80,000 Hours Podcast

#145 Classic episode – Christopher Brown on why slavery abolition wasn't inevitable

60 snips
Jan 20, 2026
In this thought-provoking discussion, historian Christopher Leslie Brown, a Columbia University professor and author of *Moral Capital*, explores the complex history surrounding the abolition of slavery. He argues that the end of slavery was not inevitable, challenging the belief that economic and moral progress would naturally lead to its decline. Brown highlights the deep-rooted ubiquity of slavery, critiques of the practice throughout history, and the crucial role of activism, particularly by Quakers and early abolitionists, in fostering change.
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ADVICE

Turn Moral Intuition Into Collective Action

  • Recognize many moral insights never translate automatically into action.
  • Use organized collective effort rather than assuming awareness will cause change.
INSIGHT

Moral Awareness Often Fails To Drive Change

  • Knowing a moral problem doesn't guarantee reform; habits and tastes sustain harms like eating meat.
  • Brown uses everyday moral inconsistency to explain why slavery persisted despite awareness.
INSIGHT

Legal Ambiguity In Britain Helped Abolition

  • English common law's ambiguity made slavery legally weak at home.
  • Somerset (1772) signaled English law wouldn't enforce slaveholders' rights, shaping metropolitan attitudes.
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