4.6 β’ 620 Ratings
ποΈ 23 March 2017
β±οΈ 49 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
Lamenting the ideological polarization in American public life has become a feature of modern politics. But perhaps what ails America is less what divides the Left and Right than the errors they share. In βTaking the Long Way,β published in First Things in 2014, political thinker Yuval Levin argues that liberals and conservatives are both inspired by an overly individualistic understanding of the human person and a weak vision of political freedom. For all the apparent differences between our parties, Levin believes we must attend to the tacit assumptions that serve as the philosophical foundation for both of them. Levin turns to the Book of Exodus in order to help him explain a more enduring liberation consistent with a truer understanding of the human condition. This more enduring freedom does not spring fully formed into the hearts and minds of spontaneously ordered libertarians or exquisitely managed progressives. Political freedom is an achievement that lies at the end of a long road, best traveled in the company of friends, neighbors, and family.
In this podcast, Levin joins Tikvah Senior Director Jonathan Silver to discuss this important essay. They begin by discussing what both the Left and Right get wrong about freedom. Then, using Exodus to guide their conversation, Levin and Silver discuss the stations on the long road to liberty, the potential pitfalls along this path, and what traditional Jews can teach their fellow citizens about creating the cultural preconditions that sustain the free society.
Musical selections in this podcast are drawn from the Quintet for Clarinet and Strings, op. 31a, composed by Paul Ben-Haim and performed by the ARC Ensemble, as well as Ich Grolle Nicht, by Ron Meixsell and Wahneta Meixsell.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Tikva podcast and great Jewish essays and ideas. |
0:11.6 | I'm your host, Jonathan Silver. |
0:13.7 | If you like listening to our podcast, I invite you to subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher, |
0:18.0 | and I hope you'll leave us a rating and a review. |
0:20.6 | If you want to learn more |
0:21.4 | about Tikva and our work, you can visit our website, tikvafund.org, follow us on Twitter |
0:26.8 | at Tikva Fund, or like us on Facebook. Yvall Levin is the Hurtag Fellow at the Ethics |
0:32.1 | and Public Policy Center, the editor of National Affairs, and it's a real pleasure to welcome |
0:37.0 | him back to our podcast. |
0:39.2 | Today we'll be discussing his 2014 essay, Taking the Long Way, published in First Things. |
0:45.1 | The essay begins with an epigraph from Exodus chapter 13, verse 17, and it came to pass when |
0:52.1 | Pharaoh had let the people go. that God did not lead them through |
0:55.5 | the land of the Philistines, even though it was nearer. God took the Israelites on the long way, |
1:02.6 | and Yuval would have us learn from that example. While to see what this means and why the |
1:06.7 | journey of ancient Israel has so much to teach contemporary America, we should just get into |
1:10.8 | the essay and see its argument. |
1:13.0 | Yvall begins by noting that the left and the right in contemporary politics are confused |
1:18.1 | about liberty and progress, what they mean and what they require, because they both stem |
1:23.3 | from a shallow and emaciated notion of the human person. |
1:30.8 | So just to begin, how does the left think about freedom? |
1:33.9 | How does that thinking relate to its understanding of the human person? |
1:36.4 | Yvall, what is the choosing individuals? |
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