Inspire Us Podcast

Deirdre McCloskey: Humanomics, Equality of Permission & the Case for Classical Liberalism | S8EP6

1 h 33 min · Gestern
Episode Deirdre McCloskey: Humanomics, Equality of Permission & the Case for Classical Liberalism | S8EP6 Cover

Beschreibung

Deirdre McCloskey is an economic historian, philosopher, and Distinguished Scholar and chair holder at the Cato Institute in Washington D.C. She did her education at Harvard and taught at the University of Chicago — where Milton Friedman was her colleague — and produced a body of work that fundamentally challenges how economists think about language, ethics, and what actually made the modern world rich.At 83, she has been a socialist, a Keynesian, and is now a classical liberal. She calls her position "humanomics" — economics with the humans left in. In this conversation she makes the case for what she calls equality of permission: not income, not opportunity, but the simple freedom to try. From minimum wage and price controls to COVID lockdowns, free speech absolutism, and the creeping surveillance state, McCloskey is sharp, uncompromising, and an absolute pleasure to speak with.Hope you enjoy!

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Inspire Us Podcast-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

43 Folgen

Episode Deirdre McCloskey: Humanomics, Equality of Permission & the Case for Classical Liberalism | S8EP6 Cover

Deirdre McCloskey: Humanomics, Equality of Permission & the Case for Classical Liberalism | S8EP6

Deirdre McCloskey is an economic historian, philosopher, and Distinguished Scholar and chair holder at the Cato Institute in Washington D.C. She did her education at Harvard and taught at the University of Chicago — where Milton Friedman was her colleague — and produced a body of work that fundamentally challenges how economists think about language, ethics, and what actually made the modern world rich.At 83, she has been a socialist, a Keynesian, and is now a classical liberal. She calls her position "humanomics" — economics with the humans left in. In this conversation she makes the case for what she calls equality of permission: not income, not opportunity, but the simple freedom to try. From minimum wage and price controls to COVID lockdowns, free speech absolutism, and the creeping surveillance state, McCloskey is sharp, uncompromising, and an absolute pleasure to speak with.Hope you enjoy!

Gestern1 h 33 min
Episode Fixing Polarisation: Politics, Free Speech & the Future of the West | Robert B. Talisse | Inspire Us Podcast Cover

Fixing Polarisation: Politics, Free Speech & the Future of the West | Robert B. Talisse | Inspire Us Podcast

Robert B. Talisse is a Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University and one of America's leading thinkers on democracy, political polarisation, and public reason. He has authored over fifteen books including Overdoing Democracy, Sustaining Democracy, and A Pragmatist Philosophy of Democracy — exploring how democracies can thrive amid deep disagreement, belief polarisation, and public ignorance.In this episode of Inspire Us, we discuss:— What belief polarisation is and why it's tearing us apart— Why the more you only talk to people like you, the more extreme you become— Free speech — and why it's not just about the person speaking, it's about you listening— Why government efforts to fix polarisation could actually make things worse— The future of the WestCan Western democracies fix polarisation, or have we already passed the point where the usual solutions apply?

25. Mai 20261 h 24 min
Episode Common Law Liberalism: The Case Against Government Made Rules | John Hasnas Inspire Us podcast S8EP3 Cover

Common Law Liberalism: The Case Against Government Made Rules | John Hasnas Inspire Us podcast S8EP3

John Hasnas is a Professor at Georgetown University Law Center and the McDonough School of Business, and the author of Common Law Liberalism, a bold and original contribution to political and legal philosophy that challenges how we think about law, order, and the role of government in society.This episode is a full breakdown of common law, what it is, where it came from, and why it may be the most important legal system most people have never thought about. John Hasnas makes the case that society has always been capable of regulating itself, and that the invisible framework of common law has been doing the heavy lifting all along while government legislation gets all the credit. Find John Hasnas' book "Common Law Liberalism" on Amazon: https://amzn.eu/d/0fRXnDiz

11. Mai 20261 h 7 min
Episode Why the Universe Has Mass: The Higgs Field & What Physics Can't Explain Yet | Michael Peskin S8EP2 Cover

Why the Universe Has Mass: The Higgs Field & What Physics Can't Explain Yet | Michael Peskin S8EP2

Michael Peskin is a theoretical physicist and Professor at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory at Stanford University, one of the world's leading centres for particle physics research. He is the co-author of An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory, widely considered the definitive graduate-level textbook in the field and used by physicists across the globe. This episode is a full breakdown of particle physics as simply explained as it gets, by one of the best in the field. We explore one of the deepest questions in all of science, why does anything have mass at all? We unpack the Standard Model of particle physics, the discovery of the Higgs boson, and what the Higgs field actually is and why it matters. We also get into what the Standard Model still cannot explain, how the Large Hadron Collider works and why it discards 99% of its data, and how AI is now being used to push the boundaries of particle physics discovery. This is a conversation about the frontier of human knowledge where our best equations break down, what lies beyond them, and why physicists like Michael Peskin believe the biggest surprises are still ahead. Let us know in the comments what you think! Hope you enjoy!

4. Mai 20261 h 35 min