
Giving Ventures Ep. 88 - The Traditionalist Conservatives
Jun 24, 2025
Daniel McCarthy, Vice President for Publications at the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, and Luke Sheahan, assistant professor of political science, dive into the heart of traditionalist conservatism. They discuss how modern liberalism erodes community bonds and emphasize the need for decentralization. McCarthy highlights Edmund Burke's arguments against revolutionary rationalism, while Sheahan connects traditionalism to American self-governance. Together, they explore the overlap with libertarianism and the importance of continuity in preserving Western traditions.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Self‑Government Is Deeply Historical
- Traditionalists see American self‑government as rooted in long local practices like New England townships and church governance.
- They argue the Constitution preserves a centuries‑old culture of decentralized civic life, not a sudden philosophical invention.
Continuity Over Radical Reboot
- Continuity and gradualism matter more than revolutionary breaks for traditionalists; the past refines institutions over time.
- Burke and Tocqueville shaped this view by warning that radical remaking often unleashes violence and centralization.
Burke's Critique Of Abstract Rationalism
- Burke argued Enlightenment rationalism risked substituting abstract schemata for evolved institutions, producing tyranny.
- Traditionalists thus defend inherited practices that have tempered political power and human harshness.









