Podcasts
Making sense of our delusions (Converging Dialogues, 2024)
Lisa Bortolotti: Why Delusions Matter (The Dissenter, 2023).
The Philosophy of Psychology and Psychiatry (Delving in with Stuart Keller, Las Cruces Community Radio, 2023).
Philosophy of Psychiatry (Behind the Stigma, 2023).
How to think like a philosopher (MicroPhilosophy with Julian Baggini, 2023).
La verità è là fuori! Credere alle teorie del complotto è irrazionale? Falso! (Osservatorio sul complottismo, 2023).
Mental Health (UoB PTR Equality Diversity and Inclusion, 2022).
Irrational Beliefs and their Impact on our Reality (Sassi Talks, 2022).
The Future of Delusions (New Books Network, 2022).
How to give young people agency in mental health (McPin Foundation, 2021).
The Future of Delusions (New Books Network, 2022).
How to give young people agency in mental health (McPin Foundation, 2021).
Misinformation. (Forum for European Philosophy, 2021).
Raccontami una favola (RAI Radio3 Scienza, 2021).
The Truth about Marriage (The Big Idea, BBC World Service, 2020).
The Epistemic Innocence of Irrational Beliefs (New Books in Philosophy, 2020).
In Conversation... Philosophy of Mind (Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health, 2018).
Clinical Delusions (3CR Community Radio Radical Philosophy, 2017).
How Language and Thought affect our Wellbeing and Success (Voice of Islam Breakfast Show, 2017).
Hypocrisy (BBC Radio 4, The Philosopher's Arms, 2017).
Are We Biased about Love? (Philosophy 24/7, 2017).
Emotions: Do they control us? (Forum for European Philosophy, 2016).
Is there a clear line between madness and sanity? (Philosofa Episode 5, 2016).
Irrationality (Philosophy Bites, 2015).
Unintended Consequences (The Forum, BBC World Service, 2014).
Panel debate on Wise Choices (Forum for European Philosophy, 2014).
Exactly how Irrational are Delusions? (interview by Raj Persaud, 2009).
Videos
Why Delusions Matter. Lisa Bortolotti in conversation with George Holliday (This Mind of Ours, July 2024).
Launch of project EPIC: What interests me about epistemic injustice. Lisa Bortolotti (Project EPIC, May 2024).
How (Not) to Talk to Young People about Mental Health – RoseMcCabe, Lisa Bortolotti, Michele Lim (The Royal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series, 2024).
The Ant and the Grasshopper: are conspiracy beliefs a bit like delusions? (First Annual Webconference of the International Society for the Philosophy of the Sciences of the Mind, 2023).
Emotions, Cognition and Behaviour (Emotions Brain Forum, Geneva, 2022) Talk from 1:20 to 1:50.
Protecting Epistemic Agency in Mental Health (Centre for Health Humanities, Leuven, 2022)
Agency in Mental Health Webinar (Mental Elf, How not to put people into a box, 2021)
Doctors without Disorders (Joint Session Presentation, 2020).
Mental Capacity Webinar (Mental Elf, Launch of a policy brief, 2020).
Mental Health, Rationality, and the Meaning of Life (Meaning in Life conference, 2020).
The Dissenter: The Epistemic Innocence of Irrational Beliefs (2020).
The Costliest Bias of All (The Evidence-Based Investor, 2018).
Youth Mental Health (Birmingham Heroes, 2017).
The three stigmas about mental health we need to deconstruct (TEDxBrum talk, 2017).
Delusions (Hay Levels Philosophy, 2017).
The Epistemic Innocence of Self-enhancing Beliefs (PERFECT, 2016).
Agency without Rationality (Inaugural Lecture, University of Birmingham, 2016).
Birmingham Heroes: Mental Illness. (University of Birmingham, 2015).
Project PERFECT, Year Two (University of Birmingham, 2015).
On Responsibility and Control: the Case of Delusions (CRASSH Moral Psychology conference, 2015).
Project PERFECT, Year One (University of Birmingham, 2014).
Clinical Delusions (University of Birmingham, 2011).
Agency without Rationality (Inaugural Lecture, University of Birmingham, 2016).
Birmingham Heroes: Mental Illness. (University of Birmingham, 2015).
Project PERFECT, Year Two (University of Birmingham, 2015).
On Responsibility and Control: the Case of Delusions (CRASSH Moral Psychology conference, 2015).
Project PERFECT, Year One (University of Birmingham, 2014).
Clinical Delusions (University of Birmingham, 2011).