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Policy@McCombs

Latest episodes

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Aug 31, 2023 • 1h 21min

Caplan Family School Graduation Podcast

In 2017, 8th graders Aidan and Tristan Caplan talked to their dad, Bryan Caplan, about their homeschooling experience in middle school. Spoiler: After three weeks of regular high school, they resumed homeschooling and are now at Vanderbilt University.
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12 snips
Aug 21, 2023 • 1h 16min

The Myth of Left and Right: Caplan and Hanson Interview the Lewis Brothers

The Lewis brothers challenge the essentialist view of left and right in politics, advocating for a social view. They discuss the concept of tribalism and its harmful effects. The podcast explores the limitations of the left-right spectrum and the evolving nature of political positions. They also discuss affirmative action for conservatives in academia and the importance of intellectual diversity.
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Aug 4, 2023 • 1h 6min

Bryan Caplan Interviews Chris Rufo

Bryan Caplan interviews Chris Rufo on his best-selling *America's Cultural Revolution*. In this wide-ranging interview, Rufo tackles some tough questions, including: How bad were the founders of critical theory, really? How fake is Continental philosophy? What would Rufo had done if he'd had Freire's job in Guinea-Bissau? Are fanatics evil? And, does he really hate libertarians? And many more.
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Jul 31, 2023 • 55min

Bryan Caplan’s interview with Ron Baker and Ed Kless

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Jul 27, 2023 • 1h 19min

Rousseau and the Collectivist Concept of Freedom pt. 2

George Walsh (c.1923-2001) was one of those old-school professors who wrote little but read everything. This two-lecture series on Rousseau, delivered in the late 1980s, shines a spotlight on the great intellectual outlier of the Enlightenment. While Voltaire, the Physiocrats, Locke, Smith, and Hume promoted rationalism and individual freedom, Rousseau was a harsh, if sometimes veiled, critic of both. Walsh paints Rousseau as an early adopter of the Orwellian idea that “Freedom Is Slavery” – and the proto-totalitarian inspiration of not only the French Revolution, but the socialist and nationalist revolutions of the 19th and 20th centuries. The Salem Center’s Bryan Caplan, who heard Walsh live in 1989, has plans to make all of Walsh’s “lost” lectures on the history of ideas once again available to the curious public.
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Jul 27, 2023 • 1h 13min

Rousseau and the Collectivist Concept of Freedom pt. 1

George Walsh (c.1923-2001) was one of those old-school professors who wrote little but read everything. This two-lecture series on Rousseau, delivered in the late 1980s, shines a spotlight on the great intellectual outlier of the Enlightenment. While Voltaire, the Physiocrats, Locke, Smith, and Hume promoted rationalism and individual freedom, Rousseau was a harsh, if sometimes veiled, critic of both. Walsh paints Rousseau as an early adopter of the Orwellian idea that “Freedom Is Slavery” – and the proto-totalitarian inspiration of not only the French Revolution, but the socialist and nationalist revolutions of the 19th and 20th centuries. The Salem Center’s Bryan Caplan, who heard Walsh live in 1989, has plans to make all of Walsh’s “lost” lectures on the history of ideas once again available to the curious public.
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Jul 17, 2023 • 1h 15min

Adversaries of Classical Liberalism

Historian and polymath Ralph Raico explores the classic criticisms and seminal critics of classical liberal thought.
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Jul 13, 2023 • 1h 21min

Foundations of Classical Liberalism

 Historian and polymath Ralph Raico explores the basic ideas and seminal thinkers of classical liberal thought.
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May 18, 2023 • 1h 9min

George Walsh on The Enlightenment

 George Walsh (c.1923-2001) was one of those old-school professors who wrote little but read everything. This lecture on the Enlightenment, delivered c.1992, gives a typically insightful and humorous intellectual tour of the Enlightenment. The Salem Center’s Bryan Caplan, who heard Walsh live in 1989, has plans to make all of Walsh’s “lost” lectures on the history of ideas once again available to the curious public.
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May 11, 2023 • 1h 7min

George Walsh on Protestant Fundamentalism, Lecture 2: Ethics and Politics

George Walsh (c.1923-2001) was one of those old-school professors who wrote little but read everything. These two lectures on Protestant Fundamentalism, delivered in the late-80s, distill decades of study of Protestant Fundamentalism with great insight and humor, handling the ideas with the same seriousness that intellectual historians normally reserve for the Great Thinkers of Western Philosophy.  Lecture 1 covers fundamentalist theology and epistemology; lecture 2 delves into fundamentalist ethics and politics.  The Salem Center’s Bryan Caplan, who heard Walsh live in 1989, has plans to make all of Walsh’s “lost” lectures on the history of ideas once again available to the curious public. 

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