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right and wrong
Morality has always been in motion—shaped by time, place, and perspective. What one culture praises as virtuous, another may condemn; what one generation sees as progress, the next may view as decline. In this podcast, we dive into the shifting nature of right and wrong, exploring how morals evolve across societies and centuries, and why the answers we cling to today may not be universal or permanent.
By examining these changes, we also ask a bigger question: if morality is so fluid, what might it mean to embrace one another beyond rigid judgments? Perhaps the greater challenge—and opportunity—for humanity lies not in enforcing one timeless definition of virtue, but in learning to accept people as they are, within the shared framework of law, respect, and coexistence.
By Temple Barredright and wrong
Morality has always been in motion—shaped by time, place, and perspective. What one culture praises as virtuous, another may condemn; what one generation sees as progress, the next may view as decline. In this podcast, we dive into the shifting nature of right and wrong, exploring how morals evolve across societies and centuries, and why the answers we cling to today may not be universal or permanent.
By examining these changes, we also ask a bigger question: if morality is so fluid, what might it mean to embrace one another beyond rigid judgments? Perhaps the greater challenge—and opportunity—for humanity lies not in enforcing one timeless definition of virtue, but in learning to accept people as they are, within the shared framework of law, respect, and coexistence.