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Online Library of Liberty
Добавлен 13 авг 2020
The Online Library of Liberty is an extensive digital library of scholarly works focused on individual liberty and free markets. From Art and Economics to Law and Political Theory, the OLL provides a curated collection of resources available to download at no charge.
VRG Extra: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall & David Hume's History & Essays w/Shannon Chamberlain, Part 4
This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Shannon Chamberlain and Christy Lynn Horpedahl is a brief conversation about about the end of Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall.
The final chapters of Wolf Hall see the execution-or martyrdom-of Thomas More, Cromwell's longtime enemy and the last obstacle in the way of England's separation from Rome. Cromwell becomes the king's "own dear Cromwell," but at a high price. Chamberlain and Horpedahl talk about the women of Wolf Hall, especially Jane Seymore, how Mantel and Hume compliment and challenge each other, and how Thomas Cromwell is like Michael Corleone in The Godfather.
Christopher Hitchens' Atlantic article on Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, "The Men Who ...
The final chapters of Wolf Hall see the execution-or martyrdom-of Thomas More, Cromwell's longtime enemy and the last obstacle in the way of England's separation from Rome. Cromwell becomes the king's "own dear Cromwell," but at a high price. Chamberlain and Horpedahl talk about the women of Wolf Hall, especially Jane Seymore, how Mantel and Hume compliment and challenge each other, and how Thomas Cromwell is like Michael Corleone in The Godfather.
Christopher Hitchens' Atlantic article on Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, "The Men Who ...
Просмотров: 27
Видео
VRG Extra: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall & David Hume's History & Essays w/Shannon Chamberlain, Part 3
Просмотров 40Год назад
This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Shannon Chamberlain and Christy Lynn Horpedahl is a brief conversation about about Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, Part III and David Hume's Essay III, "That Politics May Be Reduced to a Science," from his Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary. Don't ask, don't get. Thomas Cromwell is solidly within Henry VIII's orbit and his formidable talents are being to...
VRG Extra: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall & David Hume's History & Essays w/Shannon Chamberlain, Part 2
Просмотров 75Год назад
This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Shannon Chamberlain and Christy Lynn Horpedahl is a brief conversation about about Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, Part II and David Hume's Essay VI, "Of the Study of History," from his Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary. In the second part of Wolf Hall, Cardinal Wolsey's fall is brought about by his failure to obtain the king's divorce. Cromwell is haun...
VRG Extra: Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall & David Hume's History & Essays w/Shannon Chamberlain, Part 1
Просмотров 33Год назад
This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Shannon Chamberlain and Christy Lynn Horpedahl is a brief conversation about Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, Part I and David Hume's The History of England, Vol. III, Chapter XXIX. Change is in the English air and Thomas Cromwell, Cardinal Wolsey's man of business and not-so-secret Protestant, is in a position to take advantage. Mantel's Cromwell and Hume’s ...
A Conversation with Gary Becker
Просмотров 126Год назад
Gary Becker (1930-2014) was one of the most original and pathbreaking economists of modern times. His 1992 Nobel laureate in Economic Sciences was described as his “having extended the domain of microeconomic analysis to a wide range of human behaviour and interaction, including nonmarket behavior.” Becker’s early work on discrimination led to his further work on Human Capital and education, in...
A Conversation with Israel Kirzner
Просмотров 123Год назад
Israel Kirzner, Professor Emeritus at NYU, is among the foremost scholars in the continuing development of the Austrian school of economic theory. He has extended our understanding of the workings of a free society, illuminated the role of entrepreneurs in the process of economic discovery, and shed new light on the dynamics of market forces. In this interview, recorded in 2000, Kirzner explore...
Reading Group Extra: The Election of 1800 with Cara Rogers
Просмотров 105Год назад
What does it mean to be an American? How can Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and the Election of 1800 help us think about this question? This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Cara Rogers focuses on these questions. Rogers also corrects the record on two BIG misconceptions from Lin Manuel Miranda's musical Hamilton and offers defenses Thomas Jefferson and John Adams against common criticisms. ...
The Deadweight Loss of the Magi
Просмотров 118Год назад
Liberty Fund Senior Fellows Sarah Skwire and Amy Willis spend some time with O. Henry's classic holiday tale, "The Gift of the Magi" and the economic concept of deadweight loss. It turns out there's a lot more to say about gift giving than you'd expect. It might, in the end, be one of the things that makes us human. OLL: oll.libertyfund.org/
Reading Group Extra: William Shakespeare The Life of King Henry the Fifth w/ Dr. Sarah Skwire 11/22
Просмотров 507Год назад
This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Sarah Skwire takes a farewell glance over the shoulder, hair in the wind, longing-look at William Shakespeare’s King Henry V. It is the fourth and final play in the Henry Tetralogy. France is conquered. Henry gets the crown and the princess. Skwire discusses Shakespeare’s and the play’s interest in the changes Henry makes on England and the nations arou...
Reading Group Extra: Shakespeare’s King Henry IV Part One and Two with Dr. Sarah Skwire
Просмотров 972 года назад
This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Sarah Skwire and Christy Horpedahl takes a brief look at William Shakespeare’s King Henry IV Part One and Two. They are the second and third plays in the Henry Tetralogy. They include Henry IV's reign and death, battles, treachery, and lust. It also includes our introduction to the roguish Prince Hal (the heir to the throne) and his "companions of ill r...
Reading Group Extra: King Richard II with Dr. Sarah Skwire
Просмотров 5562 года назад
This Virtual Reading Group Extra with Dr. Sarah Skwire and Christy Horpedahl takes a brief look at William Shakespeare’s The Life and Death of King Richard the Second. It’s the first play in the Henry Tetralogy and covers the last two years of Ricahrd’s life and his death. They discuss traitors, Shakespeare's use of poetry, and David Tennant's hair. Also, here's the Online Library of Liberty Re...
Sarah Skwire, Garth Bond, and Adam Simon talk about Horror
Просмотров 1232 года назад
What does horror have to do with freedom? Why have humans dedicated so much time to the odd pleasure of terrifying one another? And what's the scariest movie you ever saw? To explore these questions. Liberty Fund Senior Fellow Sarah Skwire is joined by Garth Bond, Professor of English literature at Lawrence University and Adam Simon, noted writer, director, and producer of horror television and...
Book Discussion: Property and Justice: A Liberal Theory of Natural Rights by Billy Christmas
Просмотров 3292 года назад
How do we deal with questions about property and our differing claims to it? Liberty Fund Senior Fellow Sarah Skwire is joined by Aeon Skoble, Professor of Philosophy at Bridgewater State University and Jacob T. Levy, Professor of Political Theory at McGill University for this discussion of Billy Christmas's book Property and Justice. oll.libertyfund.org/
The Law and the Lady with Sarah Skwire, Heather King, and Clark Neilly
Просмотров 1572 года назад
Sarah Skwire, Heather King, and Clark Neilly discus Wilkie Collins book The Law and the Lady.
OLL Book Discussions: Charles Dickens
Просмотров 642 года назад
Sarah Skwire and Amy Willis sit down to talk about two of Charles Dickens' Christmas stores- A Christmas Carol and The Chimes.
Poet of Revolution: An OLL Discussion
Просмотров 1453 года назад
Poet of Revolution: An OLL Discussion
The Industrial Revolution Part 1: The Great Discontinuity
Просмотров 4093 года назад
The Industrial Revolution Part 1: The Great Discontinuity
Liberty Matters Author Interview with Hardy Bouillon, May 2021
Просмотров 713 года назад
Liberty Matters Author Interview with Hardy Bouillon, May 2021
A Conversation with Ernest van den Haag
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.3 года назад
A Conversation with Ernest van den Haag
A Conversation with Ralph Harris and Arthur Seldon
Просмотров 2443 года назад
A Conversation with Ralph Harris and Arthur Seldon
A Conversation with M. Stanton Evans
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.3 года назад
A Conversation with M. Stanton Evans
A Conversation with Richard Cornuelle
Просмотров 2083 года назад
A Conversation with Richard Cornuelle
Industrial Revolution Part 3: A Magnificent Century
Просмотров 3123 года назад
Industrial Revolution Part 3: A Magnificent Century
Industrial Revolution Part 2: Freedom Under the Law
Просмотров 3103 года назад
Industrial Revolution Part 2: Freedom Under the Law
Jackson John Hernandez Barbara White Brenda
Is the narrator the boss from The Professionals?
had adam smith lived today, he wuld immed be demonized as a "socialist"...
I felt like learning about the wealth of knowledge that came from the late 18th century thinkers. I feel like American are losing are priciples and one way I can stop that is to make sure that I adopt them myself. Cheers to a freer America and may communism seize to exist.
I have got Augustus Kelley's reprint of the first edition of the Wealth of Nations, whose English text seems too difficult for me. But I'll keep it instead of selling, because this reprint itself seems to be somewhat rare today, making its price soar. Thanks.
"I've never known much good, in those trading in the public interest" 💞💕
Yes, Scotland ...many human wonders derive from Scotland ❤❤❤
Excelente trabajo.
Wonderful talk. Thank you
Thank you for sharing the wisdom of Prof. Kirzner; much needed today.
I love his writing, his many volumes; in particular, his treatment of written expression, ie) good and sound writing.
"A criminal is a person with predatory instincts who has not sufficient capital to form a corporation. Most government is by the rich for the rich. Government comprises a large part of the organized injustice in any society, ancient or modern6 Civil government, insofar as it is instituted for the security of property, is in reality instituted for the defense of the rich against the poor, and for the defense of those who have property against those who have none6". Adam Smith
Smith says in his preamble you give here 'In a well-governed society." All he says rests on that Yankee buffoon.,
I was tutored by both of these gentlemen at Oxford 50 years ago. Although they differed in their political outlooks, both were kind and inspiring teachers.
That 3/4 of this man's published work is out of print is an indictment against all American universities. Barzun expressed in a rich, American prose what all the current pseudo-philosophers are bumbling through in a confused state right now.
thxs
This man is brilliant, a treasure to our times. I normally sleep through videos, big time ADHD, but not this one, watch to the end. May God Keep you both in good health and in peace! ❤️
Good discussion. I think eustace was a good guy. And Valeria a great woman! 💕
I always enjoyed listening to him on Firing Line with Bill Buckley. He has a lot to teach us, even today, maybe especially today. Would that there were more like him now. He always makes you think, whether or not you agree with him on everything.
I read Barzun more than forty years ago. I have re-read some of his books since. He is one of those clear and precise writers like Orwell and William James. Their persistent teaching that clear thinking leads to clear writing and vice versa Those who read them soon learn the necessity of revision. Which is a type of re-thinking.
Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith has been in the public domain for some time and can be downloaded from Project Gutenberg and searched. The printed book can cost you $15 and take a lot of effort to search. Has Smith's "Invisible Hand" been used as a propaganda tool for decades since most people would never read WoN? Smith used the word 'invisible' six times but only once as "invisible hand". It is really curious that we hear about the 'invisible hand' so much. Smith used the word 'education' EIGHTY TIMES. We are not told about that. Search for "and account" and you will find multiple instances of "read, write, and account", not "read, write and arithmetic". Double entry accounting was more than 300 years old when Smith wrote Wealth of Nations, but 50% of Brits were illiterate and public schools did not exist in 1776. The United States could have made accounting/finance mandatory in the schools since Sputnik. Wouldn't that have helped everyone best serve their own self interest? But we do not hear the people who propagandize us about the "invisible hand" advocating mandatory accounting because that might make their invisible rip-offs more difficult. Adam Smith never used the word 'depreciation' in WoN. He mentioned paper money being depreciated one time. Marx wrote about 'depreciation' 35 times in Das Kapital, sometimes regarding the depreciation of machines and sometimes of money. Marx even mentioned Adam Smith 130 times though not much about education. Consumers did not buy automobiles, air conditioners, televisions and microwave ovens before 1885. Marx died in 1883. But it's OK! Our brilliant economists do not talk about the depreciation of under engineered consumer trash today either. Every time you buy a replacement the purchase is added to GDP. What about NDP? Oh sorry, when do you ever hear an economist explain NDP? That's OK too, they only depreciate the Capital Goods and ignore the depreciation of consumer junk anyway. Wealth of Nations has probably been in the public domain for a very long time but cheap computing did not make it available in Project Gutenberg until 3/17/2001. Milton Friedman died in 2006. Was Friedman giving us the straight dope on economics or treating us like a bunch of dopes for decades?
I love this man's work. I always believed that McCarthy was blackballed, and that communism has now infiltrated most of our universities. If Joseph McCarthy was able to do what he was trying to do, that would've slowed down the influence or socialism/communism, and our big institutions might actually be free of that ilk. Thank you for the video!
Well said, and so true!
A lot of zooming in and zooming out -- it's kind of interesting. I'd prefer to get wacky teaching stuffs with puppets, V-tubers, animated paintings, etc -- but this was cool and I quite liked the narration.
An old man that only sees and perceives what is in his time.. hmmmm.. capitalism economic system is a dinosaur 🦕 economic system.
I needed this today...well every day, really! This is the first time I have thought that Austen left us these less than dashing heroes for our gals on purpose. She was a wily one, that Miss Jane. I HAVE heard, however, that Mary Wollstonecraft's writings appear to looks as though they heavily influenced this particular Austen book. There is nothing more than remarkable than learning about her writings through her context and time.
That’s Tibor Machan interviewing John Hospers.
At present Russia and Ukraine are warring,Economics in tatters,nuclear war possible,covid19 still around,cataclysms ubiquitous,.... Man is questioning his orientations And so Woman. Biology and Gender no longer a straight forward phenomenon Religion is more tribalistic,its Spirituality a flagrant sham.Values no longer Valuables. A tragic Tale. No leader leader enough to sort this miasma of fiasco local and internationally. Shit is ubiquitous.A World in tatters,oblivious and utterly amnesiac of the Past,which is repeated all over again,with monsters in politics,economics,medicine,law,cultures,almost in the direction of biblical quranic cataclysms.And those civilisations crumbled.Who would have guessed what is happening Now,at this present Epoch. Terrible world. A most enduring Decadent Time,a time of impactful Worry and Despair. Horror,Terror,the Vampires are out.Sauve qui peut.!!!
To the conversation about taking one's seat, I guess my family was more anarchic: "You move your feet, you lose your seat!"
I'm guessing that's why most news feeds today have zero morals to the truth
Hours & hours of liberal "feel good" & "feel bad" uploads w/ Adam Smith en the title. This is real.
What a brilliant mind!
Great picture!
a titan!!
Loved the content Frank G Melbourne Australia
Dr. Ayau was so fluent in English. His ideas were so powerful; I had the privilege of sitting in a couple of his classes. He was a good professional and a good man.
This man is brilliant and conveys an excellent argument in favor of the death penalty for murderers.
This belongs on Netflix. Thank you, Liberty Fund. And thanks for publishing Government by Judiciary.
Both great men.
A wonderful RUclips piece. I knew them both.
28:25 - 35:10
Brilliant presentation of a very brief overview of Adam Smith's ideas. I am pleased to note that among the technical advisors is the redoubtable Ronald Coase. No wonder the script of the vide is so good. Thank you so much, Online Library of Liberty.
He's wrong on the death penalty.
I wish this was longer!
YAY!
Yeah, definitely upload part 1 please.
Done!
@@onlinelibraryofliberty6673 Cheers for that.
Great stuff! Please upload episode one if you have it.
Done! (And questions coming soon...)
@@onlinelibraryofliberty6673 Thanks!
I studied with him at the New School Brilliant then and now
I have his book " From Dawn To Decadence"!!!!
And how would you rate it? What do you like about it most?
Thank you for posting this!
Fantastic conversation! Thank you
I was just reading government by judiciary. Fascinating