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The Free Mind Podcast explores philosophic and political ideas with adventurous disregard for intellectual trends. Listeners are invited to pull up a chair in an intellectual laboratory where rationally defensible arguments are tested in the spirit of truth-seeking, and made in a conversational style free of academic jargon. The podcast engages scholars and public intellectuals who seek to present a diversity of viewpoints in a venue where good faith is granted at the door, and clear expression of ideas is more important than adherence to any particular ideology.
Episodes
Wednesday Mar 20, 2024
S8 E3: Sam Abrams: Political diversity and antisemitism on campus
Wednesday Mar 20, 2024
Wednesday Mar 20, 2024
Sam Abrams is a Professor of Politics at Sarah Lawrence College, a non-resident fellow of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), and a board member of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE). He is the author of multiple books and numerous articles, in outlets including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Chronicle of Higher Education, among many others. He has written several articles over the past decade on the lack of political diversity in higher education and the challenges it causes. More recently, he has written about antisemitism on college campuses. We discuss both of these issues, as well as his views on what universities can do to address them.
Tuesday Feb 13, 2024
S8 E2: Brandon Warmke: Why It's OK to Mind Your Own Business
Tuesday Feb 13, 2024
Tuesday Feb 13, 2024
Brandon Warmke is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Bowling Green State University, and the Spring 2024 Visiting Scholar in Conservative Thought and Policy here at the Benson Center. He is co-author of several books including Grandstanding: The use and abuse of moral talk, Why it’s ok to mind your own business, and Conservatism, the basics, which will be published in 2024. We discuss his book, Why it’s ok to mind your own business, as well as the state of conservative academic and intellectual life.
Tuesday Jan 09, 2024
S8 E1: Cory Clark, Adversarial collaboration and rebuilding trust in academia
Tuesday Jan 09, 2024
Tuesday Jan 09, 2024
Cory Clark is Executive Director of the Adversarial Collaboration Project at the University of Pennsylvania, where she is also Visiting Scholar in the Wharton School and the School of Arts and Sciences. The Adversarial Collaboration Project brings together scholars who have contrasting views on important scientific questions to work out their differences through rigorous collaborations. It is based on the idea that viewpoint diversity produces better science. We discuss this project, as well as Dr. Clark’s other work on trust in academia, nuances in gender bias, and more.
Tuesday Dec 12, 2023
S7 E4: Todd Zywicki, The Rule of Law and Threats to it
Tuesday Dec 12, 2023
Tuesday Dec 12, 2023
Todd Zywicki is the George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia School of Law. He is also the Visiting Scholar in Conservative Thought and Policy here at the Benson Center. He previously served as Chair of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Taskforce on Federal Consumer Financial Law, Chair of the Association of American Law Schools Section on Law & Economics in 2019, and Director of the Office of Policy Planning at the Federal Trade Commission. We discuss the rule of law, its importance to economic development and western civilization, and the threats it faces in our society today.
Tuesday Nov 14, 2023
S7 E3: Sasha Breger Bush, Is there a Global Debt Crisis?
Tuesday Nov 14, 2023
Tuesday Nov 14, 2023
Sasha Breger Bush is an Associate Professor of political science at the University of Colorado Denver, who studies international political economy, and the author of Derivatives and Development: A Political Economy of Global Finance, Farming, and Poverty. Prof. Bush has recently sounded the alarm on what she calls the whole world debt crisis. We discuss her work, as well as recent public debates about debt and deficits in the United States.
Tuesday Oct 10, 2023
S7 E2: Roger Pielke Jr., When Science Gets Political
Tuesday Oct 10, 2023
Tuesday Oct 10, 2023
Roger Pielke Jr. is a Professor at the University of Colorado Boulder, who studies the politics of science and authors a popular Substack blog called The Honest Broker. Never one to shy away from controversy, Prof. Pielke has done high-profile research and writing on climate change and natural disasters, the origins of COVID-19, and the inclusion of transgender and intersex women in women’s sports. We discuss the relationship between science and politics and what can go wrong when science is politicized.
Tuesday Sep 12, 2023
S7 E1: Alexandra Coţofană, Magic and the Occult in Elite Politics
Tuesday Sep 12, 2023
Tuesday Sep 12, 2023
Alexandra Coţofană is an Assistant Professor of Humanities and Social Sciences at Zayed University in the United Arab Emirates. Dr. Coţofană is a cultural anthropologist who studies a range of topics including the cultures of political elites. Our conversation focuses on one of her quite unique study topics: the role of beliefs in magic and the occult in the elite politics of Romania.
Tuesday Aug 15, 2023
S6 E4: Brad Wilcox, The Role of Family in Social Progress and Challenges
Tuesday Aug 15, 2023
Tuesday Aug 15, 2023
Brad Wilcox is Professor of Sociology and Director of the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia, Senior Fellow at the Institute for Family Studies, and a non-resident Fellow of the American Enterprise Institute. We discuss two-way interactions between family structure and stability, socioeconomic outcomes, and culture in the U.S. context, and the important role families must play in any project of civic renewal.
Thursday Jul 13, 2023
S6 E3: Smriti Mehta, Why Start a Heterodox Campus Community>
Thursday Jul 13, 2023
Thursday Jul 13, 2023
Smriti Mehta is a Ph.D. student in Psychology at the University of California Berkeley, and the co-chair of UC Berkeley’s new Heterodox Academy (HxA) Campus Community, which is dedicated to promoting open inquiry, viewpoint diversity, and constructive disagreement on their campus. I (Matt) co-chair a similar group at University of Colorado Boulder. We discuss what it’s like to start an HxA Campus Community, why it’s needed, what the hurdles are, and how we might overcome them. Smriti's podcast can be found here: Nullius in Verba | a podcast by Smriti Mehta and Daniël Lakens (podbean.com)
Tuesday Jun 13, 2023
S6 E2: Jennifer Smith, Cancellation in the Fifteenth Century
Tuesday Jun 13, 2023
Tuesday Jun 13, 2023
Jennifer Smith is Associate Professor of English, Coordinator of Digital Humanities, and Associate Director of the Center for Faith and Learning at Pepperdine University. She is a noted medievalist, and also a 2022-2023 sabbatical fellow at the Benson Center. We discuss the life and legacy of the fifteenth-century English bishop Reginald Peacock, who was defrocked and exiled for heresy–i.e. canceled–for questioning the infallibility of the church and advocating the authority of reason.