios to perform a few songs and talk about his journey away from and back to music.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Novelist and journalist William Vollmann has written a seven volume study of the moral calculus of violence. Vollmann talks with Steve Paulson about when violence is justified and when it isn’t.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Steve Paulson talks with some leading Darwin experts and goes to see Darwin's letters at Cambridge University in England to try to get at Darwin's views on God.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Author Sam Harris's Dangerous Idea? Free will may be an illusion.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Native American writer Sherman Alexie talks with Steve Paulson about his stories, the film “Smoke Signals,” and being Indian in America.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Is hip hop strictly for the under-30 crowd?  Todd Boyd tells Anne Strainchamps it’s a message of empowerment for Black Americans.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

The nexus of science and religion has become a point of passion for interviewer Steve Paulson.  In this segment, Steve looks back at TTBOOK's first interview with biologist E.O. Wilson.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Rosalind Wiseman and Rachael Simmons say that girls’ popularity with other girls is influenced by the politics of the social pecking order and that the effects of being ostracized can be devastating.

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