
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Today, the political and social philosophy known as liberalism—which champions democracy, individual rights, and free enterprise—is on the defensive.
Conservatives often charge it with eroding community, while some progressives view it as a justification for economic exploitation.
On this episode, Yale political theorist Samuel Moyn, author of the new book Liberalism against Itself, joins features editor Alex Stern to discuss the debates that surrounded liberalism during the Cold War.
Instead of a narrow liberalism that focuses on individual liberties, Moyn argues that a broader, more expansive view of the idea is possible—one that retrieves the original Enlightenment emphasis on egalitarianism and emancipation.
For further reading:
By Commonweal Magazine4.6
124124 ratings
Today, the political and social philosophy known as liberalism—which champions democracy, individual rights, and free enterprise—is on the defensive.
Conservatives often charge it with eroding community, while some progressives view it as a justification for economic exploitation.
On this episode, Yale political theorist Samuel Moyn, author of the new book Liberalism against Itself, joins features editor Alex Stern to discuss the debates that surrounded liberalism during the Cold War.
Instead of a narrow liberalism that focuses on individual liberties, Moyn argues that a broader, more expansive view of the idea is possible—one that retrieves the original Enlightenment emphasis on egalitarianism and emancipation.
For further reading:

38,238 Listeners

6,821 Listeners

3,949 Listeners

9,206 Listeners

1,571 Listeners

10,740 Listeners

112,225 Listeners

1,017 Listeners

2,365 Listeners

409 Listeners

2,071 Listeners

16,339 Listeners

308 Listeners

642 Listeners

1,133 Listeners