Virtual Reading Groups
Would you like to join interesting people and have interesting conversations based on readings from the history of liberty?
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Our Virtual Reading Groups will each focus on a particular topic, and a common set of readings will form the basis for our discussions. Each group is facilitated by a professional moderator and is conducted online powered by Zoom.
Our Timeless Reading Groups are asynchronous and open to all in the Portal platform. Liberty Fund solicits a scholar to lead a discussion of a short story and/or essays that each participant will read and discuss. This format doesn’t require participants to use Zoom or “schedule” a specific time to participate.
Participation is offered at no-cost, and there is no need to be an expert on the topic for discussion! The only requirement is that participants be eager to read and engage in conversation.
Upcoming
Liberty and the American Statesman: Publius
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Pre-registration is required.
with Todd Estes
This VRG will discuss seven of the 85 essays on the US Constitution known as the Federalist Papers or sometimes just The Federalist. They were composed by John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison,…
One Fell Swoop: Reading All of Shakespeare Plays: The Two Noble Kinsmen
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Pre-registration is required.
Co-written with John Fletcher, this play comes from “The Knight’s Tale” in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, which took it from a poem by Boccaccio. We will think about literary influence here, of course, but also explore the play’s…

The Presidents: Jefferson and Understanding the Declaration of Independence
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Pre-registration is required.
Thomas Jefferson wrote that in drafting the Declaration of Independence he meant to give expression to “the American mind.” What does this mean? What does the Declaration tell us about the American mind as it relates to the…

Civil Society and Political Economy
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Pre-registration is required.
Debates surrounding public policy often bifurcate the world into private markets and government. When social and/or economic problems arise, pundits are quick to propose government solutions to so-called failures of private…

Spontaneous (Dis)Order: Enlightenment Thinking on Anarchist Thought
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Pre-registration is required.
Spontaneous (Dis)Order: Enlightenment Thinkers on Anarchist Thought, is designed to explore the intellectual lineage from Enlightenment thought to the development of modern anarchism. Anarchism’s emphasis on decentralization,…

Tolstoy's War and Peace
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Pre-registration is required.
Soviet writer Isaac Babel said of Tolstoy’s War and Peace, “if the world could write by itself, it would write like Tolstoy.” The novel’s author seems to be especially interested in the contrast between the artificial and the…
A Timeless Reading Group: Harriet Martineau's Illustrations of Political Economy: Wine and Politics
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Pre-registration is required.
with Alice Temnick
This is the fourth in our series of Timeless reading groups about Harriet Martineau’s Illustrations of Political Economy. For this discussion, we will read and discuss the novella “French Wines and Politics.”…

Liberty After 50: Exploring John Rawls and Robert Nozick
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Pre-registration is required.
Two of the great works of contemporary political philosophy – John Rawls’s A Theory of Justice and Robert Nozick’s Anarchy, State, and Utopia – have turned 50 in recent years. The aim of these two one-day VRGs is to explore…

One Fell Swoop: Reading All of Shakespeare Plays: The Gentlemen of Verona
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Pre-registration is required.
Possibly Shakespeare’s earliest, and definitely one of his least popular plays, Two Gentlemen of Verona, winds its way through young love, betrayal, violence, treachery, and even pirates before settling on a happy ending. What…

A Timeless Reading Group: James Baldwin on Black Liberty
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Pre-registration is required.
James Baldwin’s masterfully written The Fire Next Time is a timeless exploration of racial injustice. This reading group will discuss this revolutionary book as well as supplemental readings on slavery, civil rights,…

Tragedy and Politics on Stage: An Encounter with Euripides
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Pre-registration is required.
Join us for a four-week discussion of ancient Greek tragedy. Together, we will read four plays by Euripides, the playwright Aristotle called “the most tragic poet.” We will consider how Euripides reimagines epic mythology and…

One Fell Swoop: Reading All of Shakespeare Plays: Love's Labour's Lost
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Pre-registration is required.
What is love? (Baby, don’t hurt me.) Shakespeare’s play is an extended, linguistically pyrotechnical exploration of the nature of love and its pleasure, dangers, and distractions. How does the play suggest we balance love and…

Past Sessions
Foundations of Modern Environmentalism
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Environmental activism, despite its omnipresent placement in our news feeds, is really nothing new. Thinkers back to (at least) John Locke and John Stuart Mill have expressed concern for the natural environment.
Join us for three…

Bruno Leoni: Freedom and the Law
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After WWII, classical liberal thinkers attempted to develop a new version of classical liberalism, more attuned with the needs and issues emerged through the century. Virtually all of them played a special attention to the law.…

Oakeshott's Moral Vision
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Michael Oakeshott offers his readers a striking description of what it means to be conservative—in politics and in moral life more generally. His vision is connected to a particular view of liberal education. This VRG will…

The Messiness of Progress: Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall and David Hume's Essays and Histories
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Hilary Mantel’s modern masterpiece Wolf Hall tells the story of the rise of Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII’s notorious minister and fixer. Usually cast as the villain in Tudor historical fiction, Cromwell instead emerges from…

J.S. Mill “Of the Liberty of Thought and Discussion"
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Mill's On Liberty provides readers with a ringing defense of free speech as a crucial component of a free society. This VRG will consider the effectiveness of Mill’s argument on its own, and in the light of today’s…

Classical Tragedy and the World of Ideas
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What can tragic dramas from the ancient world have to teach us today?
Join us to explore classic works by Sophocles and Aeschylus to explore the individual and philosophical implications of the tragic choices they portray.

The Election of 1800: Jefferson v. Adams
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In our current political climate, America can appear more divided than ever before. Politicians and pundits rage at one another, utilizing personal attacks, and each party seems to believe that the other side will destroy the…

Shakespeare’s First Tetralogy
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Shakespeare’s first tetralogy, composed of Richard II, I and 2 Henry IV, and Henry V, is a masterpiece of staged English politics and history. The plays represent the facts of history (more or less) but are deeply interested in…
