Trace the modern political imagination from Rousseau's social contract and Voltaire's Enlightenment polemic to Lenin's revolutionary Marxism. How thinking about freedom, society, and power evolved across two centuries that remade the world.
What happens when a man looks at civilization and sees not progress, but a catastrophe? Jean-Jacques Rousseau believed that human beings were born free, compassionate, and whole, and that society had made them vain, competitive, and miserable. This three-hour episode traces Rousseau's life and philosophy from his youth as a wanderer through Savoy and Turin to his explosive arrival in Parisian intellectual life. We explore his first great provocation, that the arts and sciences had corrupted rather than improved us, and follow his thought through the Discourse on Inequality, The Social Contract, Emile, and the Confessions. Along the way, we examine his account of human nature, the psychology of amour-propre, his revolutionary ideas about education, his quarrels with Voltaire and the philosophes, his invention of modern autobiography, and his lasting influence on the French Revolution, Romanticism, and democratic theory.
He wrote twenty thousand letters and made half of Europe afraid of him. Fall asleep to the complete philosophy of Voltaire. Tonight we spend nearly two and a half hours with Francois Marie Arouet, known as Voltaire, the most famous writer in eighteenth century Europe and the most devastating enemy of fanaticism, superstition, and cruelty that the French language has ever produced. We follow him from his birth in Paris in 1694, through two imprisonments in the Bastille, through his three year exile in England and his discovery of Newton and Locke, through the Lisbon earthquake that destroyed his patience with Leibnizian optimism, through the writing of Candide, through the Calas affair, through the founding of the town of Ferney, through the Philosophical Dictionary, and finally through his triumphant return to Paris in 1778, where he died surrounded by the city that had once exiled him. Settle in, lower the lights, and let the story carry you. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.
Vladimir Lenin transformed Marxism from a theory of historical inevitability into a theory of revolutionary action, and in doing so reshaped the twentieth century. This episode traces his intellectual development from his provincial childhood in Simbirsk through the trauma of his brother's execution, his radicalization, and his years of exile and organizing. It covers his major works including What Is to Be Done?, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism, and State and Revolution, examining key concepts such as the vanguard party, democratic centralism, and the dictatorship of the proletariat. The narrative follows the events of 1917 from the February Revolution through the October seizure of power, the Civil War, War Communism, the Red Terror, the Kronstadt rebellion, and the New Economic Policy. It concludes with Lenin's final struggle, his Testament warning against Stalin, and the long debate over his contested legacy.