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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
Tuesday Aug 09, 2022
S4 E1: Shilo Brooks, ”A Farewell from Shilo, and a New Host!”
Tuesday Aug 09, 2022
Tuesday Aug 09, 2022
Season 4 will be Shilo Brooks's final season as host of the Free Mind Podcast. Matt Burgess will assume hosting duties beginning in 2023. Stay tuned!
Tuesday Jul 12, 2022
S3 E3: Alexander Duff, Introduction to the Philosophy of Martin Heidegger
Tuesday Jul 12, 2022
Tuesday Jul 12, 2022
Alexander Duff, Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of North Texas. Duff discusses the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, one of the most towering and controversial thinkers of the 20th century. We discuss Heidegger’s political and metaphysical philosophy, his affiliation with the Nazis, and his writings on technology.
Tuesday Jun 14, 2022
S3 E2: Daniel Mahoney, From the Culture of Repudiation to the Cancel Culture
Tuesday Jun 14, 2022
Tuesday Jun 14, 2022
Daniel J. Mahoney, Augustine Chair in Distinguished Scholarship at Assumption University and a visiting fellow at Princeton University. Mahoney discusses cancel culture, explores what is valuable about our civilizational inheritance, and urges resistance to efforts to silence the life of the mind and free pursuit of truth.
Thursday May 19, 2022
S3 E1: Paul Ulrich, Allan Bloom and Higher Education
Thursday May 19, 2022
Thursday May 19, 2022
Season 3 launches with Paul Ulrich, Associate Professor of Political Science and the Director of the Intellectual Foundations Program at Carthage College. Our conversation today explores Allan Bloom’s 1987 book The Closing of the American Mind.
Tuesday Apr 12, 2022
S2 E4: Robert Pasnau, The Benson Center for the Study of Western Civilization
Tuesday Apr 12, 2022
Tuesday Apr 12, 2022
Robert Pasnau, Professor of Distinction in Philosophy at CU Boulder, is the founding director of the Benson Center for the Study of Western Civilization. Pasnau discusses how the unlikely center got started, and how its mission to foster free inquiry, heterodox ideas and diverse political perspectives has affected academic life at CU and across the nation.
Tuesday Mar 08, 2022
S2 E3: Jeremy Fortier, Introduction to the Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche
Tuesday Mar 08, 2022
Tuesday Mar 08, 2022
Jeremy Fortier, Post-doctoral Fellow in the Department of Political Science at the City College of New York. Fortier explores the thought and writings of 19th-century German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. We discuss Nietzsche’s popular appeal, his complicated legacy, his criticism of the Western Tradition, his style of writing, and the basic problems his philosophy confronts.
Tuesday Feb 08, 2022
S2 E2: Kevin Williamson, The Disciplinary Corporation
Tuesday Feb 08, 2022
Tuesday Feb 08, 2022
Kevin Williamson is a correspondent at National Review and author of several books, including his most recent book Big White Ghetto. The Benson Center was delighted to present Williamson’s investigation into how progressive business elites have created disciplinary corporations.
Tuesday Jan 11, 2022
S2 E1: Bradford Wilson, The Political Thought of Alexander Hamilton
Tuesday Jan 11, 2022
Tuesday Jan 11, 2022
Season Two of The Free Mind podcast launches with a conversation between Shilo Brooks and Bradford Wilson, Executive Director of the James Madison Program at Princeton University and fellow at Princeton’s Butler College. Wilson explores Hamilton’s life and intellectual legacy. We discuss Hamilton’s unusual upbringing, the enduring importance of his political thought, and the fateful contributions he made to the form and structure of the American economy.
Tuesday Dec 14, 2021
S1 E7: Colleen Sheehan, Jane Austen‘s Emma
Tuesday Dec 14, 2021
Tuesday Dec 14, 2021
Colleen Sheehan, professor of political science and director of graduate studies at Arizona State University’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership. She discusses what makes Jane Austen’s characters so enduring, the lessons Austen teaches about love in Emma, and what readers can learn from Austen’s complex use of language and penetrating psychological insights into human nature.
Tuesday Nov 09, 2021
S1 E6: Joshua Katz, Cancel Culture and its Discontents
Tuesday Nov 09, 2021
Tuesday Nov 09, 2021
Joshua Katz, Costen Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics at Princeton. Katz’s uncontroversial intellectual pursuits and his warm and fair-minded demeanor make the story of his attempted cancellation at Princeton all the more surprising. Katz reflects on his experience and discusses potential threats to the truth-seeking mission of higher education.