Matthew Stewart on Slavery, Enlightenment, and America’s Refounding
Description
Matthew Stewart is an independent philosopher and historian who has written extensively about the philosophical origins of the American republic, the history of philosophy, management theory, and the culture of inequality. His work has appeared in The Atlantic, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, and Harvard Business Review, among other publications. In recent years he has lived in Boston, New York, and Los Angeles, and is currently based in London. He is the author of Nature’s God: The Heretical Origins of the American Republic and An Emancipation of the Mind: Radical Philosophy, the War over Slavery, and the Refounding of America.

Shermer and Stewart discuss:
What does the phrase “The Law of Nature and Nature’s God” mean?
What is heretical about the origins of the American Republic?
Religion of the founders: John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, John Jay, James Madison, Thomas Paine
Ethan Allen and Thomas Young
The Enlightenment influence on the Founding Fathers
John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Rene Descartes, Baruch Spinoza
Ancient Greek influences on the Founding Fathers
Epicurus’s Dangerous Idea
Lucretius’s “swerving” atoms
Theism, Deism, Pantheism, Atheism
Reason and empiricism
Self-evident truths
Morality and the origin of right and wrong
Happiness and its pursuit
The religion of freedom
Enslaving other humans: what were these people thinking and feeling?
Should they have known better?
Racists or creatures of their time in which nearly everyone held such views?
Monogenism vs. polygenism
Abolitionism
John Brown
Frederick Douglass
Theodore Parker
Abraham Lincoln
Civil War cause: slavery or states’ rights?
Religious supporters of abolition: Quakers, William Wilberforce
How did American slavery lead to civil war?
Why did the war result in emancipation?
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