When King Leontes accuses his pregnant wife of adultery, the nobleman Antigonus assumes that Leontes has been \u201cabused and by some putter-on\u201d\u2014in other words, some Iago-like villain has been putting malevolent ideas into his head. In fact, Leontes is the father of his own misconceptions, just as he is the father of his wife\u2019s children. But unlike his children, his ideas might be said to have no mother; they lack corroboration, which is to say, collaboration with a source outside himself. How, then, do we account for the seemingly spontaneous generation of his thoughts? How can false apprehensions arise out of nothing? And what price must one pay for bearing these misconceptions, these \u201cnothings,\u201d into the world? In this episode, the first part of a six part discussion, Wes & Erin discuss one of Shakespeare\u2019s last plays, "The Winter\u2019s Tale."