American Socrates

What is the Golden Rule?

28 min · 22 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio What is the Golden Rule?

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/fan_mail/new] Isn't Morality Just the Golden Rule? Most people think the Golden Rule is about fairness — treat others the way you want to be treated. But fairness and forgiveness are not the same thing, and the difference matters. This episode explores why forgiveness looks like weakness but functions like power, how moral scorekeeping corrodes relationships, families, and communities, and what it actually means to forgive someone without excusing what they did or trusting them again. We draw a sharp line between forgiveness, reconciliation, and trust — three things that get collapsed into one and shouldn't be — and make the case that holding onto resentment isn't justice. It's just a weight you've agreed to carry. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/support] Question Everything!

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30 episodios

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/fan_mail/new] Erich Fromm argued in The Art of Loving that love is a skill — and that most people are bad at it not because they are unloving but because they have never treated it as something that requires practice and development. This episode builds on Fromm's framework to examine love as a discipline made up of care, responsibility, respect, and knowledge, and contrasts it with the modern romantic model in which love is something that happens to you rather than something you build. We tie together the season's themes — forgiveness as love under strain, loyalty as love over time, the Golden Rule as love generalized — and arrive at the question that may be the most important one of the season: not whether you are loved, but whether you are becoming someone capable of loving well. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/support] Question Everything!

27 de may de 202631 min
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What are the Ethics of Loyalty?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/fan_mail/new] How loyal should one be? Loyalty is one of the most emotionally compelling ideas in human life and one of the most philosophically slippery. This episode defines loyalty as a binding commitment that resists constant recalculation — which is exactly what makes it powerful and exactly what makes it dangerous. We examine the difference between loyalty to persons versus loyalty to causes and ideologies, trace the shift from ancient reverence for loyalty to modern suspicion of it, and look at the specific ways loyalty conflicts with truth, justice, and conscience in families, friendships, and political life. The argument: loyalty without moral limits becomes corruption, but morality without loyalty becomes abstraction. The good life requires both — and knowing which one is being asked of you in a given moment. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/support] Question Everything!

20 de may de 202630 min
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Am I Guilty for the Sins of My People?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/fan_mail/new] What is Collective Guilt? Can guilt be shared without becoming meaningless? This episode untangles four concepts that keep getting collapsed into one — collective responsibility, liability, complicity, and guilt — and argues that the confusion between them produces neither justice nor repair. We look at when collective moral thinking makes sense, when it functions as a political weapon or a substitute for actual restitution, and why performed guilt so often discharges social pressure without changing anything. The episode also examines what diffuse, unearned guilt does to individual agency, dignity, and moral seriousness — and makes the case that moral inflation, like financial inflation, eventually makes the currency worthless. Image: Gary Todd - Mass Grave - Xinzheng, China Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/support] Question Everything!

13 de may de 202632 min
episode What does Forgiveness Bring Us? artwork

What does Forgiveness Bring Us?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/fan_mail/new] What does forgiveness actually do to the people who practice it — and what does real transformation look like when it happens? In this episode, we move past the question of why forgiveness is hard and into the territory of what it produces. We look at Simon Wiesenthal's famous decision not to forgive a dying SS soldier — a choice that still holds up — and use it to set the scale for what forgiveness can and can't do. Then we spend time with the story of Hector Black, an elderly Tennessee man whose daughter was murdered, and who ended up in a years-long correspondence with her killer — sending Christmas packages, exchanging letters about ordinary days, building something that neither of them fully understood. His story is the opposite of the tidy, therapeutic version of forgiveness that culture tends to offer: it's strange, slow, and bewildering, which is exactly what makes it credible. If you've ever wondered whether forgiveness is something that happens to you or something you decide — or whether it's possible to let go without pretending the harm didn't matter — this episode is for you. John Martin - Christ Healing the Palsied Man - Yale Center for British Art Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/support] Question Everything!

6 de may de 202624 min
episode What is the Silver Rule? artwork

What is the Silver Rule?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/fan_mail/new] Is Fairness Enough? Tit-for-tat is mathematically elegant and emotionally satisfying: you get what you give, and nobody gets taken advantage of. Game theory even proves it works — under the right conditions. This episode examines what those conditions are, where they break down, and what happens when the logic of reciprocity runs loose in marriages, workplaces, social media, and political life. Fairness stabilizes systems that are already functional. It cannot heal systems that are broken, generate trust where none exists, or move a relationship past the point where both people are waiting for the other to go first. We ask whether the Silver Rule — do unto others as they do unto you — is wisdom or a ceiling we've mistaken for a standard. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2458277/support] Question Everything!

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