Lex Fridman Podcast - #256 – Nationalism Debate: Yaron Brook and Yoram Hazony
Episode Date: January 16, 2022Yaron Brook is an objectivist. Yoram Hazony is a national conservative. This is a conversation and debate about national conservatism vs individualism. Please support this podcast by checking out our ...sponsors: - Noom: https://trynoom.com/lex - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex and use code Lex25 to get 25% off - SimpliSafe: https://simplisafe.com/lex and use code LEX to get a free security camera - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 months free - Blinkist: https://blinkist.com/lex and use code LEX to get 25% off premium EPISODE LINKS: Yaron's Twitter: https://twitter.com/yaronbrook Yaron's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ybrook Yoram's Twitter: https://twitter.com/yhazony Yoram's Website: https://www.yoramhazony.org/ Yaron Brook's Books: In Pursuit of Wealth: https://amzn.to/3qmXuGo Equal Is Unfair: https://amzn.to/3FopKOV Yoram Hazony's Books: Conservatism: https://amzn.to/3sv0Nhe The Virtue of Nationalism: https://amzn.to/3mtxqs6 PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (09:11) - Conservatism (15:07) - Importance of history (27:09) - Rationalism vs empiricism (32:39) - Communism (40:43) - Otto von Bismarck (45:04) - Edmund Burke and the French Revolution (49:52) - USA's founding fathers (1:02:47) - Founding documents (1:24:36) - Cohesion and Individualism (1:45:29) - Love and relationships (1:53:41) - Individual freedom (2:08:08) - Having children (2:21:54) - Reason vs emotions (2:28:44) - Nationalism (2:40:56) - Finding love (2:52:44) - Hope for the future (2:58:08) - Meaning of life
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The following is a conversation with Yaram Brook and Yaram Hazoni.
This is Yaram's third time on this podcast and Yaram's first time.
Yaram Brook is an objectives philosopher, chairman of the Ein Rand Institute, host of the Yaram
Brook Show, and the co-author of Free Market Revolution and Equal is unfair.
Yaram Hazoni is a national conservatism thinker chairman of the
Eman Burke foundation that hosted the National Conservatism Conference. He's
also the host of the Nat Khan talk and author of the virtue of nationalism and an
upcoming book called Conservatism a Rediscovery. Allow me to say a few words about each part of
the two-word title of this episode, Nationalism Debate. First debate. I would like to have
a few conversations this year that are a kind of debate with two or three people that hold
differing views on a particular topic, become to the table with respect for each other,
and a desire to learn and discover something
interesting together through the empathetic exploration
of the tension between their ideas.
This is not strictly a debate, it is simply a conversation.
There's no structure, there's no winners,
except of course, just a bit of trash talk
and to keep it fun.
Some of these topics
will be very difficult. And I hope you can keep an open mind and have patience with me
as kind of moderator who tries to bring out the best in each person and the ideas discussed.
Okay, that's my comment on the word debate. Now onto the word nationalism. This debate
could have been called nationalism versus individualism,
or national conservatism versus individualism, or just conservatism versus individualism.
As we discuss in this episode, these words have slightly different meanings depending on
who you ask. This is especially true, I think, for any word that ends in ism. I personally
enjoy the discussion of the meaning of such philosophical words.
I don't think it's possible to arrive at a perfect definition that everybody agrees with,
but the process of trying to do so for a bit is interesting and productive, at least to
me, as long as we don't get stuck there, some folks sometimes do in these conversations.
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This is the Lex Friedman Podcast, and here is my conversation with Yaram Brooke and Yoram
Zoni. I attended the excellent debate between the two of you yesterday at UT Austin.
The debate was between ideas of conservatism represented by your Amazon and ideas of individualism
represented by Yarram Brook. Let's start with the topics of the debate.
Yarram, how do you define conservatism?
Maybe in the way you were thinking about it yesterday.
What do you are some principles of conservatism?
Let me define it and then we can get into principles.
If you want one, when I talk about political conservatism,
I'm talking about a political
standpoint that regards the recovery, elaboration, and restoration of tradition as the key to maintaining
a nation and strengthening it through time. Okay, so this is something that if you have time to
talk about it, like we do on the show, it's worth emphasizing
that conservatism is not like liberalism or Marxism. Liberalism and Marxism are both
kind of universal theories, and they claim to be able to tell you what's good for human
beings at all times in all places. And conservatism is a little bit different because it's going to carry different
values in every nation and every tribe, you know, even every family, you can say, has
somewhat different values. And these loyalty groups, they compete with one another. That's
the way human beings work. So it's deeply rooted in history of that particular area of land.
Well, I wouldn't necessarily say land.
You're right that many forms of conservatism are tied to a particular place.
So how does the implementation of conservatism to differ from the ideal of conservatism,
the implementations you've seen of political conservatism in the United States and the
rest of the world, just to give some context?
Because it's a loaded term, most political terms.
So when people think about conservative in the United States,
they think about their Republican party.
Can you kind of disambiguate some of this?
Go to the supposed to think about that.
Yeah, that's a really important question.
Usually the word conservative is associated with Edmund Burke
and with the English common law tradition, going back centuries and centuries.
There's kind of a classical English conservative tradition that goes fordiscue hooker, Burke, Blackstone before Burke.
If you take that kind of as a benchmark and you compare it, then you can compare it
to things like the American Federalist Party
at the time of the American founding
is in many respects very much,
very much in keeping with that tradition.
As you go forward, there's an increasing mix of liberalism and to
conservatism. And I think by the time you get to the 1960s with William Buckley and Frank
Meyer, the jargon term is fusionism. By the time you get there, it's arguable that their conservatism isn't very conservative
anymore, that it's kind of a public liberalism mixed with a private conservatism.
So a lot of the debate that we have today about, you know, what is the word conservatism
actually mean? A lot of the confusion comes from that. It comes from the fact that
that on the one hand, we have people use the term,
I think, properly, historically,
to refer to this common law tradition
of which Burke was a spokesman.
But there are lots of other people who,
when they say, conservative, they just mean liberal.
And I think that's a big problem.
I mean, it's a problem just to have an intelligent debate is difficult when people are using
the word almost in two antithetical.
What would you say the essential idea of conservatism is time?
You mentioned your father's a physicist.
So a lot of physicists, when they form models of the universe, they don't consider time. So everything is dealt with instantaneously.
A particle is represented fully by its current state, velocity and position.
You're saying, so you're arguing with all of physics and your father, as we always do,
that their time matters in conservatives.
That's the fundamental element is the full history
matters and you cannot separate the individual from the history, from the roots that they come from.
The parallel in political theory is what's called rationalism. I guess we'll probably talk about
that. Rationalism is kind of an instantaneous, timeless
thing before I mentioned that liberalism and various enlightenment theories, they don't
include time at all.
Their goal is to say, look, this such a thing is universally human reason.
All human beings, if the reason properly will come to the same conclusions.
If that's true, then it removes the time consideration. It removes tradition
and context because everywhere where you are at any time, you ought to be able to use
reason and come to the same conclusions about politics or morals. So that's a theory
like Emanuel Kant or John Locke as an example, Hobbes as an example, that kind of political
theorizing really does say at a given instant, we can know pretty much everything that we
need to know, at least the big things.
And conservatism is the opposite.
It's a traditionalist view, exactly as say that, that says that history is crucial.
So, you're on, you say that history is interesting, but perhaps not crucial in the context of
individualism.
No, I think there's a false dichotomy he presented here, and that is that one view holds that
you can derive anything from a particular historical path
and kind of an empirical view. And if we know the history, we know where we should be tomorrow.
We know what we should stand today. And the other path is we ignore history, we ignore facts,
we ignore what's going on, we can derive from some a priori axioms, we can derive a truth right now.
And both of those views in my view of false.
And I'm random, I reject both of those views.
And I think the better thinkers of the Enlightenment
did as well, although they sometimes fall
into the trap of appearing like rationalists.
And you know, I mean, I agree on one thing,
and that is that Kant is is one of you know, we've we've talked about this in the past
Lex now, but we both hate Kant. We both think Kant is is I at least think Kant is probably the the most destructive
philosopher since Plato who was pretty destructive himself, but and part of the problem is that Kant divorces reason from reality.
That is, he divorces reason from history.
He divorces reason from experience,
because we don't have direct experience
of reality according to Kant, right?
We're removed from that direct experience.
But I view Kant as the anti-enlightenment.
That is, I view Kant as the destroyer
of good enlightenment thinking
and Yoram, and I acknowledge a lot of history of philosophy, people who do history of philosophy,
view Kant as the embodiment of the Enlightenment, that is the ultimate. But I think that's a mistake.
I think both who sow and Kant fundamentally, the goal, the mission in life is to destroy the enlightenment. So my view is neither of those options are the right option. That is the true reason based,
reason is not divorced from reality. It's quite the opposite. Reason is a tool. It's a faculty
of identifying and integrating what it's identifying and integrating the fact of reality as
as we know them through sense perception or through the study of history,
through what actually happened.
So it's the integration of those facts.
It's the knowledge of that history.
And then what we do is we abstract away principles based on what's worked in the past,
what hasn't worked in the past, the consequences of different ideas,
different past, different actions.
We abstract away principles that then can be universal. Not always. We make mistakes, right?
We can come up with our universal principles since that's not. But if we have the whole scope
of human history, we can derive principles as we do in life, as individuals, we derive principles
that are then truths that we can live by, but you don't
do that by ignoring history, you do that by learning history, by understanding history,
by understanding in a sense tradition, and what it leads to, and then trying to do better.
And I think good thinkers are constantly trying to do better based on what they know about
the past and what they know about the past.
What's the difference between studying history on a journey of reason and tradition?
So, you mentioned that Burke understood that reason begins with inherited tradition yesterday.
So, what's the difference between studying history but then being free to go any way you want
and tradition where it feels more, I don't want to say a negative term like burden, but
it's, there's more of a momentum that forces you to go the same way as your ancestors.
It's the recognition that people are wrong, often are wrong, and the enderrants, including
your parents, including your teachers, including everybody. Everybody is potentially wrong. And that you can't accept anybody
just because they happen to come before you.
That is you have to evaluate and judge.
You have to have a standard by which they valued and judge
the actions of those who came before you,
whether they are your parents,
whether they are the state in which you happen to be born,
whether they are somebody on the other side of planet Earth, you can judge them if you have a standard.
And I might stand it, and I think the right standard is human well-being.
That is, that which is good for human beings, core human beings, you know, is the standard
by which we judge.
I can say that certain peers of history were bad.
They happened.
It's important to study them.
It's important to understand what they did
that made them bad so we cannot do that again.
And I can say certain cultures, certain periods of time,
were good, why?
Because they promoted human well-being and human flourishing.
That's the standard.
And then derive from that, okay,
what is it that made a particular culture?
Good, what is it that made that particular culture
positive in terms of human well-being and human flourishing? What made this bad? And hopefully from that, I can derive a principle.
Okay, if I want human flourishing and human war being in the future, I want to be more
like these guys, unless like those guys, I want to derive what is the principle that will
guide me in the future? That's, I think, how human knowledge ultimately develops.
I think people often make a mistake. just I'm not saying you're on,
but lots of people don't actually read the original sources.
And so what happens is people will attack conservatives,
assuming that conservatives think
that whatever comes from the past is right.
And actually, it's very difficult to find a thinker
who actually says something like that.
The Seldener Burke, the big conservative theorists,
Hooker, they're all people who understand that the tradition carries with it mistakes that
were made in the past. And this is actually, I think, an important part of their empiricism,
is that they see the search for truth as something a society does by trial and error.
And what that means is that in any given moment, you have to be aware of the possibility
that things that you've inherited are actually false.
And the job of the political thinker or the jurist or the philosopher is not to dig in and
say, you know, whatever it is that we've inherited is right, the job is to look at the society as a whole and say, look, we have this job of, first of all,
conservation, just making sure that we don't lose good things that we've had. And second,
Singapore can repair things in order to improve them where it's necessary or where it's possible.
And that process is actually a creative process. This is a way in which
I think it is similar to your own philosophy that you take the inherited tradition and you look
for way that you can shape it in order to make it something better than it was. That's a baseline
for what we call conservatism. It's just a comment. So the trial and error, the errors is, you're proud of the errors.
It's a feature, not a bug.
So the, you mentioned trial and error a few times yesterday.
It's a really interesting kind of idea.
It's basically accepting that the journey is going to have flaws, as opposed to saying,
I mean, the, the conclusion there is the current system is flawed and it will
always be flawed. And you try to improve it. When you listen to Iran talk, there's much more of
optimism for the system being perfect now or potentially soon or it could be perfect and to me at the way I heard it is almost like
Accepting that the system is flawed and through trial and error will improve and
Your aunt says no we can have a
perfection now
That's what it sounds to me. Yeah, and I think that's right
I think the difference is that at some point, just like in science, I think, one can stop
the trial and error and say, I can now see a patent here.
I can see that certain actions lead to bad consequences, certain actions lead to good consequences.
Let me try to abstract away what is it that is good and what is it
that are bad and build a system around what is good and reject what is bad. I think ultimately,
if you read the Fountie Fathers and whether we call them conservatives individuals, what the
Fountie Fathers actually did all of them, I think, is study history. They all did. They all
talk about history. They all talk about examples of other cultures with it, whether
they go back to a public in Venice or back to ancient Greeks. They studied these. They
learned lessons from them. They try to figure out what is worked in the past and what hasn't
been tried to do our principles. Now, in my view, they got pretty close to what I would consider
kind of an ideal, but they didn't get a completely right.
And here we sit 200 and something years after the declaration and after the Constitution. I think we
can look back and say, okay, well, what did they get right? What did they get wrong based on how
is it done and where the flaws and where the and we can improve on it? I think we can get closer to perfection.
And based on those kind of observations, based on that kind of abstraction, that kind of
discovery of what is true, just like at some point you do the experiments, you do the
trial and error, and now you come up with a scientific principle.
It is true that a hundred years later you might discover that, hey, I missed something, there's something, but to not take the full lesson, to insist on
incrementalism, to insist on we're just going to tinker with the system instead of saying,
no, there's something really wrong with having a king. There's something really wrong with
not having any representation, or whatever the standard
needs to be.
In the name of, we don't want to move too fast, I think, is a mistake.
And the problem with trial and error in politics is that we're talking about human life, right?
So, there was a big trial around communism.
And, you know, 100 million people paid the price for the trial.
I could have told them in advance as did many people that it would not work. There are principles
of human nature, principles of that we can study from history, principles about economics and
and other aspects. What we know it's not going to work, you don't need to try it again. You know,
we've had communal arrangements throughout history. There was an experiment
with fascism and there'd been experiments with all kinds of political systems. Okay, we've
done them, sad that we did them because many of us knew they wouldn't work. We should
learn the lesson. And I think that all of history now converges on one lesson. And that
is what we need to do is build systems to protect individual freedom.
That is the core. That's what ultimately leads to human flourishing and human success and human achievement.
And to the extent that we place anything above that individual, whether it's the state, whether it's the ethnicity, whether it's the race, whether it's the bourgeois, whatever it happens to be, a class or whatever, whenever we place something above the individual consequence of negative, that's one of these principles that I think we can derive from studying
to, you know, 3000 years of civilization. And it's tragic, I think, because we're going
to keep experimenting. Sadly, I see it, right? I'm not winning this battle. I'm losing the
battle. We're going to keep experimenting with different forms of collectivism, we're going to keep paying the price in human life and in missed opportunities for
human flourishing and human success and human wealth and prosperity. Well, look, if we let's take
communism as a good example, none of the major conservative thinkers would say, you know what's a
good idea? A good idea would be to experiment by raising everything that we've inherited
and starting from scratch.
I mean, that's the conservative complaint or accusation
against rationalists.
I mean, as opposed to empiricism, using rationalism,
let's take Descartes kind of as a benchmark.
And you also maybe define rationalism.
Yeah, these are two terms that are in philosophy, especially in epistemology.
They're often compared to one another.
You're on said that it's a false dichotomy, and maybe it is a bit exaggerated, but that
doesn't mean it's not useful for conceptualizing the domain. So, rationalist is somebody like Dick Hart, who says,
I'm going to set aside, I'm gonna try to set aside,
everything I know, everything I've inherited,
I'm gonna start from scratch.
And he explicitly says, you know,
in evaluating the inheritance of the past,
he explicitly says, you take a look at the histories
that we have, they're not reliable, you take a look at the moral and the scientific histories that we have, they're not reliable,
you take a look at the moral and the scientific writings that receive, they're not very good.
His baseline is to look very critically at the past and say, look, I'm evaluating it.
I think all in all, it's just not worth very much.
And so whatever I do, beginning from scratch, is going to be better as long as, and here's his caveat,
is as long as I'm proceeding from self-evident assumptions, from self-evident premises,
things that you can't argue against.
I think therefore I am.
And then from there deducing what he calls infallible conclusions.
So that model of self-evident premises to infallible conclusions, I'm calling
that rationalism, I think that's kind of a standard academic jargon term. And it's opposed to
empiricism, which is a thinker, I think in universities usually the empiricist is David Yume.
universities, usually the empiricist is David Yume. And David Yume will say, we can't learn anything the way that Descartes said. I mean, there is nothing that's that self-evident
and that infallible. So, Yume proposes, based on Newton and Boyle and the new physical
sciences. So, Yume you propose a science of man,
and the science of man sounds an awful lot
like what you're on just said,
which is we're gonna take a look at human nature,
at the nature of societies.
Human nature, we're gonna try to abstract
towards fixed principles for describing it.
Human societies, we're gonna try to do the same thing.
And from there we get, you know, for example, contemporary economics, but we also get, you know, sociology and anthropology,
which cut in a different direction. So that's rationalism versus empiricism. Can I just say?
Yeah, go ahead, please. Yeah, just I agree with that. I think I think it's a, I think empiricism,
the one thing I disagree is that I think empiricism really comes to these abstractions. I think it's a, I think empiricism, the one thing I disagree is that I think
empiricism really comes to these abstractions. I mean, they want more facts. It's always about
collecting more evidence in the, but this is where, you know, I think I knew hand is so unusual
and where I think there's something new here, right? And that's a bold statement given the history of philosophy, but I think I knew Anne-Ran
is something new.
And so she says, yes, we agree about nationalism and that it's inherently wrong.
Impericism has the problem of, okay, what is it lead?
You never come to a conclusion, you're just accumulating evidence.
There's something in addition.
There's a third alternative, which she is positive,
which is using empirical evidence, not denying empirical evidence,
recognizing that there are some axioms, there's some axioms that we all,
at the base of all of our knowledge that are starting points, we're not rejecting axiomatic knowledge. And integrating those two and identifying the fact that based on these axiomatic knowledge and integrating those two and identifying the fact that based on these
axioms and based on these empirical evidence, we can come to truths. Just again, like we do in science,
we have certain axioms, scientific axioms, we have certain experiments that we want, and then we
can come to some identification of a truth. And that truth is always going to be challenged by
new information, by new knowledge, but as long as that's what we know, that is what truth is, the truth is contextual in the sense that it's contextual
it's based on that knowledge that surrounds itself.
That's right. That's right.
So for it to change if you get new facts, always available to change if the facts that you
get and they really are, I mean, the burden of changing what you've come to a conclusion of truth is high,
so you'd have to have real evidence that it's not true, but that happens all the time.
So it happens at science, right? We discover that what we thought was true is not true, and it can
happen in politics and ethics, even more so than in science, because they're much messier fields.
But the ideas that you can come to a truth, but it's not just deductive. Most
truths are inductive. We learn from observing reality and again, coming to principles about
what works and what's not. And here I think this is, I'm Rand is different. She doesn't
fall into the, and she's different in her politics and she's different in her epistemology.
She doesn't fall into the conventional view.
She's an opponent of human.
She's an opponent of the cards.
She's certainly an opponent of cons.
And you know, I think she's right.
So if it's okay, can we walk back to criticism of communism?
You're both critics of communism, socialism.
Why did communism fail?
You started to say that conservatives
criticized it on the basis of rationalism
that you're throwing away the past.
You're starting from scratch.
Is that the fundamental description
of why communism failed?
I think the fundamental difference
between rationalists and empiricists is the question of
whether you're throwing away the past.
That's the argument.
And it caches out as a distinction between abstract universal rationalist political theories
and empirical political theories, empirical political theories are, are, are, they're always going
to say something like, um, look, there are many different societies. We can say that some
are better and some are worse, but the problem is that, you know, that, that, that, that,
there are many different ways in which a society can be better or worse. There's an ongoing competition and we're learning on an ongoing basis,
what are the ways in which societies can be better and worse.
That creates a kind of, I'd say, a mild skepticism, a moderate skepticism,
among conservatives. I don't think too many conservatives have a problem looking at the Soviet Union, which is brutal and murderous,
ineffective in its economics, totally ineffective, spiritually, and then collapsed.
Okay, so I think it's easier for us to look at a system like that and say, you know,
what on earth, what should we learn from that?
But the main conservative tradition is pretty tolerant of a diversity
of different kinds of society
and is slow to insist that France is so tyrannical.
It just needs a revolution
because what's gonna come after the revolution
is gonna be much better.
The assumption is that there's lots of things
that are good about most societies
and that a clean slate leads you to to to throw out all of
the inherited things that you don't even know how to notice until they're gone.
Could I actually play a double advocate here and address something you also said, can we
as opposed to knowing the empirical data of the 20th century that communism presented?
Can we go back to the beginning of the 20th century that communism presented. Can we go back to the beginning of the 20th century?
Can you empathize or steal man or put yourself in a place
of the Soviet Union where the workers are being disrespected?
And can you not see that the conservatives could be pro communism?
Communism is such a strongly negative word in modern day political discourse
that you have to put yourself in the mind of people who like red colors, who like, who
it was. It's all about the branding, I think. But also the ideas of solidarity of nation of togetherness of
respect for fellow man. I mean all of these things that kind of communist
represents can you not see that this idea is actually going along with
conservatism. It isn't some ways respecting the deep ideals of the past, but proposing a new way
to raise those ideals and implement those ideals on a system. Yes, I'm going to try to do what
you're suggesting, but historically, we actually have a more useful option, I think, for both of our
positions, instead of pretending that we like the actual communists, we have conservative statesmen,
like Disraeli and Bismarck, who initiated social legislation, right? The first step towards
saying, look, we're one nation, we're undergoing industrialization. That industrialization is
nation, we're undergoing industrialization. That industrialization is important and positive, but it's also doing a lot of damage to a lot of people, and in particular, it's doing damage,
not just to individuals and families, but it's doing damage to the social fabric, the capacity
of Britain or German to remain cohesive societies is being harmed. And so it's these two conservative statesmen,
Israeli and Bismarck, who actually take the first steps in order to
legislate for what today we would consider to be minimal social programs,
pensions and disability insurance and those kinds of things.
So for sure, conservatives do look at industrialization as a rapid change. And they say, we do have
to care about the nation as a whole. And we have to care about it as a unity. And I assume
that you're on. We'll say, look, that's the first step towards the catastrophe of communism.
But before you're on drives that nail into the car. Let me try to make a distinction because when
you read marks, you're reading an intellectual descendant of Descartes. You're reading somebody
who says, look, every society has consists of oppressors and oppressed, right? And that's an
improvement in some ways over liberal thinking because at least he's seeing
he's seen groups as a as a real social phenomenon, but he says every society has a press or class
and a press class. They're different classes, they're different groups, and whenever one is stronger,
it exploits the ones that are weaker. All right, that is the foundation of a revolutionary political theory. Why? Because the moment that you say
that the only relationship between the stronger and the weaker is exploitation, the moment that
you say that, then you're pushed into the position and Marx and Engel say this explicitly,
you're pushed into the position, we're saying, when will the exploitation end? Never until there's
a revolution. What happens when there's a revolution? You eliminate the oppressor class. It's annihilationist. I mean, you can immediately, when you read it,
see why it's different from a dichartre Bismarck, because they're trying to keep everybody,
you know, somehow at peace with one another. And Marx is saying, there is no peace. That oppressor
class has to be annihilated. And then they go ahead
and do it. And they end the kill 100 million people. So I do think that despite the fact your question
is good and right, there are certain similarities and concern. But still, I think you can tell the
difference between that. That extra step of revolution to you is where the problem comes.
Like that extra step of let's kill all the pressers. That's the problem. Right. And then to you is where the problem comes. Like that extra step of let's kill all the pressers. That's
the problem. Right. And then to you, you're on the whole step one is the problem. Well, it's all a
problem. But first, I don't view communism as something that radical in a sense that I think it
comes from a tradition of collectivism. I think it comes from a tradition of looking at groups
and measuring things in terms of groups. It comes from a tradition where you expect some people
to be sacrificed for the great of good of the whole. I think it comes from a tradition where
mysticism or revelation as the source of truth is accepted. I view Marx's in some sense very Christian.
I don't think he's this radical rejecting.
I think he's just reformatting.
Christianity in a sense, he's replacing,
in a sense, he's replacing God with the polyterian knowledge.
You know, you have to get knowledge from somewhere.
So you need the dictatorship of the polyterian,
you need somebody, the Stalin, the Lenin who
who somehow communes with the spirit, the spirit of the
politician. There's no rationality, not rationalism. There's
no rationality in Marx. There is a lot of mysticism and there
is a lot of hand waving. And there's a lot of sacrifice and a
lot of original sin in the way he views humanity.
So if you Marx as as one more collectivists
in a whole string of collectivists.
And I think the Bismarckian response,
which Bismarck, I mean, I know less about this rarely.
So I'll focus on Bismarck.
I mean, Bismarck is really responding
to political pressures from the left
and he's responding to the rise of communism, socialism.
But what Bismarck is doing, he's putting something alternative, he's presenting an alternative
to the proletarian as the standard by which we should method the good.
And what he's replacing it is the state. He's replacing the proletarian with the state.
And that has exactly the same problems.
That is first, it requires sacrificing some to others,
which is what the welfare state basically legitimizes.
It places the state above all, so the state now becomes,
I think the biggest evil of Bismarck,
and I definitely view him as a negative force in history,
is public education.
I mean, the Germans really dig in on public education
and really develop it. And really the American model of public education is copying the
German, the Prussian, the Bismarckian public education.
I think that real quick, why the public education is such a root of moral evil for you.
Well, because it now says that there's one standard,
and that standard is determined by government,
by bureaucracy, by whatever the government deems
is in the national interest.
And Bismarck is very explicit about this.
He's training the workers of the future.
You know, they need to catch up with England and other places,
and they need to train the workers, and it's going to be a,
he's going to train some people to be the managerial class, he's going to train other people to be,
and he decides, right, that the government to be bureaucracy is going to decide who's who,
and where they go, there's no individual choice, there's no individual showing an ability to break
out of what the government has decided is their little box, there's very little freedom, there's very
little, you know, ultimately there's very little competition, there's very little freedom. There's very little, you know, ultimately there's very
little competition, there's very little innovation. And this is the problem we have today in
American education, which we can get to is there's no competition and innovation. We have
one standard fit all. And then we have conflicts about what should be taught. And the conflict
now not pedagogical, they're not about what works and what doesn't. Nobody cares about
that. It's about political agendas, right?
It's about what my group wants to be taught
and what that group wants to be taught
rather than actually discovering,
how do we get kids to read?
I mean, we all know how to get kids to read,
but there's a political agenda
about not teaching phonics, for example.
So a lot of schools don't teach phonics,
even though the kids will never learn how to read properly.
So it becomes politics, and I don't believe politics belongs in education.
I think education is a product, it's a service, and we know how to deliver products and services
really, really efficiently at a really, really low price, at a really, really high quality.
And that's leaving it to the market to do.
But your fundamental criticism is that the state can use education to further authoritarian aims.
Well, or whatever the aims do,
I mean, think about the conservative today,
critique of American educational system,
it's dominated by the left.
Yeah, what did you expect?
Right?
If you leave it up to the state to fund,
they're gonna fund the things that promote
state growth and state intervention
and the left is better at that
It has been better at that than than the right and and they now dominate our educational institutions
But look if we go back to Bismarck my problem is placing the state above the individual
So if if communism places the the class above the individual what matters is class individuals are nothing the cogs in a machine
Bismarck, certainly the German tradition,
much more than the British tradition or the American tradition,
the German tradition is to place a state above the individual.
I think that's equally evil,
and the outcome is fascism, and the outcome is the same.
The outcome is the deaths of tens of millions of people
when taken to its ultimate conclusion,
just like socialism, the ultimate conclusion of it is communism,
nationalism in that form, kind of the smart key in form, the ultimate conclusion is, is Nazism or some
form of fascism. Because you don't care about the individual, the individual doesn't
matter. I think this is one of the differences in the Anglo, you know, Anglo-American tradition, where the Anglo-American tradition, even the conservatives,
have always acknowledged and it goes back to a special...
Especially the conservatives.
Yes, the conservatives were there first.
They acknowledged, well, you've defined conservatives to include all the good thinkers
of the distant past, and they're all good thinkers.
We agree on that.
I'm defining conservatism the way that Burke does.
I'm just... Look, this is a very simple observation.
Burke thinks, when you open Burke and you actually read him,
he starts naming all of these people who he's defending.
And it's bizarre. I'm sorry, it's just intellectual sloppiness for people to be publishing books
called Burke, the first conservative, the founding conservative, the founder, I mean, this is non-stop.
It's a view that says Burke reacts to the French Revolution, so conservatism has no prior
tradition. It's just reacting to the French Revolution. And this is, I mean, this is just
absurd.
Can I ask a quick question on conservatism? Are there any conservatives that are embracing
of revolutions? So are they ultimately against the concept of revolution?
Yes, Burke himself embraces the Polish Revolution, which takes place almost exactly at the same time as the French Revolution.
And the argument is really interesting because there's a common mistake is assuming that Burke and conservative thinkers are always in favor of slow change.
I think that's also just factually mistaken.
Burke is against the French Revolution because he thinks that there are actually
tried and true things that work.
Things that work for human flourishing
and freedom included as a very important part
of human flourishing.
He, like many others,
takes the British, the English Constitution to be
a model of something that works. So it has a king, it has various other things that, you know,
maybe your own will say that, well, that's a mistake, but still, for centuries, it's the leader,
in many things that I think we can easily agree, are human flourishing. And Burke says,
look, what's wrong with the French Revolution? What's wrong with the French Revolution is that they have a system that has all sorts
of problems, but they could be repairing it.
And instead, what they're doing by overthrown everything is they're moving away from what
we know is good for human beings.
Then he looks at the Polish Revolution. And he says, the Poles do the opposite.
The Poles have a non-functioning traditional Constitution.
It's too democratic.
It's impossible to raise armies and to defend the country
because of the fact that every nobleman has a veto.
So the Polish Revolution moves in the direction
of the British Constitution.
They repair their Constitution through a quick, rapid revolution.
They install a king along the model that looks a lot like Britain and Berks support.
He says, this is a good revolution.
So it's not the need to quickly make a change in order to save yourself.
That's not what a conserv in order to save yourself.
That's not what a conservators are objecting to.
What they're objecting to is instead of looking at experience
in order to try to make a slow or quick improvement,
a measured improvement to achieve a particular goal.
Instead of doing that, you say,
look, the whole thing has just been wrong.
And what we've really got to do is annihilate a certain part of the population and then make completely new laws
and a completely new theory. That's what he's objecting to. That's the French Revolution.
And that then becomes, you know, the model for communist revolutions.
And for me, the French Revolution is clearly a real evil and wrong. But it's not that it was
a revolution. And it's not that it tried to change everything. I mean, let's remember what was going on in France at the time.
And people were starving.
And the monarchy in particular was completely detached, completely detached from the suffering
of the people.
And something needed to change.
The unfortunate thing is that the change was motivated by an egalitarian philosophy, not
egalitarian in a sense that I think
the funny father's talked about, but egalitarian in a sense of real equality, equality of outcome,
motivated by a philosophy, by who source philosophy. And inevitably, you could tell that the ideas
were going to lead to this, to massive destruction and death and annihilation of a class.
and death and annihilation of a class. You can't annihilation is never an option.
That is, it's not true that a good revolution
never leads to mass death of just a whole groups of people
because a good revolution is about the sanctity
of the individual, it's about preservation,
liberty of the individual.
And again, that goes back to,
and the French Revolution denies,
and we so denies really that in civilization there is a value
and a thing called the individual?
I think this is a good place to have this discussion.
The founding fathers of the United States,
are they individuals or are they conservatives?
So in this particular revolution that found
in this country at the core of which are some fascinating,
some powerful ideas, were those founding fathers, were those ideas coming from a place of
conservatism, or did they put primary value into the freedom and the power of the individual?
What do you think?
There were both.
I mean, this is something that's a little
bit difficult for sometimes for Americans. I mean, even very educated Americans, they
talk about the founding fathers as though it's kind of like this collective entity with
a single brain and a single value system. But I think at the time that's not the way they, they, they, not the
way any of them saw it. So roughly there's two camps and they map on to the rationalist
versus traditionalist empiricist dichotomy that I proposed earlier. And the, so on the
one hand, you have real revolutionaries like Jefferson and Pan. These are the people who
Burke was writing against. These are the people who Burke was writing against.
These are the people who supported the French Revolution. So when you say real, so when you say
pain, you're referring to revolutionaries in a bad way, like this is a problem. These are people
who will say history up until now has been, you know, with with Dicart, but applied to politics. History up until now has been, you know, just a story of
ugliness, foolishness, stupidity and evil.
And if you apply reason, we'll all come to roughly,
we'll all come to the same conclusions, you know,
and a pain write a book called The Age of Reason.
And The Age of Reason is a manifesto for,
here is the answer to political and moral
problems throughout history. We have the answers. And it's in the same school as Rousseau's
social, no, you don't like that? No, no, no, I thought it was like, I think there's
opposites. Okay, so, so limit just to throwing a question on Jefferson and pain, do you think America would exist without those two figures?
So like how important is spice in the flavor of the dish you're making?
I don't want to try to run the counterfactual.
I don't have confidence that I know the answer to the question.
But it's so much fun.
You know what?
I'm going to offer something that I think is more fun.
More fun than the counterfactual is
America had two revolutions, not one. Okay, at first there is a
revolution that is strongly spiced with
this kind of rationalism
and then there's a ten-year period after the Declaration of Independence.
There's a ten-year period under which America has a constitution.
It's first constitution, which today they call the Articles of the Confederation, but
there's a constitution from 1777.
And that constitution is based on, in a lot of ways, on the hottest new ideas.
It has, instead of the traditional British system with a division of powers between an executive
and a bicameral legislature, instead of that traditional English model, which most of
the states had as their governments, instead of that, they say, no, we're going to have
one elected body, and that body, that Congress, it's going to be the executive.
It's going to be the executive, it's going to be the
legislative, it's going to be everything. And it's going to run as a big committee. These
are the ideas of the French Revolution. You get to actually see them implemented in
Pennsylvania, in the Pennsylvania Constitution, and then later in the National Assembly in
France. It's a disaster. The thing doesn't work. It's completely made up. It's not based on any kind.
It's neither based on historical experience nor is it based on historical custom on what people are used to.
And what they succeed in creating with this first constitution is it's wonderfully rational,
but it's a complete disaster. It doesn't allow the raising of taxes. It doesn't allow the mustering of troops. It doesn't allow giving orders to soldiers to fight a war. And if that had continued, if that had continued to be
the American constitution, America never would have been in an independent country. There
I'm willing to do that counterfactual. What happens during those years where Washington and Jay and Knox and Hamilton and Morris, there's
like this group of conservatives, they're mostly soldiers and lawyers, others in Washington,
most of them are from northern cities. And this group is much more conservative than the, than the, than the Tom Payne and, and Jefferson
School. You, some, some historians, some historians call them the nationalist party. Historically,
they give up the word nationalism and they call themselves the federalists, but they're basically
the nationalist party. What does that mean? It means on the one hand that their goal is to create an independent nation independent from Britain, but on the other hand, they believe that they already have national legal traditions, the common law, the forms of government that have been imported from from Britain, and of course Christianity, which they consider to be part of their inheritance.
This federalist party is the conservative party.
These are people who are extremely close in ideas to Burke.
And these are people who wrote the Constitution
of the United States, the second Constitution,
the second revolution in 1787,
when Washington leads the establishment
of a new constitution, which, you know, may
maybe technically legally, it wasn't even legal under the old constitution, but it was
democratic. And what it did is it said, we're going to take what we know about English
government, what we've learned by applying English government in the States. We're going
to create a national government, a unified national government that's going to muster power in its hands enough power to be able to do things
like fighting wars to defend a unified people. Those are conservatives. Now, it's reasonable to say,
well, look, there was no king, so how conservative could they be, but I think that's a reasonable question,
but don't forget that the American colonies, the English colonies in America by that point had been around for 150 years.
They had written constitutions.
They had already adapted, for an entire century, adapted the English constitution to local
conditions where there's no aristocracy and there's no king.
You know, I think you can see that as a positive thing.
On the other hand, they have slavery.
That's an innovation.
That's not English.
So it's a little bit different from the English Constitution.
But those men are conservatives.
They make the minimum changes that they need to the English Constitution.
And they largely replicated, which is why the Jeffersonians hated them so much.
They call them apostates.
They say they've betrayed equality and liberty and fraternity by adopting an English style
constitution.
So I would imagine, Aaron, you would put emphasis of the success of the key ideas at the
founding of this country also, at the freedom of the individual.
So the tradition of the British Empire.
I mean, the one thing I agree with you, Am, is the fact that freedom of the individual. So the the I mean, the tradition of the British Empire. I mean, the one thing I
agree with you all is is is the fact that yes, the founding fathers
were not a monolith. I mean, they argued they debated, they
disagreed, they wrote against each other. I mean, Jefferson and
Adams for decades didn't even speak to each other, though, they
did make up and had a fascinating fascinating relationship
after you and I are making up.
It's like the founding fathers. You know, there's massive debate and discussion.
But I don't agree with the characterization of pain
and Jefferson.
I don't think it's just to call them rationalists
because I don't think they're rationalists.
People who've looked at history,
at the problems in history,
and remember this is the 18th century,
and they were coming out of a hundred years earlier,
some of the bloodiest wars in all of human history.
We're happening in Europe, many of them over religion.
You know, they had seen what was going on
in France and other countries,
where people were starving,
and where kings were frolicking in palaces in spite of that.
They were very aware of the relative freedom
that the British tradition had given Englishmen.
I think they knew that, they understood that.
And I think they were building on that.
They were taking the observation of the past
and trying to come up with a more
perfect system. And I think they did. And in that sense, I'm a huge fan of Jefferson. You know,
there are two things that I'm I think done fortunate about Jefferson. One is that he continued to hold
slaves, which is, which is, which is a very unfortunate. And the second is is early support for
the French Revolution, which I think is a massive mistake.
And that would be surprised if you were
credited later in life, given the consequences.
But they were trying to derive principles
by which they could establish a new state.
And yes, there was pushback by some
and there was disagreement in the constitution
and the end is to some extent a form of compromise.
It's still one of the great documents of all of human history, the Constitution.
Although I think it's inferior to the Declaration, I'm a huge fan of the Declaration.
I think one of the mistakes the Conservatives make, one of the mistakes the Supreme Court makes
and American Judiciary makes is assuming the two documents are separate. I think Lincoln is
aptually right. You can understand the Constitution without understanding the Declaration,
the Declaration, what set the context and what sets everything up for the Constitution,
individual rights of the key concept there. And one of the challenges was that some of the
compromises and compromises not necessarily between groups, but compromises that even Jefferson
made and others made regarding individual rights, set American path that we are suffering
from today.
And I mentioned three last night, one was slavery.
Obviously there was a horrific compromise, one that American not just paid for with the Civil War, 600,000 young men died
because of it, but the suffering of black slaves for all those years. But then the whole issue
of racial tensions in this country for a century to this day really is a consequence of that initial
compromise. Who knows what the counterfactual is in America?
If there's a civil war right at the founding,
right, because there would have been a war no matter what.
But if it had happened in the late 18th century,
19th century rather than waiting till 1860s.
But then second was Jefferson's embrace of public education.
His founding of the University of Virginia,
which I think is a great tragedy. since embrace of public education, his founding of the University of Virginia,
which I think is a great tragedy,
and which nobody agrees with me on.
So that's one of the areas where I'm pretty radical.
And then they embrace both by Jefferson and by Hamilton
for different reasons,
but they embrace by both of them
of government, role in the economy.
And I do finance, so I know a little bit
about finance, and the debate between Jefferson
and Hamilton about banking is fascinating,
but at the end of the day, both wanted
a role for government in banking.
They both didn't trust,
Jefferson didn't trust big financial interests.
Hamilton wanted to capture some of those financial issues
for the state, and as a consequence,
we set America on a path where, you know, in my view, regulation
always leads to more regulation.
There's never, never a case where regulation decreases.
And we started out with a certain regulatory body around banks and a recognition that
was okay to regulate the economy.
So once we get into the late 19th century, it's fine to regulate the railroads, it's fine
to pass antitrust laws, it's fine to then continue
on the path of where we are today, which is heavy, heavy, heavy, massive involvement of
government in every aspect of economy and really in every aspect of our life because of education.
So I think the country was found in a certain mistakes and we haven't been willing to question
those mistakes and in a sense that we've only moved in the opposite direction.
And now America has become, whereas I think it was founded in the idea of the primacy of the
individual, the sanctity of the individual, at least as an idea, even if not fully implemented,
I think now that's completely lost. I don't think anybody really is an advocate out there for
individualism in politics or for true freedom in politics.
We'll get to individuals and but let me ask the Beatles and the Rolling Stones question about the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
What do you want?
Well, because it's like which document Beatles are all in which document is more important.
So it's obvious to the Beatles, right?
Okay, it's the question.
It's not even a question.
But then let me then even zoom in further and ask you to pick your favorite song.
So what ideas in the Constitution or the Declaration of Independence do you think are the most
important to the success of the United States of America?
I'll answer the question, but before answering the question, I want to descend from...
Registered descent from your runs.
Is it the public education?
Is it which public education?
Is it which?
No, no, no, actually, we're not so far apart on public education.
I'm actually kind of surprised that you're so anti-biz mark because his public school system
with his national public school system was created in order to stick it to the church.
It was the church that ran the schools before then.
And it was okay, but so that's a different. I'm oversticking it to the church. It was the church that ran the schools before then. And okay, but so that's a different I'm over sticking it to the church.
Any opportunity, but not now when the alternative is the nation. I see. I'd rather see
the basically free educational system, you know, where freedom is in education.
Okay, so, so I want to register a dissent about Lincoln. Look, Lincoln is an important figure
in a great man, and he was presiding over a country,
which at that point was pretty Jeffersonian
in terms of its self-perception.
He said, what do you need it to say?
I'm not gonna criticize him,
but I don't accept the idea that the declaration
of independence, which starts one revolution,
is of a peace with the second constitution, the constitution of 1787, the nationalist constitution,
which is effectively a counter-revolution. What happens is there is a revolution, it's based
on certain principles. There are a lot, not exactly, but in many ways resemble the later ideas of
the French Revolution. And what the Federalist Party does,
the Nationalist Conservative Party does,
is a counter-revolution to reinstate
the Old English Constitution.
So these documents are, if you're willing to accept
the evidence of history, they are,
in many respects, contrary to one another.
And so if I'm asked what's the most important values that are handed down by
these documents, I don't have an objection to, you know, to life, liberty, and property, all of
which are really important things. I do have an objection to the pompous overreach of these
are self-evident, which is absurd. They can't be self-evident. If they
were self-evident, then somebody would have come up with them, you know, like 2000 years before.
It's not self-evident. And so that's damaging. I like the conservative preamble of the
Constitution, which describes the purposes of the national government that's being established.
describes the purposes of the national government that's being established. There are seven purposes, a more perfect union, which is the principle of cohesion, justice,
domestic peace, common defense, the general welfare, which is the welfare of the public
as a thing that's not only individuals, but there is such a thing as a general welfare, liberty, which we agree is absolutely crucial, and posterity, the idea that the purpose
of the government is to be able to sustain and grow of this independent nation, and not only to
guarantee rights, no matter what happens. But you don't like the, we hold these truth to be
self-evident, so you're definitely Beatles guy, you don't want the, you don't like the, we hold these truths to be self-evident. So you're definitely Beatles guy.
You don't want the, you don't want the pompous,
you don't need that breath of a string.
No, look, I just, I think that that expression,
self-evident truth, it does tremendous damage
because it, it, it, instead of a moderate skepticism,
which says, look, we may not know everything.
It says, look, we know everything. everything. It says, look, we know
everything. Here it is. Here's what we know. We don't know everything. No, we think. So,
so I, you know, I'll agree with you, I don't like self-evident. I don't like self-evident
because he's absolutely right. It's not self-evident. These are massive achievements. These are massive
achievements of, of enlightened thinking, of studying history,
of understanding human nature, of deriving a truth from 3000 years of historical knowledge,
and a better understanding of human nature and the capacity. It's using reason in some ways
better than any human beings have. I mean, funny fathers giants historically, in my view,
because they came up with these truths,
I do think they're truths,
but they're certainly not self-evident.
I mean, if they were, you're on his right,
they would have discovered them thousands of years earlier
or everybody would accept them, right?
I mean, how many people today think
that those, what they state in the dark,
document is true?
Pretty much, you know, five people, I don't know,
it's very, it's very,
that your criticism of modern society,
it's very, very few people recognized,
if they were self-evident,
bam, everybody would have become,
you know, would have accepted American Revolution
as truth, and that was it.
A lot of work has to go into understanding
and describing and
convincing people about those truths. But I completely disagree with you all about this idea
or I'll voice my dissent, as we said about-
I'm just very here, this official dissent, about being two different revolutions and being
that American revolution was at any similarity to the French revolution.
You know that Jefferson and Payne were,
they were in France running a different revolution.
I know, but they were, they were,
they were waiting constantly.
I mean, they were in communication with Madison.
They were doing a lot of input going on.
I know, and Jefferson's sitting there in Paris,
pulling his hair out because Madison,
Madison has come under the influence
of these nationalists, then he can't believe it.
The reality is that the difference between the French Revolution
and the American Revolution is vast
and it is a deep philosophical difference.
And it's a difference that expressed,
I think, between the differences,
you know, you're in his writings,
lumps who sow with luck and with Voltaire and with others.
And I think that's wrong.
I think we sow is very different than the others.
I think again, we sow is an anti-enlightenment figure.
We sow is in many respect,
hawking back to a past, an ancient past.
And I think a completely distorted view of human nature of human mind.
He rejects reason.
I mean, we sow is on the premise that reason is the end of humanity.
Reason is the destruction of humanity.
Reason is how we get civilization.
The civilization is awful because I don't disagree.
We're only talking about different texts.
When I say, I'm just talking about the social contract.
Yeah, but the social contract, he has some
allowity between others, but he takes it in a completely different direction
and we agree a social contract is a bad idea.
But the can have a contract
that you don't actually voluntarily accept.
But so is the French Revolution.
Who so is about destruction and mayhem and chaos
and Anarchy, he is the spirit behind the French Revolution.
I think the Morgan Revolution is a complete rejection of Russo.
I think Jefferson is a complete rejection of Russo.
I don't think Jefferson is a fan of Russo.
He is a Valtan, he's certainly a minuscule.
If you look at the Federalist papers,
the intellectual most cited in the Federalist papers,
I think in terms of this to the number of times
aside, is minuscule.
You know, so I think the American Revolution
is an individualistic revolution.
It is a revolution about the rights of the individual.
The French Revolution is an agation of the rights of the individual.
It's a collectivistic revolution.
It's not quite the Marxist revolution of the proletarian,
but it's defining people in classes,
and it's rebellion against a certain class, And yeah, kill them all, right?
Off with their heads. And it is an agation. It's about egalitarianism in the sense of equality
of outcome, not in a sense of equality before the law or equality of rights, which is the
Jeffersonian sense. So I think it's it's it's wrong to lump Jefferson in to the fraternity,
to lump Jefferson in to the fraternity, you know, egalitarian notion of the French, which is far more similar to what ultimately became socialism and Marxism and kind of that tradition.
It's anti-individualistic, the French Revolution is where the American Revolution, the first
one, is individualistic. It's all about individual rights. And while there's certain phrases
and declaration of independence that I don't agree with,
it's beautifully written and it's a magnificent document.
So it's hard for me to say I don't agree.
Who am I?
These were giants.
Self-evident is one of them.
I'm not particularly crazy about endowed by the creator, but I like the fact that it's
creator, not God, or not a specific creator, but just a more general thing.
But putting those two ashes aside, it's the greatest political document in all of human
history, in my view, by far.
Nothing comes close.
It is a document that identifies the core principles of political tourism of truth.
That is the wall of government is to preserve and to protect these rights, these inalienable
rights.
And that is so crucial that these rights are inalienable.
That is, a majority can vote them out.
You know, a revelation can vote them out.
This is what is required for human liberty and human freedom.
The right, that is the sanction of freedom, to act on your own behalf, to act based on your
own judgment, and as long as you're not interfering with other people's rights, you are free to do so.
That is such a profound truth. That to me is the essence of political philosophy. That's the beginning, you know,
and it's based on just not falling to you. I'm just going to say it's irrational. It's based on
a whole history of what happens when you get that. It's based on looking at England and seeing
to the extent that they practiced a respect for individual liberty, a property of freedom. Good things happened.
So let's take that all the way. Let's not compromise on that. Let's be consistent with the good
and reject the bad. And when England goes away, distance itself on the rights of man, from the idea
of a right to property and so on. Bad things happen. And when they go to, let's go all in. And I'm all in
on the right to life, liberty, property and the pursuit of happiness. And I think the ideal
pursuit of happiness is profound because it's a moral statement. It's a statement that says
that sanctions and says that ultimately people should be allowed to make their own judgments and
live their life as they see fit based on how they view happiness.
They might be right.
They might be wrong, but we're not going to dictate what happiness entails and dictate
to people how they should live their lives.
We're going to let them figure that out.
So it has this self-interested moral code kind of embedded in it.
So I think it's a beautiful statement.
So I think the declaration is key.
And I think there was an experiment,
and the experiment was posed in that period
of before the Constitution, where the experiment was,
let's let the states, let's have a kind of a loose
confederation, let's the states experiment
with setting up their own constitutions and all the
government, and we won't have any kind of unity.
And I think what they realized, and I think even Jefferson realized, is that that was not
workable because many of the states were starting to significantly violate rights.
There was nothing to unify, there was nothing to really protect the vision of the declaration.
You needed to establish a nation, which is what the Constitution does.
It establishes a nation.
But the purpose of that was to put everybody under one set of laws that protected rights.
The focus was still on the protection of rights.
And I agree with six of the seven of the principles, right?
And the what which did disagree with the common welfare,
which the general law, what general law, right?
I think in the way the founders understood it,
I think I probably agreed with it.
But it's such an ambiguous, I'm sure you don't agree.
Maybe I don't.
But can you stay at the general welfare principle?
Well, the idea that part of the world of government
is to secure the general welfare.
Look, it's something, it's something that...
Look, look, this is something we didn't get to it
in the debate we really should have,
is the question of whether there is such a thing
as a common good or a public interest
or a national interest or a general welfare,
do these words, do these terms mean anything
other than the good of all of the individuals
in the country?
That's an, sorry, I'm an entrepreneur.
Yeah, so that's right.
So that's why, so I object to it because I think it's too easy to interpret it as.
So I interpret it as, well, what's good for the, you know, a general, a group, a common,
a, a, people are just collection of individuals, so what's good for the individual is good
for the common welfare.
But I understand that that is something
that is hard for people to grasp
and not the common understanding.
So I would have skipped the general welfare
in order to avoid the fact that now the general welfare
includes the government telling you
what gender you should be assigned.
So I would have wanted to skip that completely
So I think the the Constitution is because pretty consistent with the the declaration with a few exceptions the general welfare, but you know
Perfection is is a difficult thing to find particularly for me right politically
But it's it's a magnificent document the the Constitution it doesn't quite rise to the level I think of the declaration, but it's a magnificent document because
You know, and this is the difference. I think what between the English Constitution. Here's what I see as the difference.
The difference is that the Constitution is written in the context of, why do we have a
separation of powers, for example?
We have a separation of powers in order to make sure that the government only does what
the government is supposed to do, and what is the government supposed to do? Well, fundamentally, it's supposed to protect rights.
I mean, all of those seven, or at least six of the seven, about protecting rights. They're
about protecting us from foreign invaders, about protecting, you know, peace within the country.
They're about preserving this protection of rights. And why do we have this separation?
So so that we make sure that no one of those
entities, the executive or the legislature, judicial can violate rights because there's always somebody looking over the shoulder. There's always somebody who can veto their power. But there's
a purpose to it. And that purpose is clearly a signified and characterized. And that's why I think
the Bill of Rights was written in order to add to the clarification of what exactly we mean, what is the purpose,
the purpose is to preserve rights, and that's why we need to elaborate what those rights.
And Madison's objection to the Bill of Rights was to say not to be objected to having a
protection of rights, but to listing them because he was worried that other rights that were
not listed would not be, and his worry was completely justified because it's exactly what's happened. It's like the only reason we have free speech in America is
we've got it in writing as a First Amendment. If we didn't have any writing it would have been
gone a long time ago. And the reason we don't have, for example, the freedom to negotiate a contract
you know independent government regulation is there was that was not listed as a right
in the bill even
no I think it's clearly covered under the Constitution and certainly under the Declaration.
So there was a massive stake down in the Bill of Rights. They tried to cover it with the
Ninth Amendment, but they never really stuck this idea that they're non-inumerated rights that
are still in place. So I don't see this as a second revolution. I think it's a fix to a flaw that happened.
It's a fix that allowed the expansion of the protection
of rights to all states by creating a national entity
to protect those rights.
And that's what ultimately led to slavery going away.
You know, under the initial agreement, slavery would have been there in perpetuity
because states were sovereign in a way that under the new constitution they were not,
and in a sense the constitution sets in motion, the declaration and then the constitution set
in motion, the Civil War. The Civil War has to happen because at the end of the day you
cannot have some states
with a massive violation of rights. What's more of them violation of rights and slavery? And some states
that recognize it's not, it inevitably leads to the civil war.
You're on with just saying that other than the general welfare, these principles are about individual
liberties. I think I just don't think you can read it that way. The first stated purpose of the Constitution of 1787 is in order to form a more perfect union.
A more perfect union, it's describing a characteristic of the whole.
It is not a characteristic of any individual.
If you look at how the individuals are doing, you don't know whether their union is more
or less perfect. So what they're doing is they're looking at the condition in which, in order to be able
to fight the Battle of Yorktown, somebody has to write a personal check in order to be
able to move armies.
A more perfect union is a more cohesive union.
It's the ability to get all of these different individuals to do one focused thing when it's
needed necessary to do it. thing when it's needed necessary
to do it.
Well, it's more than that, right?
So I agree with that.
But for what purpose?
That is, and this is why, you know, this is why it's so hard with these historical documents
because there's a context and there's a thinking that they can't write everything down, right?
Which is sad because I wish they had.
What's the purpose of a more perfect union?
The purpose of the pro-more perfect union
is to preserve the liberty of the individuals
within that union.
Well, how do you know?
And how do you know?
Because if you look, what's the rest?
So what is the common defense?
The common defense is to protect us from foreign invaders
who are now disrupt what the rest of the constitution
is all about.
All of the constitution is written in a way
as to preserve fine ways to limit the rest of the Constitution is all about, all of the Constitution is written in a way as to preserve
fine ways to limit the
ability of government to violate the rights of individuals.
That the beauty of this Constitution, and again, its connection to the Declaration and tradition, right?
What came before it, what came before it was a document which they all respected, which was the Declaration,
which set the context for this, and now the Union is there in order to provide for the common defense, great,
because we know that foreign invaders can violate our rights. That's what was about. To protect
us from peace to establish peace and justice within the country, that's based on law, the
will of law, and again, individual liberty., to me, when you read the founders, when
you read the federalist papers, when you read what they wrote, what they're trying to do
is figure out the right kind of political system, the right kind of structure to be able
to preserve these liberties and not all of them had a, from my perspective, perfect understanding
what those liberties entailed, but they were all, even the conservatives that you call conservatives were all in generally
in agreement about the impulsive individual liberty and the puts of individual.
Of course, because almost all of these rights are traditional English rights, they exist
in the English Bill of Rights and the English petition of right in the existence of course,
of course, all of these are trying to do is perfect that.
They're trying to take the British system and perfect it.
And what?
But you keep leaving out that they want to be like England
in that they want to have an independent nation.
An independent nation is not a collection of individual liberties.
An independent nation.
The first sentence of the Declaration of Independence
is the declaration that there is a collective right
that we as a people are breaking the bonds
with another people, and we're gonna take our place
our equal station among the nations of the earth.
For what purpose?
The purpose is to protect individual rights,
and there's no collective right.
No, your argument is completely circular.
You're not allowing the possibility
that there could be, that there could be,
great and decent men,
that you and I both admire, who wanted the independence of their nation, not because that would give
individuals liberty, but because the independence of their nation was itself a great good.
So we clearly disagree on this, because I don't think the independence of the nation is a good
enough itself, because it's's and this is why I think it was.
I don't think they did.
And this is why they tried so hard not to break from England and why many of them struggled,
really, really struggled with having a revolution because England was pretty good, right?
English was the best.
And this is where we should get to the universality
of these things because I do think England was the best. And universally and absolutely
was the best system out there. And what they struggled to break from England because they
didn't view the value of having a nation as the prime. But what they identified in England
is certain flaws in the system that created situations in which
their rights were being violated.
So they figured there are only option in order to secure these rights is to break away from
England and secure a nation.
Now I am not an anarchist as Michael Malice, because we've discussed it.
I believe you need nations.
You need nations to secure those rights.
That is the rights are not, you can't secure those rights without having a nation.
But the nation is just a means to an end.
The end is the rights and I think that's how the founders understood it
and that's why they created this kind of country.
I think this is a good place to ask about common welfare and cohesion.
Let me say what John Donne wrote that quote,
no man is an island entire of itself.
Every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main.
He went on, any man's death diminishes me because I am involved in mankind.
And therefore, never sent to know for whom the bell tolls.
It tolls for thee.
So let's talk about individualism and cohesion.
Not just the political level, but at a philosophical level for the human condition.
What is central? What is the role of other humans in our lives?
What's the importance of cohesion? This is something you've talked about. So, Aaron said that the beauty of the founding documents is that
they create a cohesive union that protects the individual freedoms. But you have spoken
about the value of the union, the common welfare, the cohesion in itself.
So can you maybe elaborate on what is the role of cohesion and the collective, not to use
that term, but multiple humans together connected in the human condition?
Sure.
I keep getting the feeling that you're on and I are actually having a disagreement about empirical reality.
Because I think that enlightenment rationalist political thought features the individual,
it features the state.
There isn't really a nation other than the nation.
The people as a collective is created by the state.
And when the state disappears, then the collective disappears.
Now, I think that when conservatives of all stripes look at this kind of thinking that
there's the individuals and then there's the state, and there really isn't anything else.
When they look at that, they say, even before you get to consequences, it's a terrible theory because when we try
to understand any field of inquiry, any domain, any subject area, when you try to understand
it, we try to come up with a small number of concepts and of relations among the concepts,
which is supposed to be able to explain, to illuminate as much as possible
the important things they're taking place in the domain. And conservatives look at this
individuals and the state, and they say you're missing most of what's going on in politics,
also in personal human relations as well. But it just doesn't look like a description of human beings.
It looks like a completely artificial thing
and then conservatives say,
well look, once you adopt this artificial thing,
then the consequences are horrific
because you're not describing reality.
So a conservative reality begins with
an empirical view of what a human beings like? And the first thing you notice
about human beings, or at least the first thing I think conservatives notice, is that they're sticky,
is that they clump, they turn into groups, and you take any arbitrary collection of human beings,
and set them to a task, or even just leave them alone. And they quickly form into groups
and those groups are always structured as hierarchies.
Isn't this competition within the hierarchy
who's gonna be the leader, who's gonna be number two?
But there are everywhere you look in human societies,
universally, there are groups, the groups compete,
and they're structured internally as hierarchies,
and then their internal competitions
for who leads the different groups.
And when we think about scientific explanation,
we allow that there are different levels of explanation,
that a macroscopic object like a table,
it doesn't have properties that can be directly derived
from the properties of the atoms or the molecules
or the micro fibers that make up the table.
That's understood that there's what academic philosophers call emergent properties.
When you get up to the level of the table, it has properties like that you can't put
your fist through it, which you can't necessarily know just by looking at the atoms alone.
And I think conservatives say the same thing is true for political theory, for social
theory, that looking at an individual human being and thinking about what is that individual
human being need, which you're on does very eloquently in his writings.
But that doesn't tell you what the characteristics are of this hierarchically structured group.
As soon as you have that, it has its own qualities.
So an example, the question of what holds these groups together.
And we need to answer that question.
I try to answer it by saying there's such a thing as mutual loyalty.
Mutual loyalty is shorthand for human beings.
Individuals have the capacity to include another individual within their self, within
their conception of their self.
When two people do it, it creates a bond, like a bond between two atoms creates a molecule.
That doesn't mean that they lose their individuality. They, within the group, they may still continue competing
with one another, but that doesn't mean
that there isn't in reality a bond.
And that real bond is the stuff of which
political events and political history are made.
Is the coming together, the cohesion,
and the dissolution of these bonded loyalty groups.
That's the reality of politics.
And so when I hear these discussions about individuals in the state, I feel like we're missing
most of the reality.
And in order to understand the political reality, we need to understand what makes human beings
coherent to groups, what makes them dissolve,
what makes the groups come apart and end up creating civil wars and that kind of thing.
I think we also need to know. In practice, rival groups do come together and bond.
I mean, basically, when we think about democratic society, we're talking about different groups.
We can call them tribes or you can come up with a different name, but different tribal
groupings with different views. They come together to form a nation, and they're able to do that,
even though, you know, often they hate each other, you know, like we were talking about the American
Revolution, and often they hate each other. And nevertheless, they're able to come together. Why? How?
And that leads us into questions like, how does honor, the giving of honor by one group to another?
How does that increase the mutual loyalty between groups that are still competing with one another?
the mutual loyalty between groups that are still competing with one another. All of these questions, I think we have to answer them in order to be able to talk about politics.
I think the reason, the first reason why I want to approach politics as a conservative,
rather than as an individualist, is because it gives these theoretical tools to be able to
talk about reality, which we
don't have as long as we keep within the individualist frame.
As you're talking, the metaphor that's popping up in my mind, and this is also something
that bothers me with theoretical physics.
The metaphor is there's some sense in which there's things called theories of everything.
We try to describe the basic laws
of physics, how they interact together, and once you do, you have a sense that you understand
all of reality. In a sense, you do. And that, to me, that to me is understanding the individual,
like how the individual behaves in this world. But then you're saying that they're, hey,
hey, you're also forgetting chemistry,
biology, how all of that actually comes together, the stickiness, the stickiness of molecules
and how they build different systems and they, some systems can kill each other, some
systems can flourish, some can make pancakes and bananas and some can make poison and all
those kinds of things. And we need to be able to, we need to consider the full stack of things that are constructed
from the fundamental basics.
And I guess you're on, you're saying that no, you're just like the theoretical physicist.
It all starts at the bottom. Like if you need to preserve
the fundamentals of reality, which is the individual, like the basic atom of human society is the
individual to you. So, yes, so the basic unit, the basic MOLO unit, the basic ethical unit in society
is the individual. And, yeah, of course, we form groups. And you can't understand history unless you understand group formation and group motivation.
And I have a view about what kind of groups should be formed.
And politically from a political perspective, voluntary ones, ones in which we join when
we want to join and we can leave when we want to leave and ones that help us and clearly groups help us
pursue whatever it is a goal is ultimately so in the pursuit of happiness
there are lots of groups that want to once to form whether it's marriage, whether it's businesses,
whether it's sports teams, whether it's lots of different groups when it's a fun bit.
But the question is what is the standard of what be?
Is it the standard of what being some algorithm
that maximizes the what being of a group,
some utilitarian function?
Is it something that's inherent in the group
that we can measure as goodness
and to hell with individuals within as long as we can get
that the group to function well?
We don't really care about where the individuals are.
So to me, the goal of creating groups
is the well-being of the individual.
And that's why it needs to be voluntary
and that's why there has to be a way out of those.
Sometimes it's costly.
It's not a cheap out.
That's why you should really
think about what groups you, you, you, you, and this, you know, on an issue that's very controversial.
Maybe we can discuss maybe not. This is why to me, immigration is so important, right? Open
immigration, a free immigration is because that's another group that I would like people to be able
to voluntarily choose both in and out. And, and I'd like to see people be able to go and join that group that they believe will
allow for the pursuit of happiness.
But let me say that that's a description of an idea what I'm just saying.
I recognize that that's not the reality in which we live.
I recognize that that's not the reality in which history.
History, recognizing that the individual exists in a sense philosophically
is a massive achievement, right?
You know, human beings, however they evolved,
clearly we started out in a tribal context
in which the individual did matter.
We followed the leader, the competition was for power,
power over the group and dictates how the group should work.
You know, the history of human beings power over the group and dictates how the group should work.
You know, the history of human beings is a history of gaining knowledge.
And part of the knowledge is the value of an individual.
And you can see that in religion.
You can see that in philosophy.
You can see that through their evolution.
And then, you know, we evolve from tribes into nations and then empires and conflicts between nations
and conflict groups and empires.
We try a lot of different things, if you will.
I don't think we always did it on purpose, but we kind of different philosophies, different
sets of ideas drove us towards different collectives, different groupings and different ways
in which to structure.
And after, I don't know, 3,000 years of kind of known history,
history before that, but we don't know much about it.
3,000 years of known history, you can sit back and evaluate.
And I think that's what is done in the enlightenment.
And you sit back, and certainly we can do it today.
We can sit back and evaluate what promotes human flourishing
and what doesn't.
And what do we mean by human flourishing? who's who's flourishing well individual human beings now since I don't believe
in a zero sum world and the world is not zero sum like we can see that it's it's empirically
possible to show that the world is not a zero sum game my flourishing doesn't come at your
expense so I you know I can show that a system that promotes my flourishing will probably
promote your flourishing as well and promotes the general welfare in that a system that promotes my flourishing, will probably promote your flourishing as well,
and promotes the general welfare in that sense,
because it promotes individuals flourishing.
And we can look at all these examples of how we evolved,
and what leads to bloodshed, and what doesn't,
and what promotes the stability of flourishing as an individual.
Again, an achievement, the idea of individual flourishing. And then we can think about how to create a political system around that, a
political system that recognizes and allows for the formation of groups. But just under
the principle of voluntary, you can be forced to join a group, you can be cursed into
forming a group, other than the fact that you're born in a particular place
and in a particular, you know, that in a sense.
But that's not forced.
There's a different tree metaphysics and between choices.
So this is something that came up in the debate
that Yoram said that not all human relations are voluntary
and you kind of emphasize that a lot of where we are
is not voluntary.
We're grounded, we're connected in so much. So how can a human be free?
In the way you're describing, individual be free if
some part of who we are is not voluntary. Some part who we are is other people.
Well, because what do we mean by freedom? Freedom doesn't mean
the negation of the laws of physics, right? Freedom
doesn't mean ignoring, freedom means the ability within the scope of what's available for
you to choose, being able to choose those things. So in a political context, freedom means
you know, the absence of coercion.
So once you're an adult, you know,
you're born with a particular
into a particular religious context.
Absolutely, but once you're an adult,
I think it's incumbent on you to evaluate
that religious context and look at different religions
or non-religion or whatever,
and choose your philosophy of life.
Choose your values.
Choose how you want to live your life.
That's the freedom. choose your philosophy of life, choose your values, choose how you want to live your life.
That's the freedom.
The freedom is, one system says, you're either cursed by the state or cursed by the group
or cursed by society around you to follow a particular path, or the expectation is the
demand is the pressure is to conform to a particular path.
And my view is, no, you should be in a position to be able to choose your path.
And that choice means you look around, you evaluate,
you evaluate a history based on knowledge based on all of these things.
And you choose what that path would be.
That's fundamentally what freedom means.
Yes, you cannot choose your parents.
But of course not. Nobody would claim that that's within the scope of what is possible.
I think that I think the coercion freedom dichotomy, these are two few concepts, coercion
and freedom. It's too simplistic to be able to describe what we're actually dealing
with. The traditional Anglo conservative view is that society has to be,
it has to be ordered, it has to be disciplined, and there are two choices for how it can be ordered.
One is that a people is by its own traditions, you would say voluntarily, but these are mostly inherited traditions.
By its own traditions, it is ordered.
For example, people just in general will not go into somebody else's yard because that's
the custom here is we don't go into somebody else's yard without their permission.
And so Fortescue, we're talking about, you know, 500 years ago already. So Fortescue says that the genius of the English people is that our government
can be mild and apply very little coercion because the people are so disciplined. Now, when
he says the people are so disciplined, what he's saying is that our nation, our tribes, we have strong traditions which channel people, you know, through
tools of being honored and dishonored. Now, that's a reality that exists in every society,
and it's not captured by your distinction between coercion and lack of coercion, when I'm going to be dishonored if I don't care for my
aging mother, I'm not being coerced like the state comes and puts a gun to my head, but
I am being pressured.
I'm being given guidelines.
But I'm saying that's wrong and I'm saying that's dangerous because that could easily
be used for bad traditions.
Oh, no, of course.
Well, but that's it.
But what's the standard by which we value it?
No, you want a good tradition as a bad tradition.
You're in English.
You're getting to the standard too fast.
Wait, wait, wait, you're getting to the standard too fast.
First, I want to know factually, is it true
that all societies work like this?
Because if it's true that all societies work like this,
then saying we should be free from it, is it just a fantasy? No, I don't think all societies work like this because if it's true that all societies work like this, then saying, saying we should be free from it is just a fantasy.
No, I say, so, hey, I don't think all societies work like this.
I think much of what happened in America post-founding in the 19th century didn't work like that.
I think that's the genius of America. And I think what happened during the 19th century
in the industrial revolution, what happened in the 19th century, some extent globally,
but certainly in the United States, didn't work that way.
It broke tradition.
I think all innovation breaks tradition.
And I think that's what the genius of this country
is and the post-enlightenment world is.
I think pre-that tradition, they work that way.
And then the question is,
did people understand why they do what they do?
That is, I don't want people doing what I think is right.
Just because I think it's right,
and I've created a society in which,
yeah, okay, somebody found in this country
in a particular way, so we're just gonna follow.
I want people to understand what they're doing.
So I want people to have a respect for property,
not because it's a tradition,
but because they understand the value of a respect for property. I want people not have a respect for property, not because it's a tradition, but because they understand the value of a respect for property.
I want people not to murder one another, not because there's a commandment, that's on
the motto, but because they have an understanding of why murdering is bad and wrong and bad
for them and bad for the kind of world that they want to live in.
And I think that's what we achieved through enlightenment, through education, through
the, and where we don't treat people just as a blob, try, they just follow those orders.
But we now treat individuals as capable of thinking for themselves, capable for discovering
truth, capable of figuring out their own values.
And that's the big break between,
and this is why, you know, this is the break,
I think, that the declaration represents.
The break between society that is based on tradition,
following commandments, following rules,
because they are the rules,
because they are the commandments.
And a society where individuals understand those rules,
understand, yes, it's now become a tradition,
let's say, to respect individual, right, to respect property rights. But they're not following it's now become a tradition, let's say, to respect individual,
right, to respect property rights. But it's, they're not following it because it's a tradition.
They're following it because they understand what it is about it that makes it good. So that's
the world, I think, that we were on the process of evolving towards. And that is what got destroyed
in the 20th century and is certainly disappeared today.
And I think that's the great tragedy is that we're evolving to a place where people understood
the values the represent. And of course the danger with tradition is, I mean, well,
agree, right? It's, yeah, it's okay to kill the Jew, right? Or it's okay to steal people's property
if they are a certain color of it or to okay to enslave those are all traditions. And yet, once you stop and say, but what are they based on?
What is this right? Is this just based on some moral law? No, it's not. There's something wrong here.
We can't achieve happiness and success if we follow these. You're talking about reason and
tradition, but I think I would love to sort of linger on the on the stickiness of humans, the describe. So you kind of said this
primary, the individuals as primary knows a great invention. But to me, it's not at all
obvious that somehow that the invention that humans have been practicing for very long time of the stickiness of
community of family of love
That's not obvious to me that's that's not also fundamental to human flourishing and should be celebrated and
Protected of course is now the I suppose the argument you're making is and should be celebrated and protected. Of course it's true.
Now, I suppose the argument you're making
is when you start to let the state define
what the stickiness, how the stickiness looks between humans.
So you're really like the voluntary aspect,
but I just want to sort of the observation is,
humans seem to be pretty happy when they form communities, however
you define that.
So the romantic partnership family.
Some communities.
Some communities.
People are miserable in other communities.
So the nature of the community matters, right?
We know this.
We know that some bonding's not healthy and not good for the individuals involved and they don't thrive
So I absolutely I mean, I'm a lover not a fighter, right?
I'm a huge believer in love the whole philosophy I think is a is a love-based
Philosophy I fight in order to love right so it's it's love is love is at the core of all of this and it's
It's a love of of life
It's a love of of the world out there and it's a love of life, it's a love of the world out there,
and it's a love of other people,
because they represent a value to you.
So the stickiness is there.
It's, you know, my point is,
A, it should be chosen.
It should be consciously chosen.
And this is, I'm put aside the state.
Forget the state for a minute.
Forget, forget coercion, forget all that.
What I would encourage individuals to do, and this is where, you know, I'm not primarily
a political, you know, interested in politics, although I tend to talk most about that.
I'm primarily interested in human beings and how they live in a sense and morality.
And what I would urge individuals to do is to think about their relationships, to choose the best
relationships possible, but to seek out great relationships because other human beings are an immense
value to us. And when I write, maybe you'll encode this or not, but I write that the trade
principle and trading, it's easy and obvious to think of it as a materialistic kind of thing.
You know, I do the chose this day and my wife does the chose the other day and we're trading.
But trading is much more subtle than that and much more can be much more spiritual than that.
It's about the trading in emotions.
It's about the way one sees it,
it's what gets from one another.
I think friendship is a form of trade.
Now, I know that seems to make it material,
but I don't think it's of trade as a material thing.
But friendship is incredibly important in life.
Love is incredibly important in life.
Having a group of friends is incredibly important.
All of these are sticky and important.
Okay.
How can I try to be eloquent on this?
So if you give people freedom, if you give people politics, well, not politics, relations,
relations, relationships.
So this is interesting because we have an interesting dynamic going on here in terms
of beliefs.
They're differing and there was interesting overlaps.
But there is a worry.
If you look at human history and you study the lessons of history and you look at modern
society, if you give people freedom in terms of stickiness and human relations and so
on, if you not give people freedom, emphasize freedom as the highest ideal.
You start getting more tender online dating, the stickiness dissolves, just like in chemistry.
You start to have a gas versus a liquid, right?
That's the way.
So you have to, what you have to study, what actually happens. If you emphasize that the stickiness, the bonds
of humans is holding you back, the exercise of voluntary choice is the highest ideal.
The danger of that is for that to be implemented or interpreted in certain kinds of ways by
us flawed humans that are not, I mean, you
could say we're perfectly reasonable and rational, we couldn't think through all of our decisions,
but really, I mean, especially when you're young, you get horny, you make decisions that
are suboptimal, perhaps.
So the point is you have to look at reality of when you emphasize different things.
So when you talk about what is the ideal life,
what is the ideal relations,
you have to also think like,
what are you emphasizing?
I think you both agree on what's important
that community can be important,
that freedom is important,
but what are you emphasizing?
And you're really emphasizing the individual
and you're emphasizing,
you're wrong and you're emphasizing more of the community, of the family, of the
stickiness of the nation.
We will look, I don't want to deny the place of the individual.
I think that there really is a very great change in civilization when the books of Moses
announced that
the individual is created in the image of God.
That's a step that's
as far as we know without precedent before that in history and
to a very large degree. I mean what one of the kind of unspoken
things going on is that that
you're on and I really do agree on all sorts of things. I think in part because because we're both
Jewish and you did you just say you're on is basically Moses. Yes. No, I said he was channeling Moses,
but that's still in my book. You know, that's still pretty pretty. That's a compliment. That's pretty, I took it.
That for me, that's a compliment.
And we'll talk about this a little bit just for the listeners.
Yeah. So they, they know, you're on amongst many things we'll
talk about the virtue of nationalism. But you're also a religious scholar,
source, or at least leverage the Bible for much, not much, but some of the wisdom
in your life. Look, the way that your onlooks at enlightenment, or maybe at Ayn Rand, that's
the way that I see the Hebrew scripture and the tradition that comes from it. It has the same
kind of place in my life. And I just, I don't know how much we want to explore it,
but I think that the agreement that we do have
about the positive value of the creative individual,
the positive value of the individual's desire
to improve the world.
And in my book, that means including his or her desire to improve his family, his tribe,
his congregation, his nation.
But it still comes from this kind of, what your own call selfishness, the desire to make
things better for yourself.
In Hebrew Bible and in Judaism,
that just is a positive thing.
Of course, it can be taken too far,
but it just is positive.
And it doesn't carry these kinds of,
you know, you should turn the other cheek,
you should give away your cloak,
you should love your enemy.
These kinds of Christian tropes
do not exist in Judaism.
And so it just, I like listening to your
runs. I do feel like he goes too far on various things. But I also hear underneath that I can
sort of hear the Jewish current and the resistance to things about Christianity that Jews often find.
Can I ask you a question there? Can you make an argument for turn the other cheek?
No, I tend to, I guess you would equate that with altruism.
I tend to adjust it.
It's unjust to turn that.
I agree.
It's okay.
You don't have yourself if you're turning another cheek.
It's a lack of love, lack of self respect.
Well, let me push back on that because I'm a, I like turning the other cheek.
Fish on Twitter.
So I like, I like block the offender on Twitter.
No, what a Twitter aside is more like you're, you, um,
you're investing in the long termterm version of yourself versus the short-term.
So that's the way I think about it.
The energy you put on to the world, the turning out of the cheek philosophy allows you
to walk through the fire gracefully.
It's some sense.
I mean, perhaps you would reframe that as not a, then that's not being altruistic
or whatever, but there is something pragmatic about that kind of approach to life.
Disciplining yourself so that you become a better version of yourself. I mean, I,
not not only do we agree, but I think every religious and philosophical tradition probably has a version of that even
con.
We join together in finding to be terrible, even con makes that distinction between the
short-term interests and the long-term interests.
So I think that's a universal, I don't know of anybody who's really disagreeing about
that.
The thing that we were talking about a couple of minutes ago before we got onto this tangent, is the relationship between the individual who is in the image of God and is of value as an individual. Nevertheless,
there's this question about what is good for that person and also what makes him happy.
I'm not sure that those are exactly the same things, but they're both certainly relevant and important. I think we're beginning to uncover
this empirical disagreement about what it is that's good for the individual and what it
is that makes him happy. I'll go back to something I raised in the debate, which is this theory of der Kheim that
now has been popularized by Jordan Peterson.
But Der Kheim argues that he's writing a book on suicide.
He's trying to understand what brings individuals to suicide.
And he coins this term, I know me, lack of law. And the argument is that that individuals
basically are healthy and happy when they find their place in a hierarchy. Within a loyalty group
in a certain place in a hierarchy, they compete and struggle in order to rise in the hierarchy, but they know where they are.
They know who they are. The kids today like to say they know what their identity is.
Because they associate themselves, their self-expans to take on the leadership,
the different layers, the past and the future of this particular hierarchy. And I completely agree with you, Ron, that some of these hierarchies are pernicious and
oppressive and terrible, and some of them are better.
What we might disagree about is that you can find human beings who are capable of becoming healthy and happy, off by themselves without participating in this kind of structure.
The minute that you accept, if you accept, that this is empirical reality but human beings, it's an iron law.
You can't do anything.
You can tell human beings that they can be free of all constraints,
all you want, and you can get them to do things that, as you say, dissolve, dissolve their
play, that they can have contempt for hierarchies. They can say, I'm not going to, I'm not going
to serve the man. I'm going to, you know, I'm just going to burn them all down. You can,
you can get them to say all, get kids to say all these things. You can get them either to be Marxists who are actively trying to overthrow and destroy
the existing hierarchies, or you can make them some kind of liberal where they basically
pretend the hierarchies don't exist.
They just act like they're not there.
In both cases, and it's not coincidence that that's what universities teach as your
choices, either Marxist revolution or liberal
ignoring of the hierarchies. In both cases, what you've done is you've eliminated the possibility
that the young person will be able to find his or her place in a way that allows them to grow and
exercise their their their their their love their, their creativity in order to advance something constructive.
You've eliminated it and you've put the burden on them, you know, kind of a neat shan burden
to just be the fountain of all values yourself, which, you know, maybe some people can do it,
but almost no one can do it. I think that's empirically true and so I think by telling them
about their freedom rather than telling them about how
About the need to join into some some
Traditionalist hierarchy they can be good and healthy for them. I think we're destroying them
I think we're destroying this generation and the last one. And the next.
Yaraan is the burden of freedom, destroying mankind.
What freedom? I mean, how many people are indeed free? The problem is that we're caught up
on political concepts and we're moving into ethical issues.
And I don't think it's right to tell people,
you're free, you go do whatever the hell you want.
Just use your emotions, just go where you wanna go,
well, in the spur of the moment, think short term,
don't think long term, or don't think, why think?
One has to provide moral guidance
and morality here is crucial and
crucially important and part of taking responsibility for your own life is
establishing a moral framework for your life and and what does it mean to live a
good life? I mean that's much more important in a sense of a question and it is
it is my belief that people can do that. They can find
and choose the values necessary to achieve a good life, but they need guidance. They need
guidance. This is why religion evolved in my view because people need guidance. So,
so, so, it says, you know, I mean, called religion a primitive form philosophy. It was the
original philosophy that provided people with some guidance about what to do and what not to do. And secular philosophy is supposed to do the same. And the
problem is that I think religion and 99% of secular philosophy give people bad advice
about what to do. And therefore they do bad stuff. And some of that sometimes, you know,
because when they do good stuff, it gets reinforced
that we survive in spite of that.
But ideas like content, Hagle and Marx and so on, give young people awful advice about
how to live and what to do.
And as a consequence, really bad stuff happens.
And the world in which we exist today, which we agree, there are a lot of pathologies
to it, there are a lot of pathologies to it, a lot of bad stuff going on.
In my view, it's going the wrong way.
In my view, a product of a set of ideas,
you know, in the one hand, I think Christian ideas,
in the other hand, I think secular philosophical ideas,
that have driven this country and the world more generally,
in a really, really bad direction.
And this is why what I do what I do,
because I think at the core of it,
the only way to change it is not to impose
a new set of ideas from the top,
because I worry about who's gonna be doing the imposition
plus I don't believe you can force people to be good.
It's the challenge, the ideas,
it's the question, the ideas,
it's to present an alternative view of morality and alternative
Set of mob principles and alternative ultimately an alternative view of political principles
But it has to start with morality if you don't and my morality centered on the individual what the individual should do with this life in order to attain a good life
I believe that leads to happiness, but but the good life, I believe that leads to happiness, but the good life, that's why it's good, right?
The goal is survival and thriving and flourishing and happiness ultimately. But politics is a
servant of that in the end. It's not an end in itself. So the real issue is, you know, you asked
before, what is the value of relationship? There's an almost value in relationship because we get
values from other people.
We don't produce all our values. We don't produce all our spiritual values.
And we don't produce all our material values.
Other people, on a massive benefit to us because they produce values,
we can't. There's a massive division of labor in terms of values, not just in economics,
but also in philosophy and elsewhere. It's why we have teachers.
It's why we have moral teachers, moral teachers,
important to help guide us towards a good life,
not all of us are philosophers,
but what I do demand, if you all are individuals.
So this is where I put a burden on people, right?
Understand what you're doing, right?
You know, don't embrace a moral teaching
because it was tradition.
Don't embrace a moral teaching because your parents embrace it. Don't embrace a moral teaching because it was tradition. Don't embrace a moral teaching
because your parents embrace it.
Don't embrace a moral teaching
just because your teachers are teaching it.
Challenge it, think about it.
Embrace it because you,
embass it, you might be wrong.
You might embrace the wrong one,
but take moral responsibility.
Take responsibility over your life
by evaluating, testing, challenging
what you have received and choosing what you're going to pursue.
And I acknowledge empirically that most people don't do that.
And this is why intellectual leadership is so important.
This is why you want the voices, you want the voices in a culture
to be good voices so that those people who don't think for themselves land up being followers,
but they've ended up being followers of somebody good versus followers of somebody bad. But
for the thinkers in the world out there, who I think are the people who count, who the
people who shape society. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
count in a sense that you can dismiss the lives of others.
And, you know, because obviously I'm anti-corjian and anti-violence.
But yes, I don't want to sound like Plato.
But in a sense that they're the ones who land up shaping the world,
they're the ones who land up shaping how there will be.
I want those people to make choices about their values
and not to just accept them based
on tradition or based on the commandment
or based on where they happen to grow up.
And in that sense, again, I do,
and this is an interesting point where we disagree,
but I'm not exactly sure what your own position is.
I do believe in universal values,
that is there are things that are good
and there are things that are evil. And I think we agree on that. And there are systems we agree
that communism and fascism are evil. Well, I think we should be able to agree that some
things that some political systems are good. And maybe there's this middle ground where
we both think that they're not particularly bad, but not particularly good. And you might think
that better than I think they are. But if we can agree, and this is good, and this is evil, right, then the systems that tend towards the good are good,
and the systems that tend towards the evil are evil.
But that's universal, right?
I look at places like South Korea, Japan, Asia, cultures that are very, very different in many respects in the West.
And yet when they adopt, certain Western ideas about freedom, about liberty, about individualism.
I mean, the Japanese Constitution, because Mokawthor forced it in there, has the pursuit
of happiness in the Constitution, not because they chose it because you put it in there.
But to some extent adopted that.
And they're successful, they have successful places today. Those
societies in Asia that didn't adopt these values are not successful societies today.
You're on. Japan has a birth rate of what is it? One point, no, one point one, one point two
children per woman. I mean, look, there are some things, there's some places where you give
people freedom. This is also biblical, right? The idea that everyone did what's right in his own
eyes, okay? Right? This is a refrain, refrain in the book of judges. And the Bible is not an anti-freedom book. There's many, many, look, I don't know.
No, we're not fine.
We will get there.
Oh, he's going to guide me.
OK, look, just as an asterisk, I'm not asking you,
because the Bible is such a great authoritarian,
but it's not that at all.
In my view, if you want to know where
this, what you call the sanctity the what you call the the sanctity of
property where does the sanctity of property comes from it comes from the Ten Commandments it comes
from Moses saying I haven't taken anything from anyone it comes from Samuel saying I haven't
taken anything from anyone it's the condemnation of Hav of the unjust kings who steal the property
of their of their subjects so so I'm not, so I'm property and freedom,
I think there's great basis for it in the Bible.
But right now, I'm focusing on this other question,
which is what happens when everyone does what's right
in his own eyes.
That's the book of judges,
and that's this civil war, moral corruption, theft, idolatry, murder, rape.
I mean, that's what happens when everyone does
whatever's right and is on our eyes.
Well, no, that's what it says in the text.
I'm not okay.
So when I look at, you're right,
there are things that I think are objectively true.
I think it's really hard to get people to agree to them,
almost impossible.
But when I look at a country, which is, uh, is, uh, approaching, uh, one birth per woman,
in other words, half of the minimum necessary for, for, for replacement, you can say whatever you want,
whatever you want about immigration,
we can have that discussion, but the point is that when your values are such that you're not even
capable of doing the most basic techniques that human beings need in order to be able to propagate
themselves and their values and the way they see things, then I look, you're, you're finished. You can't say that you can't say if I implied that
Japan is an ideal society, I take that back. But I just
think, but let us think about your pants. I just think we're
in trouble. And we're in trouble. Yeah, yeah, give me a
second, hold that hold your leg. Be a tutorial. It's his show,
man, we enter into his hierarchy. That's it. It's a we talk we should talk about hierarchy.
Oh, but just just to clarify, do you how do you explain the situation in Japan?
Is it the decrease in value in family?
Like some of them just expand on that.
Like how do you explain that situation?
You're saying that that society is in trouble in a certain way.
Can you kind
of describe the nature of that trouble? I'm saying that when the individual is part of a social
group, this can be a family, a congregation, a community, a tribe, a nation, when the individual
feels that the things that are happening to the society are things that are
happening to him or to her. And I want to emphasize, this is not the standard view of collectivism
that, you know, that Mussolini will say, you know, the glory of the individual is in totally
immersing himself in, you know, in the organic whole. That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that human beings have and are both.
They enter into a society to which they are loyal
and they compete with one another
with in the terms that that society allows competition,
but also sometimes by bending the rules
and by shaping them and by changing them.
What you see in many societies, certainly throughout the liberal West, but also in countries
that have been affected by the liberal West, by industrialization and ideas of individualism,
what you see is a collapse of a willingness of the individual to look at what is needed by the whole and to make choices that are, as the
your one would call them selfish because the purpose of them is self-expression,
competition, self-assertion, moving up in the hierarchy, achieving honor or wealth in order to do those things. But when you stop being able to look at
the framework of a particular society and identify with it, you cease to understand what it is
that you need to do. Not every single person, but I'm talking about society-wide. So there are
few individuals who are going to have a fantastic time and live the
kind of life that you're on as describing.
And the great majority, they stop willing to take risks.
They stop being willing to get married.
They stop being willing to have children.
They stop being willing to start companies.
They stop being willing to put themselves out to do great things because the guide rails
that told them what kinds of things.
And the social feedback that honored them
when they did things like getting married
and having children, they've been crushed.
And what have they been crushed by?
They've been crushed by the false view
that if you tell the individual,
be free, make all your own decisions,
that they will then be free and make all their own decisions.
They don't, They just stop.
They stop being human.
That's powerful.
Do you want to respond to that?
Yes.
So, I don't think anybody should have children.
If the goal, if the goal, there's a good, there's a good tweet clip that out.
You can make.
Let's hear it. clip that out. You can make children for the goal of perpetuating their nation or expanding
their society or for some, I think they'd make horrible parents if that was the goal,
the purpose of doing it. I think people should have children because they want to embrace that challenge, that beauty,
that experience, that amazing, very, very hard, very, very difficult experience in life.
It's about being able to project a long term, but also being able to enjoy and love the
creation of another human being, that process of creation.
It is a beautiful, self-interested thing.
And by the way, not everybody should have children.
I think way too many people have children.
You know, there's some awful parents out there that I wish would stop.
I mean, now, you know, life is precious and life of suffering is sad.
It's sad to see people suffering.
A lot of people are bored into situations and bored, born into parents that destroy their capacity to
ever live a good life.
And that's a tragic and sad thing.
And so I don't measure the health of a society in how many children they're having a health
of a couple of whether they have children or not.
Those are individual choices.
Some people make a choice not to have children, which is completely rational and consistent
with their values.
Now, when you look at a society overall, I do think having children and not having children
is a reflection of something.
I think it's a reflection of a certain optimism about the future.
I think it's a reflection of thinking long term versus short term.
I think a short term society doesn't have children.
People don't have children there because children are long-term investment.
They require real planning and real effort and real thinking about the long-term.
But those are all issues.
And again, we're confusing or mixing.
When I say Japan, look how well Japan has done.
I don't mean the specific Japanese people and how many kids they're having and what kind of life they're having
You know in terms of these kind of particulars
But think about the alternatives of Japan faces if you look around the the options right that they face
They tried empire
They tried nationalistic empire didn't turn out too well for them or anybody who they interacted with
They could have become North Korea
We know how that turned out. We know what that is or anybody who they interacted with. They could have become North Korea.
We know how that turned out, we know what that is.
They could have been Cambodia,
if you've ever been to Cambodia and seen the kind of poverty.
And yes, maybe Cambodia has several lots of children.
But God, I'd rather be in Japan any day
than have children in the kind of poverty
and horrific circumstances they have.
But in the context of their available regimes that there were
possible post-World War II for the Japanese-Standbased, they embraced one, they generally led to
prosperity, to feed them, to individuals pursuing values, not perfectly because they didn't
implement the philosophical foundation, the moral foundation that I would like them to have.
They're still being impacted by Kantian,
Higaly and whatever philosophy that's out there in the West that's destroying the bed-apart.
So you give people freedom. Now, what do they do with it? And if they have a bad philosophy,
they're going to do bad things with that freedom, right? You tell people to do whatever they choose to do.
But if they have bad ideas, they will choose to do bad things.
So it is true that the primacy of morality
and the primacy of philosophy has to be recognized.
It's not the primacy of politics.
And indeed, you don't get free societies
unless you have some elements of decent philosophy.
But you can get free societies with a rotten philosophy,
but they don't stay free for very long.
I don't understand how can it be a decent philosophy if it doesn't care about posterity.
If you're willing to say, I'm offering guidance, I think you should live as a traitor.
All relationships should be voluntary.
Those are interesting things, but the moment that it comes to posterity,
to the future, to there being a future,
let's say that there were a society
that lived the way, you know, in general according to your view.
Let's say there was such a society,
how can you not care whether that society's capable
of passing it on to the next generation or not?
But the way to pass it on to the next generation
is through ideas and not through having children,
having children as an individual choice
that some people are going to make
and some people are not.
But the fundamental that preserves the good life,
look, what does that even mean?
There's a half sense of way.
If every generation from now on,
your society that was good at a certain point
has half as many people in it,
it's going to, very quickly,
it's just going to be overrun.
Overrun by home.
What do you mean overrun by home?
Are we just totally a historical
if you're the Spartans?
And you have all of these, you know,
like warrior values, but you stop having children,
you get overrun, you get defeated.
In case of a spotter,
that's a good thing, not a bad thing.
But I get to have my point.
You have to have the ability to have enough children
to create enough wealth and enough power and enough strength.
Who makes these kind of conclusions
that decisions about how many you make it as an individual
and you decide that you know,
we're not talking about with the,
we're talking about what kind of intellectual,
cultural, religious, inheritance you give your children.
Yes. And those are the ideas inheritance you give your children. Yes.
And those are the ideas that I give to children.
And those ideas are going to perpetuate because they're good ideas.
If they're bad ideas, they're not going to perpetuate.
They can be, they can't be good ideas if they don't produce future generations.
What are you talking about?
They're not produced future generations.
But as I said, every liberal, every liberal society on earth, but I'm not in the democratic collapse.
There's not a single liberal society on earth that I will need to defend,
but because they're not living in the democracy.
Okay, so they did not accept the idea.
So they have a semblance.
I have a semblance of a political system that is a little bit like what I would like far from what I would.
I know I would, but they certainly don't have a moral foundation.
I believe that people who have the right moral foundation,
most of them, not all of them,
but most of them will have children.
Most of them will continue into the future,
most of them will fight for a future,
but not because they care what happens in 200 years,
but because they care about their lifetime
and part of having fun and enjoying one's lifetime
is having kids is projecting into the future.
Is that the person that the people have children
because it's fun?
They're fun when they're four years old.
They're not fun when they're 50.
No, when they're 15, they're not fun.
I agree with you.
They're not just not fun.
Look, you don't do this.
I'm learning so much today.
You don't do this for fun.
You do, marriage also, you don't do for fun.
There are times that are fun and there are times
that are not fun.
Look, fun is not exactly the right way.
But you certainly do it for happiness.
You do it for fulfillment.
You do it as a challenge.
You do it for making your life better.
For making your life interesting.
For making your life challenging. For embracing. life interesting, for making your life challenging, for embracing,
you know, part of it is fun, part of it is hard work,
but you do it because it makes your life a better life.
It's very interesting, so to be empirically speaking,
if you dissolve the cultural backbone,
where everybody comes up, like the background,
the moral ideas that everybody is raised with. If you you dissolve that and if you truly emphasize the individual, I think you're almost saying it's
going to naturally lead to the dissolution of marriage and all these concepts. So you're not so like everything or basically saying you're not going to choose some of these things. You're going to more and more choose the short-term optimization versus the long-term optimization
beyond your own life, like posterity.
So I don't think about posterity.
I don't know what posterity means.
I can project into my children's life.
Maybe when I have grandchildren to the grandchildren, it ends there.
I can't project 300 years in the future. It's there. I can't project 300 years into the future.
It's ridiculous to try to think about 300 years into the future.
Things change so much. And in, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, it, right? No, no, no.
Would perpetuate the self-interference.
No, no systems are self-perpetuating.
Things rise and fall and it's the-
They don't have to stop you, I suppose.
No, no, no.
Don't believe in that.
Let me speak to you, Arif, for a second.
The great individuals in societies are the people
who have seen the decline understood it
and provided resources in order to redirect and bring it back up.
You can't agree to that. I don't see it that way at all. Yes, I want people out there to rebel against
conventional morality. I think conventional morality is destructive to their own lives and broadly
to posterity because I think it's unsustainable. It's not good. And this goes to, I think, conventional morality.
Christian morality is a morality that's
being secularized through Christian lens.
And I think it's destructive.
But I don't want them to dump that and not replace it with something.
I want, and I think it's necessary and essential for people to have a
moral code and to have a moral code.
Morality is a set of guidelines to live your life.
It is a set of values to guide you to help you identify
what is good to you.
You tell me, it's a here is a thing.
But let me hold on a second.
You're saying central to this morality
that people should have is reason.
Yes.
Okay.
You're not saying other things.
You're basically saying reason will arrive a lot of things. Why are you so sure that reason is so important?
There's nothing else. No, well, it's like, but like it seems like obvious to you. So first of all, humans that have limited cognitive capacity. So even to assume we reason can actually function that well from an artificial intelligence researcher perspective.
It seems it's the whole discussion about whether there is such a thing as artificial intelligence,
whether that is what it is. But see, there's a thing, I mean, you're very confident about this
particular thing, but not about other aspects of human nature. This seems to be obviously present.
So yes, almost human relations, love, connection between us. So it's very possible
to argue that all of the accomplishments of reason would not exist without the connection
of other humans. But that's of course that's true. It's not obvious though. It's possible
that reason is a property of the collective of multiple people interacting with each other.
When you look at the greatest inventions of human history,
some people tell that story by individual inventors.
You could argue that's true.
Some people say that it's a bunch of people in the room together,
the idea is bubbling.
If you're saying individual is primary,
and they have the full power and the capacity to make choices,
I don't know if that's necessarily obvious.
So there's a strong manning going on here of my position, right?
Yep. Of course. My favorite thing to do.
You don't do it and you do it more politely than anybody else. I know when you do it.
Of course, we all stand on the shoulders of giants. Of course, invention and science is collaborative.
of giants, of course invention and science is collaborative, not always, not 100% and Newton stood under shoulders of giants. I don't know how collaborative he was, he
wasn't exactly known as a bubbling up and testing ideas out with other people, but this
is a metaphysical fact. You can't eat for me. There's no collective stomach, you can't
eat for me. You know, you can provide me with food, but I need to do collective stomach. You can't eat for me. You know, you can provide
me with food, but I need to do the eating. You can't think for me. You can help stimulate
my thought. You can challenge my thinking. You can add to it. But in the end of the day,
only I can either do my thinking or not do my thinking, but I need to think. You can
think all by yourself alone. But what does that mean all by yourself, right? Can I think on a desert island?
Yes, I can think on a desert island.
Can I think as big and as broad and as deep as I can
in Aristotle's like, see him?
Of course not.
I'm much better thinking in Aristotle's like, see him.
Or in any kind of situation like this,
where you're going to challenge
me and I have to come back and I have to think deeply about what it is you said and why I'm
not communicating very effectively and why you're not understanding me.
Of course, now you're causing me to think much more deeply and to challenge me, but it's
still true that I have to think.
And if I don't think for myself, who's going to think for me, right?
So this is why I'm not a philosopher.
I'm certainly not an original thinker in that sense.
I recognize the fact that they're geniuses
that are much smarter than me
with it's Aristotle, I'm Rand, or people that inspire me.
I study their work, I try to understand it
to the best of my ability, but I don't take it as gospel.
I take it as, this is something I need to figure out.
I need to learn it.
I need to understand it because it's good for my life.
It's important to me.
But I have to do the thinking.
It won't be mine.
It'll be mine, but it won't be mine unless I've done the thinking to integrate it into my
soul, into my consciousness, into my mind.
But it's still true that I have to think for myself, not on a desert island.
And I now regret ever using a desert island in the book as an example because we've achieved
something.
There is progress.
Because clearly it was misunderstood. I didn't make myself clear enough in the book in terms of what I meant.
But, you know, I do not advocate for thinking alone in a dark room,
not engaging with reality, not studying history, not knowing about the world,
or on a desert island, not a direct sphere collectivist.
No, I'm a trader.
So, I enjoy what we're doing right now because you're challenging me.
You make me a better thinker.
It's interesting.
You know, the fact that a lot of people are going to watch this,
plays into it as well.
But I would probably enjoy engaging with you in conversation.
Not even recording.
Yeah, there you go.
I would enjoy engaging with you with your conversation
even if it wasn't being recorded
and even if it was because that kind of conversation makes me better.
There's some people who I wouldn't.
There's some people who make it worse, right?
That you want to walk away from the conversation because they're harmful to you.
This is where choice comes in.
I want to be able to choose who I engage with.
I don't always have that choice because as a public intellectual, you go into front of
audiences, you don't always choose who it is, but you want to choose who you engage with
and who you don't.
You want to choose the forum in which you engage and how you engage.
And the standard for me is reason.
There is no other sense.
So you asked a deep question to start off.
Why reason?
Because that's where the values come from that's the only tool
we have to discover truth yes you know reason is something that it doesn't guarantee truth it doesn't
guarantee the always right it's fallible but it's all we have it's the tool in which we evaluate
the world around us and we come to conclusions about it there There is, there just isn't other tool emotions. Emotions
are not tools of cognition. Consciousness is a tool, emotion, like love. All of these
things are ways to experience the world to say their reason is the best tool. But there's
a difference in experiencing the world and evaluating the world in terms of what is truth or what is not as a scientist.
I appreciate the value of reason and emotions and love.
A consequences. They're not primary emotions are consequences of conclusions you've come to.
Your emotions will change very quickly, relatively speaking, when your evaluations of a situation
will change. Different people can see exactly the same scene and have completely different emotions
because they're bringing different value systems
and they're bringing different thoughts to the process.
Maybe love is primary, but let me ask,
love is the same thing.
You can fall out of love with somebody.
Why?
Because you learned something new
because you've discovered something new about the person.
Now you don't love them.
The wrong podcast, the bring up love
will talk forever about it.
So, you wrote the book, The Virtue of Nationalism, contrasting nation states with empires and
with global governance, like United Nations and so on. So, you argue that nationalism uniquely
provides the, quote, the collective right of a free people to rule themselves. So continuing our conversation, why is this particular
collection of humans we call a nation a uniquely powerful way to preserve the freedom of a people
to have people rule themselves? Before I say anything on the subject, I should emphasize that
I'm not a rationalist. I'm an empiricist. And I'm offering what I think is a valid observation
of human history.
I don't have some kind of deductive framework
for proving that the nation is the best.
And empirically, we know something
about the way systems of national states work
and about the way empires work
and the way tribal societies work.
What we don't know is, you know, is it possible to invent
something else?
I mean, there's a lot of things we don't know here.
So with the caveat that I'm making an empirical observation,
the basic argument is human beings form collectives,
naturally loyalty groups.
And for most of human history and prehistory,
as far as, as we know, human beings lived in tribal societies, tribal societies or societies,
in which there's a constant friction and constant warfare among very small groups,
among families and clans. And we reach a turning point in human history
with the invention of large scale agriculture,
which allows the creation of vast wealth.
It allows the establishment of standing armies
instead of militias.
Sargon of Akad says,
I can pay 5,000 men to do nothing other
than to drill in the arts of war.
And then I'm going to send them out to conquer the neighboring city states and there you
have empire.
The Bible, which is the source of our image, our conception of a world of independent
nations that are not constantly trying to conquer one another.
The source of that is the Bible, and the biblical world is one in which Israel and various
other small nations are trying to fight for their independence against world empires,
against empires, Babylonian, Assyrian, Persian, Egyptian, which aspire to rule the world. My claim is fundamentally twofold.
It's moral that whenever you conquer a foreign nation,
you're murdering and you're stealing, you're destroying,
as you're onwards say, you're using force to cause people to submit.
So there is something in the profits
that rebels against this ongoing atrocity and carnage
of trying to take over the whole world.
And there is a prudential practical argument,
which is that the world is governed best
when there are multiple nations,
when they're free to experiment and chart their own courses. That means they have their own
route to God, they have their own moralities, they have their own forms of economy and government.
And what tends to happen in history is that when something is successful, when something looks
like when people, a different nation looks at and say, while those is successful, when something looks like, when
people, a different nation looks at it and say, while those people are, they're flourishing,
they're succeeding, then it's, it's imitated. And, you know, in, in the way that, you know,
the Dutch invented the stock market, and the English said, look, that makes them, them,
them, powerful. So, so we'll, we'll adopt it. So that there's endless examples of that. So that's the argument for it.
The argument is, since we don't know a priori deductively from self-evident principles,
what is best, it's best to have a world in which people are trying different things.
So a quick question, because the word nationalism sometimes is presented in a negative light
in connection to the nationalism of Nazi Germany, for example. So you're looking empirically
at a world of nations that respect each other.
I use the word nationalism the way that I inherited it in my tradition, which is, it's a principled standpoint that
says that the world is governed best when many nations are able to be independent and
chart their own course. That's in Ashles. As far as the Nazis, Hitler's an imperialist.
He hated nation states. His whole theory, if you pick up, I don't recommend doing this,
but if you do, if you do, actually reading here right But if you do, if you do read my comfort, then you'll
see that he says explicitly that the goal is for Germany to be the Lord of the earth and
mistress of the globe. And he detests the idea of the independent nation state because he sees it
as weak and a feat. He might as well have said it to Jewish. So let me ask from the individual perspective, for nationalism,
what do you make of the value of the love of country?
The reason I connect that, so I personally, what would you say,
Patriot, I love the love of country, or I am susceptible,
or how, how, how, in a random way. I enjoy I
In a
Some good love is a good word, but well, I love a lot of things
But I'm saying this particular love is a little bit contentious, which is loving your country
That's an interesting love that some people are a little uncomfortable with
That's an interesting love that some people are a little uncomfortable with. Even when, especially when that love, you know, I go up in the Soviet Union to say, you
know, you, you just love the country.
It represents a certain thing to you.
And it's not, you don't think like philosophically, like I was marching around with like marks
under my arm or something like that.
It's just loving community at the level of nation. It's very interesting.
I don't know if that's an artifact of the past that we're going to have to strip away.
I don't know if I was just raised in that kind of community, but I appreciate that.
I guess the thing I'm torn about is that love of country that I have in my heart, that I now love
America and I consider myself an American.
That would have easily, if I was born earlier, been used by Stalin, and I would have probably
died on the battlefield.
I would have probably died if I was in Nazi Germany as a German, and I would probably
die as an American.
Are you from...
What about these things?
Yes. That's interesting.
Well, I think about this a lot. It's interesting to run a radical
counterfactual and be sure of the answer. I mean,
No, that's sure. I mean, but I think about this a lot because obviously,
I'm really interested in history and I put my, this is the way I
think about most situations as I empathize. I really try to do hard work of placing myself in that moment and thinking through it.
I'm just, okay, I just know myself psychologically what, what I'm susceptible to.
That's a negative phrase, but what I would love doing.
And so I'm just saying, my question is, is love of nation a useful or a powerful moral,
sort of for a moral philosophy perspective, a good thing?
I think it is a good thing, but before we ask whether it's a good thing, I think it's worth
asking whether there's any way to live without it.
The idea of national independence of a world
or a continent which politically is governed by multiple independent national states. That
is a political theory. Somebody came up with that, you know, in the Bible or elsewhere,
someone came up with this idea and sold it and a lot of people like it. But the nation is not an invention. It every place in human
history that we have any record of, there are nations. And so the fact of people creating
families, families creating an alliance of of of of of of of of of of of of of clans, clans creating alliances of tribes, tribes creating alliances,
and alliances that becomes the nation, we see that everywhere in human history, everywhere
we look.
And the love of a group of tribes that have come together in order to fight opponents that are trying to destroy your way
of life and, you know, and steal your land and harm your women and children. The love of
the leadership that brings it together here, this is, you know, a George Washington type figure or an Alfred the Great type figure or or or saw the biblical saw somebody who
has the the wisdom the daring to unite the tribes overcome their their you know their their
their internal mutual hatreds and grievances and rally them around a set of ideas, a language, a tradition, an identity as people say today.
That love is irradicable from human beings. Maybe we'll have brave new world people take
drugs in order to get rid of it.
The problem is that could be leveraged by authoritarian regime.
Yes, but that's true of everything. It's like saying, you know, you can have children
and you can teach them to be evil. You can make a lot of money. It can use it for evil.
You can have a gun for self-defense, but you can use it for evil.
Come on, we did that's that's human.
That's being human.
You guys are making love this primary, which I don't think it is.
There are lots of people.
I dare you.
Yeah.
I know there are lots of people in the world that they who don't love their nation
because the nation is not worth loving.
That is love is conditional.
It's not unconditional.
Love is conditioned on the value that's presented to you.
So I lived through this experience in my own life, right?
I grew up in Israel at a time of,
everything was geared towards patriotism and the state.
I would say I was trained to, when I saw Grenade to jump on it because that was
you know every song and every story and everything was about the state as everything and you
should sacrifice. And you know when they flag went up I got to the idea. I mean I bought into it
completely. And at some point, I rejected that.
And I changed, and I changed my alliance.
And I rejected my lover visual.
It's not that I don't love it anymore, but it's certainly not my top love.
And it's certainly not looking for the grenade to jump on.
And I've got to go fight the war there.
And I fell in love with a distance with the idea of America.
I love the idea of America more than I love America. And I could see myself falling in love with a distance with with the idea of America. I love the idea of America more than I love America.
And I could see myself falling in love out of love with America,
given what it's heading.
It's not automatic.
It's conditioned on what it is that it represents and what it is,
what value it represents for me.
And I think that's always the case with love.
It's not true that children always the case with love.
You know, it's not true that children have to love their parents.
That's the idea and hopefully most children love their parents because their parents, but some children fall out of love
with their parents because their parents don't deserve their love.
And the same with the other way around,
I think parents are capable of not loving their children.
So it's, love is a conditional thing.
It's not automatic.
But let me let me point out in agreement with let me say
tell you when you agree.
You're trying to bribe me with an agreement.
I know those soft ones are soft.
The blow right mostly I like to talk to your own about his ideas.
And I don't want to talk about iron Rand.
But I want to say something just just one one thing about iron Rand.
Sure. All my kids
read Iron Rand's books, my father read The Fountainhead, I don't know like, you know, we know Iron
Rand and I'll tell you it is incredibly difficult reading for me. It's painful. It's painful to read. Why is it painful? Not because I disagree with
the view of trading and business and the creativity of it and, you know, and, and reared in metal. I mean,
I, you know, that stuff, that stuff moves me and I do admire it. But to read a book that's 1,000 pages long,
in which nobody is having children.
Nobody is having a stable marriage.
No one is running an admirable government
that's fighting for a just cause anywhere, anywhere.
You're on, I feel, I just, I feel like, like, it's focusing on one aspect
of what it is to be human and to flourish. And that everything else is just erased and
thrown out is, though it's just not part of reality. And I'm scared. I'm scared of what
happens to, to, to teenagers who hormonally are in any case. No, that's the program to pull away
from their parents and experiment with things.
They're biologically programmed to do that.
And you give them a book which says,
look, you don't have to have a family.
You don't have to raise children.
You don't have to have a country.
You don't have to fight for anything.
All you have to do is assert yourself and trade.
I think it's destructive because it's not realistic.
It's just not real.
But I got none of that from mine, man.
I got none of that from mine, man.
The books were not about a family.
You could write a book in an Iron Man style about where people have a family, but the goal, the purpose,
it's a novel. It's not. It's a novel which is delimited with the particular story. There's
one family in Gold's Gulch and there's a little passage about raising children in the value
of that because it's not caught to what she is writing about. But that doesn't exclude
it. When I read Iron Man,, I read out a short one,
I was 16 and I read it over the years,
several times more.
It never occurred to me.
Oh, I know hands-on, they ain't take family.
I shouldn't have a family.
It, that thought never came into my mind.
I always wanted to have children.
I continued to want to have children.
I thought of it a little differently.
I thought of how I would find a partner,
a little bit differently.
I thought about what I would look for in a partner
differently, but not that I wouldn't want to get married.
Well, the question I have is what effect it has on society so outside of you. So for example, you mentioned love should be
Conditional. I think well, it is whether you like it or not. It is you might pretend that it isn't, but it's always conditioned.
Well, let me try to say something and see if it makes any sense.
So could there be things that are true, like love is conditional,
is always conditional, that if you say it often, it has a negative effect on society.
So for example, I mean, so maybe I'm just a romantic, but good luck saying love
is conditional to a romantic partner.
I mean, you could, I would argue, on mass, that would deteriorate the quality of relationships.
If you remind the partner of that truth that is universal, like you have to, I mean,
okay, maybe it's just me, I'll just speak to myself,
it's like there is a certain romantic notion of unconditional love.
It's part of why you have so many destructive marriages. It's part of why.
Can you say that's a problem?
Yes, it's a real problem because yes, you all talked about honoring your spouse and in this real truth there and I respect that
Yes, you have to do certain things love is not you marry somebody and there's a real attitude out there in the culture
You marry somebody and okay now we're gonna we're just gonna cruise. It's just right Hollywood
That's the Hollywood you know marriage is work
Like all values it's work
It's something you have to reignite every day,
you have to, you have to, the challenges, the real disagreements, the things you fight about,
you disagree about. And there's real, if it's a value, you work it out, you struggle through it.
And sometimes you struggle through it and you come to a conclusion, this is not going to work.
And you dissolve a marriage.
I'm all for dissolving after really, really fighting for it,
because if it's an important value,
and if you fell in love with this person for a reason,
then that's something worth fighting for.
I have a feeling that Hollywood goes the other way,
but it's not this cruising along and everything is easy.
No human relationship is like that, not friendship,
not love, not raising children, not being a child.
You know, they require work and they require thinking
and they require creating the conditions to thrive.
And that's the sense in which it's conditional.
You have to work at it.
And it's very easy not to do the work.
And it's very easy to drift away.
And I think most people don't do the work.
Most people take it and generally in life.
The only place people seem to work is at work.
And then they take the rest of their life as I'm gonna cruise.
And yet every aspect of your life,
the art you choose, the fends you choose, the lovers you choose,
all require real thinking and real work
to be successful at them.
None of them are just there
because there is no such thing as just the intrinsic.
Right, I agree with all of that.
I was going to say before that the rabbis have this
sort of shocking expression,
Salguidudbanim, the pain of raising children.
And I find when I speak to audiences about relationships, I find that in general,
and this is cross-cultural, different countries, different religious backgrounds, that in general,
young people do not know that the only way to make a marriage work is through a lot of pain and
overcoming. They don't know that raising children involves a great deal of pain. They don't know
that caring for and helping your parents approach the end of their lives causes a great deal of
pain. And everything is kind of this sketchy, you know, very sketchy glimpsey kind of, and I
mentioned Hollywood just because it, it, everything is made to look easy except, you know, there's
kind of a funny breakdown of something, but then it, you know, maybe there's a divorce, they,
you know, they shoot one another so that's it. So then they should get to work. But the reality of how hard it is to do and
how heroic it is to do it and then overcome. And then actually, in the end, achieve something
create something that there was really, it's almost, it's almost not, it's almost not discussed.
And so I look to me, it's just not surprising that if, if there's no parallel to iron
land about, you know, the heroic saving of a marriage that was on the rust, how does it
actually happen?
So, it's a good point you're making.
And, but it's something just came to me that I've never thought
of before.
So that's always good.
This is where conversation is good.
Look, take the Tamil and I can't remember how many years after the Bible, the Tamil
is written, how many over how long of a period it's written, how many people participating
in writing it.
Iron Man was one individual. She wrote a series of books in philosophy,
which I think are true, but they're the beginning.
There is a lot of work to be done.
It's to apply this.
So hopefully there will be one of her students
who writes a book on relationships.
And there'll be somebody who writes a book
on developing a political theory in greater detail
and develop, who ethics she's got,
like she's got a few writings on ethics
and it's in the novels,
but there's a lot of work to be done,
fleshing it out, what does it mean?
And how do you, so to say I'm and didn't do everything,
is a trueism, she didn't do everything.
Okay, so what, but she laid this amazing philosophical
foundation that allows us to take those principles and to apply them to all these realms of human life.
And she does it on a scope, the few philosophers in human history have done because she goes for metaphysics all the way to aesthetics, hitting the key.
And she's an original think on each one of those things. And she might be right. She might be wrong on certain aspects of it. Always happy to have a
debate about where where where she's wrong or where she's not. But there's a lot of work to be done.
Right. It's not like and if if if there were objectives out there who presented as, okay,
human knowledge is over because I enraged these books. That's absurd. Right. This huge amount of work
to be done in applying these particular ideas just like they was for any
philosophy, take these ideas and apply them to all these realms and human experience that flesh it
out and make it. And one of the reasons I don't think objectivism is taken off is because there's
all this work still to be done that allows it to be relatable to people in every aspect of them.
Let me ask a hard question here. We've got we've taken.
Can I say what I agreed with you all, Emma?
Sure, sure.
This is good.
It's a big, good transition.
Here, this is the clip.
This is what this is the clip.
I mean, I agree about nations.
So I don't like the term nationalism
because I fear what happens when you put anism
at the end of any word, anything.
Yes.
But the nation is a good thing. And a diversity of nations in a sense is a good
thing.
In a sense, I don't think one can come up.
Look, I said, I hold, the ideal nation is a nation that protects individual rights.
How do you do that?
What are the details?
How do we define property rights exactly in an internet world?
There's going to be disagreement, rational, reasonable disagreement.
They're going to be in my future, in the 300 years from now, where in my ideas of one
finally, right, there will be multiple nations trying to apply the principle of applying individual
rights and they'll do it differently.
One of the benefits of federalism is that while you have an national government, there are certain issues that
you relegate to states and they can try different things and learn because there is a huge value
in empirical knowledge. It comes there. You can't just do it all and figure it all out.
You have to experiment. So I do, I hate the idea of a one world, one world
government because experimentation is gone. And if you make a mistake, everybody suffers.
Yeah. I like the idea. And then I like the idea of people being able to, to choose where
they live. But, but this notion of experimentation, I think is crucial, but you need a principle,
this is, you need a principle. So I don't like the idea of nations. If all the nations are
going to be bad, right? If all the nations are going to be horrible, then I don't
like it. What I like is a variety of nations all practicing
basically good ideas. And then we try to figure out, okay, what works better
than other things and what is sustainable and what is not.
Given how many difficult
aspects of history and society we talked about, let me ask a hard question of both of you.
Please, up until now. What gives you hope about the future? So we've been describing
We've been describing reasons to maybe not have hope. What gives you hope?
When you look at the world, what gives you hope that in 200 years and 300 years and 500
years, like the founders look into the future, that human civilization will be all right.
And more than that, it would flourish.
Two things for me.
One is history.
So in a very long run, good ideas winnow.
I think in a very long run,
you can go through a dark ages,
but you come out of a dark ages.
The good and the just does win in the end,
even if it is bloody and difficult and hard to get there.
So while I am quite pessimistic,
unfortunately, about the short run, I'm ultimately optimistic that in the long run, good ideas win
and are justified. And I think the fundamental behind that is, I think, is that I'm fundamentally
positive about human nature. I think human beings can think the capable of reasoning,
the capable of figuring out the truth,
the capable of learning from experience.
They don't always do it.
It's an achievement to do it,
but over time they do.
And if you create the right circumstances, they will.
And when things get bad enough, they look for way out.
They look at maybe at history,
if the history is available to them,
maybe at just learning from what's around them
to find better ways of doing things
and that reinforces itself.
But human beings are an amazing creature.
We're just amazing in our capacity to be creative and our
capacity to think and our capacity to love and our capacity to change our environment,
to fit our needs and to fit our requirements for survival and to learn and to grow and to
progress. And so again, long term, I think all that wins out short term in any point in history, short term.
It doesn't, right now it doesn't look too good.
Or by you.
Well, as usual, I moved by what Yoron says and I hear scripture. And the source for Iran's hope is the Book of Exodus, which is the first place
in human history, where we are presented with the possibility that an enslaved people that's
being persecuted and murdered and living under the worst possible regime, can
free itself and have a shot at a life of independence and worth.
And it's another inherited Jewish ideal in the tradition.
The way that we express this is by saying that there is a God who judges.
These rallies in Egypt were enslaved for hundreds of years,
according to the Exodus story,
hundreds of years before God wakes up and hears them.
He doesn't do anything until Moses kills the oppressor
and goes out into the desert.
So I think it's pretty realistic that there's a God that God judges and acts,
but probably often not for a very, very long time and not until there's a human being
who gets up and says enough, I know that today people don't want to read the Bible. They don't like reading the Bible.
But I always hear in my ear this cry of the prophet Jeremiah who saw his nation destroyed and
this people exiled. And he says in God's name, he says, he's not my word like fire, like the hammer that shatters rock,
a petition, and a pet cellar. My word is like fire, like the hammer that shatters rock.
And this is actually, this is the traditional way of saying something like what
you're on is saying, that it may take a long, long time, but there is a truth, and it has its own strength,
and it will, in the end, shatter the things that are opposing it. That's our traditional hope.
We grow up like that. And, you know, so I do have hope. I see the trends, the trends are terrible right now. And it's frightening
and it's hard, but we are terrible at seeing the future. And it is very possible that an
unexpected turn of events is going to appear, you know, maybe soon, maybe much later, and
the possibility of a redemption is there.
Let me ask, given that long arc of history, given that you do study the Bible, what is
the meaning of this whole thing? What's the meaning of life?
Wow, that's beautiful. I think that the meaning of life is in part what your own touches on when
he says that productive work, labor creativity is at the heart of what it is to be human.
I just think that there are some more arenas and maybe we even agree with a lot of them. And I, on a lot of them,
to be human is to inherit a world which is imperfect, terribly imperfect, imperfect in many ways.
And God created it that way. He created a world which is terribly lacking, and he created us with the ability
to stand up and to say, I can change the direction of this.
I can do something to change the direction of this.
I can take the time and the abilities that are given to me to be a partner with God in
creating the world.
It's not going to stay the way it was before me. It'll
be something different, maybe a little bit, maybe a lot. But that is the heart, that is
the key, that is the meaningful life, is to be a partner with God and creating the world
so that it is moving that much more in the right direction, rather than the way we found.
So, Nudge, even if a little bit,
the direction of the world,
while you're on,
you've actually been talking
and your program about life quite a bit.
So, let me ask the same question,
and I never tire you asking this question.
What do you think is the meaning of this whole thing? same question, and I never tire you asking this question.
What do you think is the as the meaning of this?
Well, I mean, I don't believe in God. So it God doesn't play a role in in my view of the meaning of life.
I think the meaning of life is to live.
I like to say to live with a capital L.
It's to embrace it.
And and I go with you. I own in a sense. We're born
into a world and as human beings, one of the things that makes us very different than other
animals is our capacity to change that world. We can actually go out there and change the world
around us. We can change it materially through production and through that. We can change it
spiritually through changing the ideas of people.
We can change the direction to which humanity works.
We can create a little universe.
I think part of the joy of creating a family
is to create a little universe, right?
We're creating a little world around us,
that's part of the joy.
And there is joy in families that it's not make it all about
difficulty and hard work. I agree. I agree. You know, part of the idea of getting married is
to create a little world in which you and your spouse are creating something that didn't exist
before and building something, building a universe. But it's really to live. I mean, one of the things that I see and it saddens me is wasted lives.
It's people who just, just cruise through life.
They just, they get bored in a particular place, they never challenge it, they never question.
They just, you know, they live, die and nothing really happened, nothing really changed.
They didn't produce, they didn't make anything of their life.
And produce here again in their largest sense. So to me, it's an every aspect of life, as you know,
because you've listened to my show, I love art. I love aesthetics. I love the experience of
great art. I love relationships. I love producing. I like business. I like that aspect of it.
producing, I like business, I like that aspect of it.
And I think people, people are shallow in so many parts of their lives, which saddens me.
I mean, if we, if you had eight billion people
in this planet, even if it never grew,
even if we just stayed at eight billion,
but the eight billion all lived fully.
Wow, I mean, what an amazing place this would be. What an amazing experience we would have.
So to me, that is the meaning is just make the most that you have a short period of time on Earth.
And it's it. This is it. And live it. Experience it fully and challenge yourself and push
yourself. And let me just say something about optimism. You know, one source of hope for me
in the world in which we live right now
Is that there are people who do that at least in certain realms of their lives, right? And I'm inspired
And I know a lot of people don't like me for this, but I'm inspired for example by Silicon Valley in spite of all the political disagreements
I have with them and all of that. I'm inspired by people
political disagreements I have with them and all of that. I'm inspired by people inventing new technologies and building. I'm inspired by the people you talk to about artificial intelligence
and about new ideas and about pushing the boundaries of science. Those things are exciting and it's
terrific to see a world that I think generally is in decline yet that these pockets in which people
are still creating new new ventures and new ideas and new things that
that inspires me and gives me hope that that is not dead. That in spite of the decay that's in our culture
there's still pockets where that spirit of being human is still alive and well.
Yeah, they inspire me as well. Yeah, and they truly live with the capital L. And maybe I can do on a star.
Maybe you can also put a little bit of love
with the capital L out there as well.
You're on, you know, I would end it that way, wouldn't you?
You're on, you're on.
Thank you so much.
This is a huge honor.
I really enjoyed the debate yesterday.
I really enjoyed the conversation today
that you spent your valuable time with me.
It just means a lot.
Thank you so much.
This was amazing.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Yarram Brook and Yarram Huzoni.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now let me leave you with some words from Edmund Burke.
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.
you