70 avsnitt • Längd: 20 min • Månadsvis
Portraits of Liberty investigates the lives and philosophies of thinkers throughout history who argued in favor of a freer world.
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The podcast Portraits of Liberty is created by Libertarianism.org. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
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Jane Jacobs revolutionized the study of cities. She did not see them as merely areas of high population densities, but as huge laboratories for experimentation making cities the flash points of the history of human progress. Her intellectual career was spent checking the hubris of government officials.
Further Reading:
A City Cannot Be a Work of Art: Learning Economics and Social Theory From Jane Jacobs by Sanford Ikeda
More articles and podcasts from Libertarianism.org:
The Rise of Free Cities: Guizot's Seventh Lecture
The Harlem Renaissance: Black Cultural Innovation Unleashed
Immanuel Kant on Spontaneous Order
Interview with Chelsea Follett – The Liberty Exchange
The Ethics Of Progress – Building Tomorrow
Why More People Means More Wealth – Free Thoughts
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Celebrating the tenth anniversary of Havel's Place in Georgetown, an episode dedicated to the dissidents of Czechoslovakia responsible for the Velvet Revolution in 1989, overthrowing the brutal Communist regime without violence or bloodshed.
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For too long history was just the study of great men, but with the rise of intellectual history we have focused more on how people have changed their ideas over time. In another sense, studying history is about studying the struggle for power. The host of Portraits of Liberty, Paul Meany, joins the show to highlight historical thinkers who may not have been strictly libertarian, but argued for a freer world. Portraits of Liberty celebrates a broader historical libertarianism.
What is valuable about studying intellectual history? Why do certain philosophers get completely forgotten? What is the difference between tradition and truth?
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Between 1720-1723 in England, a popular weekly pamphlet became a thorn in the government's side for viciously criticizing the corruption and greed of politicians. This pamphlet was known as Cato's Letters, written by John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon consisted of over a hundred "letters" on topics such as freedom of speech, religious toleration, the benefits of liberty, and the right to resist tyrannical governments. Their writings became extremely popular not only in England but also in America. Throughout the American Revolution Cato's Letters were quoted as an esteemed authority of the nature of freedom and the nightmare of tyranny.
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En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.