Dare to Think | Mere Liberty Podcast
En podcast av Kerry Baldwin
46 Avsnitt
-
Pro-Life Libertarian Women Redefine Abortion Debate
Publicerades: 2021-07-23 -
What is Christian Love?
Publicerades: 2021-07-09 -
Can Reformed Women Be Ordained Deacons?
Publicerades: 2021-06-21 -
What is Feminism in Simple Terms?
Publicerades: 2021-05-28 -
What Does it Mean to Think Well?
Publicerades: 2021-03-29 -
Fashion Theology and Public Discourse
Publicerades: 2021-01-22 -
BONUS: Adult Liberty Seminar - A Recorded Session
Publicerades: 2020-11-07 -
Learning to Critically Think Using the Socratic Method
Publicerades: 2020-11-07 -
Aimee Byrd, Recovering From Biblical Manhood and Womanhood
Publicerades: 2020-06-01 -
Give Me Liberty, by Rose Wilder Lane
Publicerades: 2020-04-17 -
Etienne de la Boétie
Publicerades: 2020-04-03 -
Rachel Green Miller, Beyond Authority and Submission
Publicerades: 2019-08-24 -
Interview with Gary Chartier; Myths of Anarchism
Publicerades: 2019-06-18 -
Interview with Gary Chartier; Anarchy and Legal Order (1 of 2)
Publicerades: 2019-03-25 -
Libertarianism, Abortion, and Fetal Self-Ownership PT 2 of 2
Publicerades: 2019-02-25 -
Libertarianism, Abortion, and Fetal Self-Ownership PT 1 of 2
Publicerades: 2019-02-11 -
Paul Jarvis, Company of One
Publicerades: 2019-01-12 -
The Christian Feminist View of Abortion
Publicerades: 2018-06-06 -
Flashes of Liberty: Frederick Bastiat
Publicerades: 2018-05-21 -
Flashes of Liberty: The Confucians Origin of Spontaneous Order
Publicerades: 2018-05-11
To challenge and rethink our paradigms for understanding society, by applying Reformed theology and philosophy to politics, religion, and culture, in order to encourage individual freedom and responsibility within our own spheres of influence. Mere Liberty is about liberty at its most fundamental core. It’s stripping away the rhetoric that we’ve become accustomed to hearing and challenging the paradigms that face us today. Mere Liberty is not about politics per se, rather it’s about the philosophies (and theology) behind the problems presented in politics and culture. Challenging the manner in which we see these problems will push us to think beyond mere political solutions that in effect isolate us from own responsibility, and eschewing responsibility means relinquishing our associated freedoms.
