Tocqueville Talks
What questions defined this year’s biggest conversations at the Tocqueville Center? In this special year-end reflection episode of Tocqueville Talks, Brent Nelsen, Beth L’Arrivée, and longtime Furman University professor Jim Guth look back on the speakers, debates, and ideas that shaped the Tocqueville Center’s lecture series over the past academic year. The discussion ranges across some of the most pressing issues in political life today: academic freedom, populism, globalization, executive power, religion and politics, the future of higher education, and the changing relationship between the United States and Europe. Beth L’Arrivée reflects on conversations with John Tomasi of Heterodox Academy and the importance of viewpoint diversity, intellectual openness, and freedom of thought in university classrooms. She also discusses a major lecture by Vincent Phillip Muñoz on the “unitary executive” and why debates over presidential power remain central to American constitutional government. Jim Guth highlights the Tocqueville Center’s international programming, especially discussions on the European Union, populist movements in Europe, and the growing tensions between nationalism, globalization, and democratic politics. The conversation examines how right-wing populist movements in Europe and the United States compare—and whether nationalist parties can truly cooperate across borders. The episode also revisits major debates about globalization and trade policy, including discussions featuring Scott Lincicome, Josef Braml, and Mark DiPlacido. Brent reflects on how students responded differently to free-market and protectionist arguments, often dividing along emotional and philosophical lines rather than purely economic ones. Throughout the episode, a deeper question keeps resurfacing: What is higher education actually for? The hosts discuss concerns raised by figures such as Ben Sasse and Mark Amstutz about the increasing tendency to reduce education to workforce preparation and economic outcomes. Against that trend, they defend a vision of liberal education centered on public service, intellectual formation, moral judgment, and the pursuit of truth. Key themes include: * Academic freedom and viewpoint diversity in higher education. * The debate over executive power and constitutional government. * European populism and the future of nationalism. * Globalization, tariffs, and competing economic visions. * Religion, politics, and public service. * The purpose of liberal education beyond career preparation. * Why students need spaces for genuine intellectual disagreement. The episode also offers a behind-the-scenes look at how the Tocqueville Center approaches education itself: bringing students, faculty, visiting scholars, and community members into sustained conversation about the deepest political and philosophical questions of our time.
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