
Episode 431·Nov 6, 2025
Jonathan Leaf on What New Research about Men and Apes Says about Human Nature
The primate myth.
The Tikvah Podcast·Episode 7·Apr 8, 2014
Lord Acton famously proposed that “power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” In Jews and Power, Ruth Wisse provides an analysis of Jewish history that suggests the exact opposite. With neither sovereignty, nor centralized government, nor even mechanisms of self-defense, the Jewish people reconceived the meaning of their nation in manifestly moral terms. They fell prey to the danger of being corrupted by powerlessness. Generations of exilic Jews sought to live as “a light unto the nations,” seeking toleration and protection from their host rulers. But their political dependency left diaspora Jews vulnerable to being scapegoated–a tendency that has persisted despite the resumption of Jewish sovereignty in Israel. Ranging from the Hebrew Bible to contemporary politics, how does Professor Wisse’s analysis of Jewish history affect our understanding of the State of Israel, the United States, and all those nations who–admirably–insist on the moral dimension of political life?


Episode 431·Nov 6, 2025
The primate myth.

Episode 430·Oct 30, 2025
The last surviving fighter, Michael Smuss, died last week.

Episode 429·Oct 23, 2025
What will become of Hamas’s underground fortifications now that the fighting has stopped.

Episode 428·Oct 17, 2025
How Genesis gave rise to modern secularism
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
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