The Skill That Built America Has Vanished From Universities with Danielle Allen
What makes a university essential to a democratic society? Political theorist, classicist, and author Danielle Allen joins John Tomasi to explore the deep connections between democracy, disagreement, and higher education. Drawing on her new book, Radical Duke, Allen traces the origins of modern constitutional democracy to a network of radical thinkers in eighteenth-century Britain who fought for free expression, political transparency, and popular sovereignty. Their struggles, she argues, offer important lessons for the challenges facing democratic institutions today. The conversation then turns to the modern university, Allen and Tomasi examine whether universities occupy a unique place in democratic life. They discuss why disagreement is essential to both truth-seeking and self-government, how institutions can create space for productive conflict, and what responsibilities colleges and universities have in preserving the civic capacities on which democracy depends. In This Episode: 💥 The forgotten British origins of modern democracy 💥 The Radical Duke and the fight for political transparency 💥 How Edmund Burke and Thomas Paine emerged from the same intellectual movement 💥 Why free societies depend on disagreement 💥 Ruth Simmons' vision of the university as a place of "quarrel and opposition" 💥 The relationship between democracy and open inquiry 💥 Scientific consensus, dissent, and truth-seeking 💥 Why universities need spaces for constrained disagreement 💥 How institutions shape civic culture and democratic norms 💥 The unique role of higher education in sustaining a free society About Danielle Allen: Danielle Allen is the James Bryant Conant University Professor at Harvard and Director of the Allen Lab for Democracy Renovation and the Democratic Knowledge Project. A political philosopher and tech ethicist, she is a contributing columnist for The Atlantic and the 2020 Library of Congress Kluge Prize recipient for her work in political theory and civic education. Her current work focuses on democracy renovation through institutional redesign and civic empowerment. She has authored several books, including Justice by Means of Democracy and the widely acclaimed Our Declaration. Her upcoming biography of an 18th-century reformer, Radical Duke, is scheduled for release in 2026. Beyond academia, Allen co-chairs the American Academy of Arts and Sciences' Our Common Purpose commission and leads the board at Partners In Democracy, advocating for a more inclusive social contract and robust democracy reform. Follow Danielle: https://x.com/dsallentess Follow Heterodox Academy on: X/Twitter: https://bit.ly/3Fax5Dy Facebook: https://bit.ly/3PMYxfw LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/48IYeuJ Instagram: https://bit.ly/46HKfUg Substack: https://bit.ly/48IhjNF Prefer to listen to the podcast? Click here 👉 https://pod.link/1550885150 Find out more about Heterodox Academy: https://linktr.ee/heterodoxoutloud Chapters: 00:00 Why Universities Matter for Democracy 00:56 Danielle Allen on The Radical Duke & the Origins of Liberal Democracy 06:28 Why Universities Must Protect Disagreement 17:34 Democratic Design, University Reform & Better Governance 29:22 Civic Centers, Civic Education & Public Trust 32:24 What Viewpoint Diversity Actually Means 39:49 What Academic Freedom Really Protects 40:00 What the Radical Duke Would Say About Higher Education Today

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