Humane Pursuits Podcast

Daniel Dreisbach on the Separation of Church and State

56 min · 20 jan 2026
aflevering Daniel Dreisbach on the Separation of Church and State artwork

Beschrijving

Summary: In this episode, I interview Daniel Dreisbach to explore one of the most contested ideas in American political life: the separation of church and state. We trace its deep roots — from biblical sources and colonial debates to Locke, Madison, and the revolution in thinking that made religious liberty a natural right rather than a privilege of toleration. Dreisbach brings to life the theological and political diversity of the colonies, the disestablishment movement, and the surprising ways federalism shaped the First Amendment. He also tells the remarkable story behind Jefferson’s famous “wall of separation” metaphor — complete with a 1,700-pound wheel of cheese — and explains how that private letter later came to dominate Supreme Court jurisprudence. This conversation offers a rich, clarifying tour through ideas that still frame American life today. For more information, visit https://humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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Alle afleveringen

8 afleveringen

aflevering Ben Klutsey on Political Polarization, Pluralism, and Civil Discourse artwork

Ben Klutsey on Political Polarization, Pluralism, and Civil Discourse

Before becoming executive director of the Mercatus Center, Benjamin Klutsey spent years studying a question that has become increasingly urgent in American life: how can people who disagree deeply still live, work, and govern together? In this conversation, Klutsey reflects on his work leading the Pluralism and Civil Exchange Project, explains what pluralism means beyond mere diversity, and explores the difference between political disagreement and the more troubling rise of affective polarization. Along the way, we discuss what social science can teach us about division, why many Americans misunderstand one another, and what Klutsey learned from bringing people with conflicting views into conversation. The discussion offers a thoughtful look at the habits, institutions, and relationships that make coexistence possible in a democratic society. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

4 jun 202656 min
aflevering Bonus Episode: Films of the American Revolution artwork

Bonus Episode: Films of the American Revolution

Summary: In this bonus episode, Garrett Brown continues his conversation with historian Al Zambone, turning to film portrayals of the American Revolution. Zambone explains why the era has proven resistant to compelling cinematic treatment, critiques films such as The Patriot and Drums Along the Mohawk, and reflects on adaptations like Johnny Tremain and the musical 1776. The discussion closes with a more favorable assessment of HBO’s John Adams, highlighting what it gets right about the period — particularly legal culture — while acknowledging the limits of film as a medium for conveying historical ideas. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

23 apr 20268 min
aflevering Al Zambone on the Great Historians of the American Revolution artwork

Al Zambone on the Great Historians of the American Revolution

Summary: More than two centuries after the American Revolution, historians continue to return to the same events with new questions, methods, and insights. In this episode, historian Al Zambone helps us trace how some of the most important works on the Revolution have approached the subject — from early participant accounts to modern studies shaped by political ideas, social experience, and the wider Atlantic world. What do these different layers of interpretation reveal about the Revolution itself? How have historians expanded the story without discarding what came before? And how do these works deepen our understanding of the American past — and of the variety and ambition of the American experiment? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

18 apr 202647 min
aflevering Sandra Peart and Erik Matson on The Wealth of Nations artwork

Sandra Peart and Erik Matson on The Wealth of Nations

Summary: Two hundred and fifty years after its publication, Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations remains both celebrated and misunderstood. In this episode, scholars Sandra Peart and Erik Matson help us see beyond the caricatures to discover Smith’s moral vision — one that challenges both colonial empires and modern assumptions about markets, virtue, and human equality. Why do both the Left and the Right claim him? What did he really say about slavery, monopolies, and the “sacred thirst for gold”? And what does his “oceanic” masterwork still have to teach us about navigating technological change and economic upheaval? Thanks for reading Humane Pursuits! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

19 feb 202649 min
aflevering Daniel Dreisbach on Covenant and the Constitution artwork

Daniel Dreisbach on Covenant and the Constitution

Summary: In this episode, I interview Daniel Dreisbach about the Hebraic ideas that helped shape American political thought. We discuss his contribution to Jewish Roots of American Liberty and the powerful influence of the Hebrew Bible on the founders — from covenant and political anthropology to the Exodus story that inspired generations of Americans, from the Revolution to the civil rights movement. Dreisbach explains why Deuteronomy was one of the most cited political texts of the founding era, how biblical narratives informed early understandings of liberty, justice, and human nature, and why recovering this literacy matters today. We also reflect on the challenges facing history education, the state of academic publishing, and the pressures of teaching in the age of AI. The result is a wide-ranging, accessible conversation about the ideas that defined the founding — and what they still offer a fractured society. For more information, visit https://humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humanepursuits.substack.com [https://humanepursuits.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

27 jan 202651 min