The Theory of Anything

Episode 117: Jonathan Rauch

Sep 30, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Jonathan Rauch, a prominent public intellectual and author, explores the epistemic case for free speech in his classic, Kindly Inquisitors. He critiques how our society collectively produces knowledge and addresses the dangers of misinformation highlighted in his work, The Constitution of Knowledge. Rauch emphasizes the importance of viewpoint diversity and freedom of inquiry. He also delves into the urgency of defending democratic institutions against authoritarian populism, sharing insights on the political consequences of secularization and the vital role of Christianity in shaping civic norms.
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INSIGHT

Liberalism's Intended Incompleteness

  • Liberalism purposely limits itself to public rules and leaves private meaning-making to religion and culture.
  • When those private institutions decline, politics and markets get overloaded with meaning-making duties.
INSIGHT

Meaning Trumps Evidence In Network Spread

  • Movements that give meaning (e.g., anarcho-capitalism, AGI doom) can spread through networks despite weak evidence.
  • Rauch credits social valences like excitement and identity for elevating plausibility-weak theories.
INSIGHT

Religion's Role In Sustaining Liberalism

  • Decline of Christianity removed a cultural source of forgiveness, sacrifice, and shared meaning that bolstered liberal norms.
  • Rauch argues this cultural loss increases political instability and drives politicized substitutes for religion.
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