Russ Roberts: From Chicago Price Theory to Practical Wisdom

Russell David Roberts (b. 1954) got his PhD through the University of Chicago, took the discipline’s tools seriously, and then spent four decades arguing that those tools cannot answer the questions that matter most.
Roberts grew up in Memphis. He studied economics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, graduating in 1975, and completed his doctorate at the University of Chicago in 1981 under Gary Becker (1930-2014). His dissertation, “A Positive Analysis of the Design of Government Transfer Programs,” examined the design of government transfer programs. Chicago at that moment carried the prestige of Milton Friedman (1912-2006), George Stigler (1911-1991), and Becker, and the department’s commitment to price theory and the explanatory reach of incentives shaped Roberts’s habits of mind. He absorbed the Chicago instinct to treat social phenomena as the product of choices under constraint, but he never developed the technical apparatus that defined the careers of many generational peers.
After Chicago he held positions at the University of Rochester, UCLA, Washington University in St. Louis (where he founded what became the Olin Business School’s Center for Experiential Learning), Stanford, and George Mason. The George Mason years placed him in proximity to Don Boudreaux (b. 1958), Tyler Cowen (b. 1962), and the Austrian-influenced scene around the Mercatus Center. Roberts adopted the Hayekian language of spontaneous order and emergent coordination, drawing on Friedrich Hayek’s (1899-1992) “The Use of Knowledge in Society” and the larger argument about dispersed information that runs through Hayek’s later work. He read Adam Smith (1723-1790) with care, and he came to treat The Theory of Moral Sentiments as the more important of Smith’s two books and a corrective to the caricature of Smith as a defender of self-interest.
Roberts’s earliest books took an unusual form (he told me about the first two after class when he was my professor at UCLA in 1989, even then Roberts was a dispenser of wisdom). The Choice: A Fable of Free Trade and Protection, published in 1994, presents the case for free trade through fictional dialogue, with David Ricardo (1772-1823) returning from the grave to instruct a contemporary American manufacturer. The Invisible Heart: An Economic Romance (2001) embeds debates about markets and morality in a romance between an economics teacher and an English teacher. The Price of Everything: A Parable of Possibility and Prosperity (2008) tells the story of a Cuban immigrant who comes to understand prices, shortages, and emergent order through a campus crisis. These books did not sell as textbooks or as scholarly monographs. They reached readers who wanted economic reasoning attached to characters and stories.
The shift that defined Roberts’s later career came with EconTalk, which he launched in 2006 in association with the Library of Economics and Liberty. The podcast began as an outlet for long-form interviews with economists. It grew into something larger. Roberts turned the program into a sustained inquiry across philosophy, religion, history, literature, medicine, and technology. His guests included Nassim Nicholas Taleb (b. 1960), Martha Nussbaum (b. 1947), Agnes Callard (b. 1976), Michael Lewis (b. 1960), Stephen Kotkin (b. 1959), and Thomas Piketty (b. 1971). Roberts let guests talk. His follow-up questions pulled conversations away from prepared themes and toward second-order doubts. By 2025 the program passed its thousandth episode and had become a model for the long-form interview as an intellectual genre.
Two currents run through the EconTalk archive. The first concerns the limits of economic knowledge. Roberts grew skeptical of empirical economics during the 2010s, a period when several high-profile findings in social psychology and economics failed to replicate. He came to argue that econometric work often claims more than it can deliver, that identification strategies tend to mask the assumptions on which they rest, and that the discipline’s appetite for policy recommendations exceeds its capacity to deliver reliable causal knowledge. He cites the Hayek essay “The Pretence of Knowledge,” delivered as Hayek’s 1974 Nobel address, and treats its argument as central to his understanding of what economists can honestly claim about the world.
The second current concerns moral philosophy. How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life (2014) presents Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments as a guide to ordinary ethical life. Roberts uses Smith’s idea of the impartial spectator to argue that human beings want not only to receive praise but to be praiseworthy, and that this distinction shapes the texture of social life in ways that price theory cannot capture. Wild Problems (2022) extends the line of thought. The book distinguishes tame problems, which admit of cost-benefit analysis, from wild problems, where the chooser cannot know in advance how the choice will alter the person who must live with it. Marriage, parenthood, and vocation belong to the second category. Roberts argues that flourishing, character, and the person one wishes to become must do the work that optimization cannot.
Roberts’s relationship to libertarianism complicates the picture. He came up in the Chicago and George Mason orbits and continues to write about markets with the conviction of a classical liberal. Yet his temperament resists the polemical style of much libertarian writing. He admires Smith more than Friedman, Hayek more than Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973), and he speaks with care about the moral and communal dimensions of commercial life. His critique of expert authority has libertarian roots, but it draws as much from his Jewish religious commitments and his reading of literature as from any policy program. During the COVID period he raised public questions about pandemic measures and the confidence of public health officials. He framed his doubts in epistemic terms. He said the experts did not know what they claimed to know, and that any institution making decisions under deep uncertainty should proceed with humility.
In 2021 Roberts moved to Jerusalem to become the third president of Shalem College, a liberal arts institution founded on the model of the American great books colleges. The appointment reflected his lifelong attachment to Jewish learning and his growing conviction that liberal education matters for civic life. Shalem teaches a core curriculum spanning the Hebrew Bible, the Greek and Roman classics, modern philosophy, and Zionist thought. Roberts has described the college as an attempt to train Israeli leaders who can hold conversations across the country’s deep political and religious divides. He sees the great books tradition as a corrective to the technical specialization that dominates Israeli higher education, much as it does American.
Roberts has also become a defender of conversation as a form of intellectual practice. He treats the long interview as a discipline that resists the compression and polemic of digital media. He often says he learns more from a guest who disagrees with him than from one who shares his priors, and he has tried to model what he calls steel-manning, the practice of stating an opponent’s argument in its strongest form before responding. The audience that has followed EconTalk over two decades suggests a sustained appetite exists for this kind of public reasoning, even in a media environment that rewards the opposite.
His written output continues alongside the podcast. His blog Cafe Hayek, co-written with Don Boudreaux, has run for two decades. He contributes to The Wall Street Journal and other outlets. He collaborated with the filmmaker John Papola (b. 1976) on the “Fear the Boom and Bust” rap video, a satirical confrontation between John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946) and Hayek that drew tens of millions of views and became a durable artifact of post-2008 economic argument.
Roberts’s trajectory widens while the Chicago training remains. The conviction that markets coordinate dispersed knowledge remains. What expands is the range of questions he treats as serious, the willingness to admit what economics cannot answer, and the patience to sit with the difficulty of human decisions that no model captures. He’s the economist who began with confidence in his discipline and grew, over time, into a public defender of humility, conversation, and the older traditions of moral and liberal learning.

Alliance Theory

Roberts came up inside three overlapping coalitions: Chicago price theory, George Mason Austrianism, and the broader libertarian policy ecosystem funded by Liberty Fund, the Mercatus Center, and adjacent donors. His early books defended free trade and markets in the standard idiom of that coalition. The vocabulary tracked the patronage.
After 2008, that coalition lost cultural ground. The financial crisis embarrassed deregulatory arguments. The libertarian moment passed. The replication crisis exposed empirical economics to ridicule from outside the field. A pure Chicago partisan in 2010 faced declining status. Roberts pivoted, and the pivot reveals the coalitional logic at work.
He did not abandon free-market commitments. He encased them inside a wider moral vocabulary drawn from Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments, Hayek’s “Pretence of Knowledge,” and the great books tradition. This new vocabulary opened alliances his old one had foreclosed. It let him speak with religious traditionalists who distrust market reductionism, with heterodox liberals who admire Smith’s communitarian side, with virtue ethicists, with Jewish and Christian intellectuals concerned about meaning, and with the educated center-right readers of The Atlantic and The New York Times who might never read a Mercatus white paper but might read a meditation on parenthood and uncertainty.
Notice what the pivot preserved. Roberts kept his Hoover fellowship. He kept Liberty Fund and the libertarian policy circuit. He kept Cafe Hayek with Don Boudreaux. He gained Shalem College, funded through the Tikvah Fund and connected to the American Jewish neoconservative intellectual network around Commentary, Mosaic, and Sapir. His move from Chicago price theorist to defender of practical wisdom doubled his coalitional reach without forcing him to leave any prior coalition. Under Pinsof’s frame, this is the optimal pattern. The coalitions Roberts entered did not require him to renounce the ones he already had.
EconTalk operates as the visible artifact of this coalitional positioning. The guest list functions as an alliance map. Inviting Thomas Piketty signals to liberals that Roberts is not a partisan. Inviting Nassim Taleb signals to heterodox readers that he respects critics of the technocratic center. Inviting Martha Nussbaum signals to philosophers and educated liberals that he reads outside economics. Inviting religious thinkers signals to traditionalist readers that he takes their concerns seriously. The mix keeps every adjacent coalition seeing Roberts as friendly. He never burns bridges with the left openly, and he never indulges the populist right hard enough to alienate liberal listeners. The result is a podcast whose audience spans factions that no longer speak to one another in any other forum.
His emphasis on “steel manning” and on conversation as discipline can be read as principled epistemic practice or as coalitional positioning. Both readings can hold at once. The practice protects him from accusations of bad faith from any coalition. A man who states his opponents’ arguments in their strongest form cannot easily be cast as a propagandist. The practice also lets him maintain alliances with figures whose actual positions he might reject if he stated his own with more force. Conversation as discipline becomes a way of keeping more doors open than a polemicist could.
His COVID-era criticism of public health authorities kept him outside the Joe Rogan coalition while letting him voice similar doubts. Heterodox liberals could still listen. Educated conservatives could still nod. The framing performed coalitional work.
The Shalem College presidency intensified an existing alignment with American Jewish neoconservative institutional life. Shalem was founded by figures connected to the Tikvah Fund and modeled on American great books colleges. Its donor and board ecosystem overlaps with the network around Mosaic, Sapir, the Hertog Foundation, and the broader project of training Israeli leaders in a particular intellectual register. Roberts’s appointment placed him at the center of a coalition that connects American Jewish intellectual conservatism, the great books revival in higher education, and Israeli liberal-Zionist institution-building. The vocabulary he brought, Smith and Hayek and liberal education, fits the host coalition cleanly.
Luke’s diagnostic questions clarify the position. Who provides Roberts’s status, income, and protection? Liberty Fund, Hoover, the Tikvah-Shalem network, the listener base of EconTalk, and the donor classes adjacent to each. Who might he risk angering by speaking plainly? Israeli right-wing politics, the donors of Shalem and Hoover, the libertarian donor class, the American Jewish neoconservative establishment, and the public health and academic-economics establishments whose authority he questions but whose intellectual respectability he still seeks. What truths might cost him his position? A sustained critique of Likud and of settler politics; a frank account of how Chicago price theory underwrote financial deregulation and the crisis it produced; a clear public position on Israeli policy under Netanyahu; a direct accounting of which libertarian arguments have failed empirically; a willingness to say which of his patrons fund work he privately considers shoddy. He does not speak to these.
Who benefits if his framing wins? The framing argues that markets coordinate dispersed knowledge, that experts overclaim, that liberal education in the great books tradition produces better citizens, that quantitative reasoning cannot answer the deepest questions, and that conversation across difference is the right posture for public life. Each claim has merit. Each claim also benefits a coalition. Markets-coordinate-knowledge serves market-funded institutions. Experts-overclaim serves donors who fund alternative intellectual infrastructure. Great-books-education serves Shalem, Hillsdale, St. John’s, and the broader Tikvah-adjacent network. Quantitative-reasoning-fails serves religious traditionalists who resist the imperial reach of social science. Conversation-across-difference serves figures positioned across multiple coalitions who need every alliance to remain warm.

Turner on the Tacit

Russ Roberts has spent forty years moving economic ideas from inside the profession to general readers. He hosts EconTalk since March 2006. He blogs at Cafe Hayek. He has written novels that teach economics through dialogue, a book on Adam Smith’s moral psychology, and a book on decisions that resist calculation. He sits at the Hoover Institution and presides at Shalem College in Jerusalem. He came up through Chicago in the late 1970s under Gary Becker. His training is libertarian. His instincts run to humility about what experts know.
Stephen Turner has spent forty years making the most careful philosophical case anyone has made against the concept of shared tacit knowledge. His argument is not against tacit knowledge as such. He grants the phenomenon. Experts do perform what they cannot articulate. Craftsmen do pass on skills no manual captures. Communities do cohere around understandings their members cannot fully say. Turner’s quarrel is with the move from individual tacit knowledge to collective tacit knowledge. He thinks the collective version is mythology. What looks like shared tacit understanding is individual brains that have been trained similarly through exposure, feedback, and habituation. There is no group mind. There is no transmitted practice as such. There are only people who have been shaped to feel and respond in similar ways, and who recognize each other when they meet the shaping.
Turner adds several moves to this base position. He argues that experts often rationalize tacit conclusions reached through other channels. He argues that coalitions form around shared trainings and feel their commitments as truths. He argues that what counts as expertise is itself a coalition decision. He argues that the tacit transfers through apprenticeship and resists explicit codification. He argues that the tacit is place-bound and person-bound. He argues that distance and abstraction lose something the master-apprentice relation holds. Michael Polanyi (1891-1976) gave the original account of personal knowledge. Turner refines it and strips out the social mysticism.
Roberts is a useful subject for the framework.
Begin with what Roberts does well by Turner’s lights. The EconTalk format runs two to three hours per episode. The guest list ranges across Nobel laureates, philosophers, founders, journalists, parents, doctors, and craftsmen. The format is too long for explicit content alone. Roberts could deliver the same propositional material in twenty minutes per episode. He does not, because he knows the format is not delivering propositional material. Listeners say years of listening have shaped them. They cannot name the lesson. They have absorbed a sensibility. They suspect clever models. They ask whether the data measure what they claim. They notice when an expert moves from his domain into another. They hesitate before confident causal claims about complex systems. Turner’s framework names what the format does. It transmits tacit professional habits through extended exposure to a model of those habits. It is apprenticeship by audio. It does what classroom economics rarely does.
His novels reach the same target through fiction. The Invisible Heart and The Price of Everything teach economic thinking through dialogue between characters. He chooses the form to match the knowledge. A textbook lists propositions. A conversation lets the reader feel a sensibility build over chapters. Roberts knows what he does.
His Adam Smith book reveals the same instinct. How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life sets aside The Wealth of Nations and turns to The Theory of Moral Sentiments. Smith’s earlier book argued that moral judgment runs through sympathy, social mirroring, and the impartial spectator each man carries in his head. That is a tacit theory of moral formation. We learn what is right through immersion, not from rules. Roberts gravitates to this Smith, not the rationalist Smith. The choice reveals his picture of how people work. It is a Turner-friendly picture.
Wild Problems extends the position. Roberts argues that the largest decisions of a life, whom to marry, whether to have children, what work to choose, resist expected-utility calculation. The right answers come through living, through trial, through the slow shaping of preferences the chooser cannot fully see in advance. The book is an economist’s surrender on the territory of the largest questions. Turner predicted this move. The fields most committed to explicit modeling reach the limits of modeling first.
So far, so Turner-compatible.
Now the inheritance from Hayek. Friedrich Hayek argued that markets coordinate knowledge no central planner can capture. Prices aggregate dispersed information held in millions of heads, none of which can be written down. The central planner sees only summaries. The local actor sees the particulars. Hayek’s case against socialism rested on this point. Roberts absorbed it. He calls his blog Cafe Hayek. His skepticism of empirical economics is Hayekian skepticism: studies report only what can be measured, and the world holds more knowledge than measurement reaches. His distrust of fine-grained policy claims (a stimulus program will create exactly this many jobs at this wage in this state) is Hayekian distrust of explicit confidence.
Turner shares the Hayekian point about the limits of explicit knowledge. So does the industrial-policy book. So does Robert Lighthizer. The agreement runs deep across these otherwise-different writers. They all see that mainstream economics has chased the modelable and lost track of the unmodelable.
A note on Roberts’s training. He came up at Chicago under Gary Becker, who pushed explicit rational-choice modeling further into human behavior than almost anyone. Becker applied utility maximization to marriage, crime, addiction, racial discrimination, and family decisions. The whole research program treated everything as susceptible to formal model. Roberts has spent four decades walking quietly away from that maximalism. EconTalk, the Smith book, Wild Problems, the long interviews with Nassim Nicholas Taleb, all carry him toward Hayekian and Smithian positions that respect tacit limits. He has not announced the exit. He has not picked a fight with the Becker school. He has spent his late career on different terrain. Turner notes the pattern. Coalition members rarely break publicly. They drift, and the drift accumulates.
Here the analysis turns critical. Roberts inherits half of Hayek’s argument and stops there.
The half he carries: state planning fails because no planner can capture market-tacit knowledge.
The half he does not carry: economics fails when it models only the parts that can be modeled.
The two halves of Hayek’s argument cut in opposite political directions. The first half supports free markets against state planning. The second half should make Roberts suspicious of his own profession’s confidence about trade, growth, and worker displacement. Mainstream economics, including Roberts’s wing of it, has done well on price competition in spot markets. It has done poorly on organization, management, R&D, engineering, supply chains, manufacturing apprenticeship lineages, and national strategic capacity. These are tacit-knowledge fields. They cannot be reduced to equations. They accumulate through generations of practice. They live in particular places among particular people. They are the phenomena Hayek’s argument should make Roberts careful about.
He has not been careful about them. He holds his free-trade commitment without the chastening the tacit-knowledge case for industrial policy should bring. His skepticism of empirical economics has not extended to skepticism of his profession’s blindness to production. The Hayekian sword swings in one direction and stays there.
Turner’s framework explains why. Roberts is inside a coalition. The coalition runs from Chicago in the 1970s through Hoover, through Cafe Hayek, through Mercatus, through George Mason economics. The coalition has tacit commitments its members feel as truths. Free trade is one of those commitments. Skepticism of industrial policy is another. Distrust of organized labor is a third. The libertarian self-description is a fourth. These commitments did not arrive through argument. They arrived through training, through community, through years of meetings, dinners, citations, and shared opponents. They sit beneath his arguments. The arguments arrive later in service of the commitments.
Turner’s account requires only that Russell be a man inside a coalition. Men inside coalitions develop tacit alignment with the coalition’s commitments. They feel certain inside it.
The October 2011 Krugman exchange tested the framework. Roberts wrote that Krugman is a Keynesian because he wants big government. Krugman replied that Keynesianism has nothing to do with government size, and that conservative economists hold quite Keynesian views about stabilization. Each man classifies the other by coalition affiliation. Each man’s coalition has prior commitments. Each man’s published reasons line up with those prior commitments.
Shalem College fits the pattern. Roberts took the presidency in March 2021. Shalem is a small Jerusalem liberal arts college built on Western great-books traditions, designed to form Israeli leaders through immersion in serious texts. The bet is that elite formation runs through immersion, not curricular delivery. That is a Turner-compatible bet. It is also a coalition bet. The great-books tradition has its own tacit commitments about which authors count, which questions deserve attention, which sensibilities the educated man should acquire. Roberts brings a coherent vision to the work. He brings a community vision.
His Smith reading shows the same logic. The Theory of Moral Sentiments offers a tacit theory of moral formation. It also offers Smith’s most palatable face to a libertarian audience. The earlier book gives Smith depth as a moral thinker without committing the reader to any particular economic policy. Roberts can affirm it without straining his free-market politics. The Wealth of Nations is closer to the political vein. Roberts addresses it less often, in part because his community has already mined it for the standard reading.
Now bring in the industrial-policy book’s central observation. Mainstream economics models price-setting in competitive markets and treats everything else as residual. The unmodeled residual is enormous: organization, management, R&D, engineering, workforce development, technology origins, product design, government strategy, the strategies nations use to compete. These are tacit-knowledge fields. They built America’s industrial base over generations of apprenticeship. They cannot be rebuilt from blueprints.
When trade policy treats these fields as adjustment costs, it destroys what it cannot see. Pennsylvania machinery lineages, Ohio tool-and-die traditions, North Carolina textile clusters, these were tacit accumulations. They held knowledge no spreadsheet captured. A generation lost them. The loss is now expensive to reverse, and may not be reversible inside the political and demographic conditions the United States now has.
Roberts could have applied Hayekian tacit-knowledge thinking to this loss. He could have written what the industrial-policy book has now written. He has the conversational instinct, the Smithian moral psychology, the Hayekian respect for distributed knowledge, the Wild Problems humility about explicit calculation. He could have produced the most penetrating libertarian critique of free-trade-as-efficiency that anyone has written. He did not. His coalition does not allow it.
A subtler point. The American elite did not abolish tacit production knowledge when it offshored manufacturing. It relocated dependence on that knowledge. Master machinists in Shenzhen and Taichung replaced the master machinists of Pennsylvania. American elites traded a domestic tacit-knowledge class that had political voice and union memory for a foreign tacit-knowledge class that had neither. The strategy held until 2020. Supply-chain shocks since have exposed the bet. The country that thought it had escaped dependence on shop-floor tacit knowledge discovered it had only moved that dependence overseas, and then lost the ability to verify what its suppliers do.
Roberts has not addressed this either. The free-trade case as he carries it has no room for the geopolitical fragility that follows from offshoring tacit production. His coalition treats supply-chain anxieties as protectionist cover. Turner predicts the response. Coalition membership filters what counts as a problem.
The dignity frame closes the analysis. A dignity-first economy treats tacit production knowledge as a public good worth preserving even at the cost of consumer surplus. An efficiency-first economy treats it as adjustment cost. The split is sharp at the rhetorical level and messier on the ground, but the contrast is real. Roberts sits squarely in the efficiency camp. He arrived there through training, community, and decades of shared work with people who hold the same view. The position feels true to him. Turner’s framework does not say the position is wrong. It says Roberts’s confidence in the position comes from the same tacit sources he correctly identifies in others.
Now the closing. Roberts is a skilled transmitter of one strand of tacit knowledge: the libertarian-Hayekian sensibility about markets, prices, humility, and the dangers of central planning. He has built unusual instruments for that transmission. EconTalk is the most patient and humane economics program in American media. His novels and his Smith book extend the work. Wild Problems pushes into territory most economists avoid. By the lights of his own coalition, he has done his job at the highest level.
By Turner’s lights, the limits of the achievement show. Roberts has not turned the tacit-knowledge framework on his own profession’s blindness to production. He has not extended Hayekian humility into the domains where Hayekian humility cuts against his coalition. He has not addressed the industrial-policy critique on its strongest ground. He has not noticed that offshoring relocated tacit dependence. He has not asked what a dignity-first reading of trade might look like inside a Smithian moral framework that takes producer well-being as seriously as consumer well-being.
These omissions are not personal failings. They are coalition consequences. Turner’s account does not predict that Roberts will fix them. It predicts that fixing them might require either coalition realignment, which his community will not undertake, or personal exit, which carries costs Roberts has chosen not to pay. He has chosen to stay. The Cafe Hayek byline, the Hoover fellowship, the libertarian self-description, the patient defense of free trade, these are his community markers. They mark also the boundary his thinking will not cross.
The lesson is not against Roberts. It is for the reader. The same framework applies to the reader’s own coalition, to mine, to Turner’s. Every alliance has its tacit commitments. Every member feels them as truths. The honest move is to name the boundary one’s own thinking will not cross, and to ask whether it should.
Roberts has not made that move publicly. He might still. He is seventy-one. Wild Problems showed he can change his mind on substantial questions. The libertarian coalition has thinned since 2016, and the free-trade consensus has lost ground inside Republican economics. Roberts has the tools and the platform. Whether he has the inclination is the question Turner’s framework cannot answer. That answer is up to Roberts.

The Choice: A Fable of Free Trade and Protection‘ (1994)

This book occupies an unusual place in the literature of political economy. On the surface, the book offers a pedagogical defense of comparative advantage in the form of a moral fable. Yet viewed through the lenses of Stephen P. Turner’s (b. 1951, est.) sociology of tacit knowledge, Robert Lighthizer’s (b. 1947) critique of neoliberal trade orthodoxy, Yoram Hazony’s (b. 1964) defense of national cohesion, and contemporary industrial policy literature, the book reveals a larger and more historically situated project: a defense of a particular governing vision of society. Roberts (b. 1954) argues for more than free trade. He advances an anthropology, an epistemology, and a hierarchy of social goods that came to dominate elite Western institutions during the late twentieth century.
Roberts’s central argument is elegant and rooted in classical liberal economics. Through the ghostly figure of David Ricardo (1772-1823), Roberts argues that trade is cooperative. Nations grow wealthier not by pursuing self-sufficiency but by specializing in what they do relatively best and exchanging with others. Americans produce pharmaceuticals. Japanese firms produce televisions. Both societies gain because specialization allocates labor and capital more efficiently. Roberts frames trade not as a tribal contest but as an extension of the division of labor. In one central formulation, trade “looks like competition” but is “really a form of cooperation.”
The rhetorical strength of The Choice lies in its ability to humanize abstract economics. Roberts grasps that comparative advantage runs against intuition. To the ordinary observer, imports appear to “replace” domestic labor. The closed factory stands visible. The dispersed gains from lower prices and redirected investment do not. Roberts therefore builds the narrative around Ed Johnson, the fictional president of Stellar Television Company in Star, Illinois. Johnson’s fear of Japanese imports reflects the emotional and political pull of protectionism. Roberts does not paint him as selfish or ignorant. Johnson stays loyal to his workers, takes pride in his community, and worries about the survival of a productive way of life. Roberts avoids caricaturing protectionist sentiment because he sees that the anxieties produced by globalization are morally serious.
The book’s most famous pedagogical device explains comparative advantage through what Roberts calls “the roundabout way to wealth.” America no longer manufactures televisions directly. Instead, it makes pharmaceuticals and exchanges them for televisions produced abroad. Roberts compares this logic to a business executive who hires a secretary rather than typing his own letters. Even if the executive types faster, his time pays better elsewhere. The analogy works because it folds international trade into the ordinary logic of specialization that governs daily life.
Yet this reduction exposes the limits of Roberts’s framework. Turner’s sociology of tacit knowledge shows that the secretary metaphor oversimplifies productive systems by treating labor as a portable and quantifiable unit of time. Roberts’s model leans on explicit knowledge: measurable labor inputs, visible price signals, and transferable economic functions. Turner suggests that much of what sustains industrial capability consists instead of tacit knowledge: the unwritten skills, institutional habits, practical judgments, and experiential expertise accumulated within communities and production ecosystems.
This distinction carries major implications for political economy. Explicit knowledge yields to mathematization, standardization, and remote management. Tacit knowledge is thick, local, experiential, and resistant to abstraction. A semiconductor engineer, a tool-and-die specialist, a machinist, or a production manager often holds competencies that no manual or optimization model captures. Such knowledge grows through participation in living institutional networks.
The modern industrial policy literature argues that mainstream economics undervalues these dimensions of production because they do not fit formal models. Industrial Policy for the United States: Winning the Competition for Good Jobs and High-Value Industries argues that economics remains weak at understanding organization, engineering, management, workforce development, industrial strategy, and technological learning because these domains resist mathematization. Mainstream economics excels at modeling price competition under idealized conditions. It falters at explaining how productive ecosystems emerge, decay, and regenerate over time.
Viewed through Turner’s framework, the closure of Stellar Television Company in Star, Illinois, represents more than a labor-market adjustment. It is the destruction of a knowledge ecosystem. Roberts treats the disappearance of television manufacturing primarily as efficient resource reallocation. Turner suggests that once tacit industrial knowledge leaves a region, retraining programs and fresh capital might not bring it back. Entire chains of apprenticeship, supplier relationships, engineering competence, and production culture can collapse permanently.
This insight sharpens the political implications of deindustrialization. The loss is not only economic. It is civilizational. A productive community holds layers of embedded competence that sustain social identity and institutional continuity. When these ecosystems disappear, unemployment statistics and consumer price indexes capture little of the damage.
The conflict here runs deeper than free trade versus protectionism. It pits competing forms of knowledge and competing models of governance against each other. Elite institutions privilege explicit, thin, and portable expertise because such knowledge yields to administrative management. Financial metrics, optimization algorithms, and econometric models allow coordination across global systems. Tacit knowledge, by contrast, stays place-bound and resists distant control.
This epistemological divide intersects with the structure of modern elite alliances. Alliance Theory suggests that coalitions form not only around material interests but around prestige systems and institutional incentives. The late neoliberal order privileged mobility, abstraction, credentialism, and cosmopolitan adaptability. Men whose expertise could move fluidly across global institutions rose in status. Portable knowledge gained institutional legitimacy. Locally embedded productive competence became invisible within elite discourse.
This helps explain why many working-class and industrial communities experienced globalization as more than economic disruption. It registered as status degradation. The issue was not simply declining wages. The collapse of social recognition attached to productive labor cut deeper. The master machinist, the factory foreman, and the skilled technician no longer held positions of cultural prestige within elite narratives of progress.
Lighthizer’s critique of free trade orthodoxy addresses this moral dimension directly. In No Trade Is Free, Lighthizer argues that modern trade theory often treats the disruption of domestic production as an unfortunate but acceptable side effect of aggregate efficiency gains. The consumer becomes the primary unit of analysis. Lower prices stand as the highest social good. Yet this framework marginalizes the dignity of production.
Lighthizer’s intervention reframes trade policy as a moral and constitutional question. What is the economy for? Does political economy aim at maximizing consumption possibilities, or at sustaining the conditions necessary for citizens to live stable and socially recognized lives?
This dignity-centered critique departs from neoliberal assumptions. Roberts portrays Ed Johnson sympathetically, but the narrative expects him to overcome his attachment to industrial locality through acceptance of Ricardian logic. The deeper challenge Lighthizer and related critics pose is that productive dignity might constitute a primary social good.
A trade regime that prioritizes cheap televisions over the stability of a father’s job in Ohio is not just making an efficiency calculation. It reorganizes the hierarchy of social prestige. It privileges the mobile, global consumer over the rooted producer. The resulting transformation is not only economic but anthropological.
This anthropological dimension becomes clearer through the work of Hazony. Hazony argues that stable political orders depend on thick national loyalties, historical continuity, and mediating institutions such as families, religious communities, and local associations. The neoliberal trade order often operates as the economic analogue of liberal universalism. Borders, local traditions, and industrial particularities appear as irrational frictions obstructing globally optimized exchange.
Roberts’s anthropology remains liberal and individualistic. Men appear primarily as utility-maximizing cooperators who benefit from widening networks of exchange. Resistance to globalization gets framed as emotional attachment to outdated modes of production. The sociological critique that Hazony and Turner advance suggests something different. Men are not abstract utility calculators. They are embedded creatures whose identities emerge from place, kinship, institutional continuity, and inherited forms of social cooperation.
From this perspective, opposition to free trade does not reduce to economic ignorance or industrial nostalgia. It often reflects rational concern about the erosion of the mediating institutions that sustain democratic life. Industrial communities historically gave more than wages. They created durable forms of association, apprenticeship, discipline, intergenerational continuity, and civic participation. When such structures collapse, the consequences run far beyond GDP measurements.
Roberts leans on Frédéric Bastiat’s (1801-1850) distinction between “the seen and the unseen.” The closed factory is visible. The lower prices and redirected opportunities produced by trade are diffuse and invisible. This remains an enduring part of the liberal economic tradition. Yet modern industrial policy critics complicate Bastiat’s framework by arguing that some supposedly unseen costs are not temporary adjustments but long-term strategic vulnerabilities.
Roberts’s fable assumes a world of peaceful and neutral exchange. It does not fully account for geopolitical rivalry, strategic dependency, or supply-chain coercion. The “roundabout way to wealth” grows more dangerous when critical production capacities concentrate within rival powers. Semiconductor manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, rare earth minerals, energy systems, and telecommunications infrastructure are not ordinary commodities. They are components of national sovereignty.
The COVID-19 pandemic and rising tensions with China intensified these concerns. Advanced societies discovered that aggressive efficiency optimization had often eliminated redundancy, resilience, and domestic productive capacity. Comparative advantage remained economically rational under idealized conditions. Yet states recognized that strategic dependency could become a geopolitical liability.
This does not invalidate Ricardo’s insights. Comparative advantage remains a foundational truth of economic cooperation. The stronger critique aims not at trade but at reductionism. The neoliberal order treated efficiency as the master value to which all other goods must subordinate. Questions of sovereignty, dignity, tacit competence, regional cohesion, and civic stability fell aside because they resisted formal quantification.
A serious critique must avoid romanticizing industrial production. Tacit knowledge lives outside factories and traditional manufacturing. Silicon Valley, elite finance, advanced software engineering, logistics systems, and biomedical research also depend on tacit institutional learning and embedded expertise. The question is which forms of tacit knowledge received institutional prestige, political protection, and moral recognition.
Part of the political realignment of the early twenty-first century reflects a widening revolt against the prestige hierarchy embedded within neoliberal governance. Citizens sensed that elite institutions valued abstract optimization over embedded social life. The language of efficiency appeared indifferent to community dissolution, declining family formation, regional decay, and productive displacement.
The resulting backlash does not reduce to irrational populism. It reflects a deeper struggle over the moral purpose of political economy. Do societies organize themselves around aggregate consumption and global efficiency, or around the flourishing of concrete national communities composed of historically situated citizens?
Roberts’s The Choice remains a compelling and elegant defense of the logic of exchange. Its pedagogical clarity and moral seriousness set it apart from many technocratic defenses of globalization. Yet viewed through Turner, Hazony, Lighthizer, and the industrial policy literature, the book appears less as a neutral economic primer than as a defense of a particular governing vision of modernity. It elevates portability over rootedness, abstraction over embedded competence, and aggregate efficiency over productive dignity.
The contemporary political realignment across much of the West suggests that growing numbers of citizens reject this hierarchy of values. They are not simply demanding higher wages or tariff protection. They are contesting an entire social order that privileges mobile expertise and global optimization over the stability of local communities and productive institutions.
The deepest challenge facing liberal democratic capitalism today is therefore not whether trade is beneficial. Trade clearly generates wealth. The deeper question is whether advanced societies can integrate the efficiencies of global exchange with the human need for dignity, rootedness, productive competence, and civic continuity. The answer to that question might determine not only the future of trade policy but the future legitimacy of democratic governance.

War and International Politics

John Mearsheimer’s essay offers a direct rebuke to the worldview that animates Russell Roberts’s The Choice: A Fable of Free Trade and Protectionism. Roberts writes from inside the late-twentieth-century liberal consensus that Mearsheimer dissects. The two men do not engage each other directly, yet Mearsheimer names Roberts’s tribe with precision when he cites the Kent Clark Center surveys: eighty-five percent of leading economists either agree or strongly agree that freer trade improves productive efficiency and consumer welfare. Roberts speaks for that consensus. Mearsheimer argues that the consensus has marched the West into strategic peril.
The clash between these two books begins with a simple question: what is the international system for? Roberts answers cooperation, specialization, and aggregate prosperity. Mearsheimer answers survival in anarchy. These answers cannot coexist. One must subordinate the other. Roberts subordinates security to consumer welfare because he writes during a moment when American security looks settled. Mearsheimer says that moment has ended.
The Choice imagines a world where David Ricardo’s logic governs international exchange. Nations specialize. Americans make pharmaceuticals. Japanese firms make televisions. Both societies grow richer. The factory that closes in Star, Illinois reflects the cost of progress. Ed Johnson, the fictional president of Stellar Television, must overcome his attachment to industrial production and accept that his workers will find better employment elsewhere. The closed factory stands as the seen cost. The dispersed gains stand as the unseen benefit. Frédéric Bastiat instructs us to count both.
Mearsheimer instructs us to count a third thing that Bastiat and Roberts both miss: the strategic position of the state in international anarchy. The factory in Star, Illinois made televisions in the 1980s. It might have made radar components, communications equipment, or military electronics in the 1940s. It might need to make such things again. Roberts treats production capacity as fungible. Mearsheimer treats it as the substrate of national power. Once a state hollows out its industrial base, it cannot easily rebuild that base when geopolitical conditions change. The tacit knowledge disappears. The supplier networks collapse. The engineering talent moves to finance or law. The state grows wealthy in the short run and weak in the long run.
Roberts’s secretary metaphor captures the problem with clarity. The executive types faster than the secretary, but his time pays better elsewhere. So he hires the secretary. The economic logic is elegant. The political logic is naive. The executive assumes the secretary will remain his secretary. He assumes she will not raise her rates, walk out, sabotage his files, or sell his correspondence to a rival firm. In domestic life, the law and the police enforce contracts. In international life, no such enforcement exists. As Mearsheimer puts it, the international system is anarchic, not hierarchical. The American executive who hired a Chinese secretary in 1995 finds himself negotiating with a different person in 2025.
Roberts cannot easily incorporate this point because his framework treats trading partners as black boxes that supply goods at prices. He follows mainstream economics in privileging absolute gains over relative gains. Both America and China grow richer from trade. The aggregate welfare function rises. Roberts is satisfied. Mearsheimer notes that this satisfaction depends on ignoring the balance of power. If China grows wealthier faster than America, China can convert that wealth into military capability. Mearsheimer cites Michael Mastanduno’s finding that economists stand almost alone in caring only about absolute gains. Most Americans, like most citizens of most states, care about relative gains. They sense intuitively what Mearsheimer makes explicit: that prosperity without security is a precarious condition.
The disagreement runs deeper still. Roberts treats survival as a non-issue because he writes during the unipolar moment. The Choice appeared in 1994. The Soviet Union had collapsed three years earlier. China remained poor. Japan had entered its long stagnation. American hegemony looked permanent. Francis Fukuyama had announced the end of history. Roberts wrote inside that consensus. He did not need to address survival because survival looked guaranteed.
Mearsheimer describes the unipolar moment as a historical anomaly that produced a generation of policymakers and intellectuals who never had to think about great power politics. Many came of age during a period when the subject was largely irrelevant. They built theories of international cooperation on the assumption that the absence of great power rivalry was the natural state of affairs. Roberts’s confidence in trade as cooperation rests on that assumption. Remove the assumption and the argument loses its grip.
The world has changed. Mearsheimer dates the return of multipolarity to around 2017. China has the economic and military capability to qualify as a great power. Russia has reasserted itself. The United States no longer enjoys the security it took for granted. The Trump administration named the new condition: great power competition has returned. Roberts’s argument addresses a world that no longer exists.
Consider the COVID-19 pandemic as a test case. Advanced societies discovered that decades of efficiency optimization had eliminated redundancy and resilience. American hospitals could not source masks. American pharmacies could not source basic medications. Roberts’s logic had been applied throughout the system. America had stopped making these things because other countries made them more cheaply. The savings went to consumers and shareholders. The cost arrived when the supply chains broke.
Roberts has no resources for thinking about this problem. His framework treats domestic production capacity as a luxury that protectionists demand for sentimental reasons. He cannot recognize productive capacity as a strategic asset because he has no theory of strategy. He has a theory of exchange.
The same problem appears in his treatment of Ed Johnson. Roberts portrays Johnson sympathetically. Johnson loves his workers and his community. He worries about the loss of a productive way of life. Roberts respects these feelings but expects Johnson to overcome them through education in Ricardian logic. The deeper problem is that Johnson’s attachments might track something real that Roberts cannot see. Johnson’s community provides not only employment but the substrate of a self-governing society. It produces voters, soldiers, engineers, and skilled workers. When the factory closes, the community decays. When the community decays, the state loses the human material it needs to defend itself.
Mearsheimer makes the political point that Roberts evades. Politics is a contact sport. Nations disagree about fundamental values. Those disagreements sometimes turn violent. In international anarchy, no higher authority enforces the peace. A state that hollows out its industrial base in pursuit of cheap consumer goods finds itself unable to mobilize when threats appear. The state that took Ricardo’s advice in the 1990s might face the consequences in the 2030s.
Roberts has one resource against this critique. He can argue that trade reduces the likelihood of war. This is the old liberal hope that commerce produces peace. Mearsheimer addresses the hope directly. He notes that liberal theories of international politics dominated the unipolar ecosystem and still influence policy debates. They are not helpful for understanding the current system. States cooperate when their interests align and their survival is not at stake. They compete when those conditions change. The cooperation of the 1990s reflected American dominance, not the pacifying force of trade. Now that American dominance has weakened, the cooperation weakens with it.
Roberts’s framework treats Ed Johnson’s protectionist instincts as economic ignorance. Mearsheimer treats those instincts as tracking something Roberts cannot see: that the state Johnson lives in might need to fight for its survival, and that fight will require the industrial capacity his factory represents. The protectionist might be wrong about the price of televisions. He might be right about the survival of the nation.
The argument cuts further. Mearsheimer notes that survival in his framework means more than physical existence. It means the maintenance of a state’s physical base, its territory, its population, its resources, and its capacity to determine its own political fate. A state that depends on rivals for semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, rare earths, and telecommunications equipment has surrendered part of its political autonomy. It cannot fully determine its own foreign policy because its rivals can punish it through trade. The Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 showed how rapidly trade relationships convert into instruments of coercion. The dependencies that looked benign in 2021 looked like vulnerabilities in 2022.
Roberts has no place for coercion in his model. Trade is voluntary exchange between consenting parties. Each side gains. Coercion appears in his framework only in the form of protectionist policies that prevent willing buyers from purchasing from willing sellers. The state that imposes tariffs is the villain. The state that uses supply chains as weapons does not exist in The Choice. Mearsheimer brings that state back into view.
The deeper Mearsheimer critique aims at the Bastiat distinction Roberts deploys with such skill. Bastiat taught us to see the unseen costs of protectionism. Mearsheimer teaches us to see a different unseen cost: the strategic vulnerability that accumulates when a state optimizes for consumer welfare and ignores production. The closed factory in Star, Illinois is visible. The lost capacity to produce military electronics is not. The cheap televisions are visible. The dependency on rival powers is not. Bastiat told a true story about half the picture. Roberts repeats that half-truth. Mearsheimer completes it.
What does this mean for evaluating Roberts? The Choice remains an elegant exposition of comparative advantage. Its pedagogy works. Its rhetorical skill commands respect. As a defense of trade in a world of secure great powers, the book holds up. As a guide to policy in a world of intensifying great power competition, the book fails. It fails not because Roberts is foolish but because he wrote in conditions that no longer hold. The unipolar moment ended. Mearsheimer’s framework reasserts the older logic that the unipolar moment had suppressed. That logic privileges survival over consumption, relative gains over absolute gains, and strategic autonomy over cosmopolitan efficiency.
Roberts speaks for the economists who built the global trading system. He speaks for the policymakers who let the industrial base contract. He speaks for the consumers who enjoyed the cheap goods. Mearsheimer speaks for the older tradition that economists displaced. He speaks for Thucydides, Hobbes, Clausewitz, and Rousseau. He speaks for the men who built states and fought wars and understood that the international system is a dangerous place. The argument between them is the argument of our political moment. Roberts won the late twentieth century. Mearsheimer might win the twenty-first.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

If Mearsheimer is right, then the entire edifice of liberal political theory, liberal journalism, liberal education, liberal foreign policy, and liberal institutional self-understanding rests on a fundamental mistake about what humans are. The mistake is not a minor technical error. It is categorical. It produces systematic failures across every domain where the mistake is institutionally operative.
Russ Roberts concedes this Mearsheimer frame without saying so. We do not reason our way to virtue. We absorb it by watching others watch us. The impartial spectator is a social construct, not a private rational faculty. Adam Smith (1723–1790) is the moral philosopher of social embeddedness, not the patron saint of atomism that libertarians use as a logo.
Roberts then writes Wild Problems. The book argues that the biggest decisions in a life cannot be made through cost-benefit analysis. Whether to marry, have children, switch careers, change cities, change faiths. These choices change the chooser. The man on the other side of the decision is not the same man who made it. Standard economic rationality breaks down.
If Mearsheimer is right, what follows?
His libertarian foundation falls. The autonomous chooser of free-market theory does not exist. People do not select values from a menu. Values arrive before the chooser. Markets might still produce useful outcomes, but the justification cannot rest on respecting individual choices, because most choices are not chosen.
His Hayekian formation survives better. Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992) emphasized tacit knowledge, emergent order, and the limits of rationalist planning. That tradition sits closer to Burke than to Locke. Mearsheimer’s critique lands hardest on Rawlsian liberalism and on the universalist human rights project. It lands softer on Hayek, who already conceded that society shapes the mind.
The Jerusalem move tells the truth his books cannot quite tell. Israel is a particularist state. It rests on one people, one faith, one history, one language. It is the antithesis of the human rights universalism Mearsheimer attacks. A liberal universalist might admire Israel from a distance. He might not move there, run a Jewish college, and raise grandchildren inside Torah. Roberts acts on Mearsheimer’s anthropology with his feet.
The tension is that his public voice still sounds liberal. He defends choice. He defends markets. He often talks like a man who believes in autonomous reasoners. His life says he doesn’t. He has not closed the gap between his rhetoric and his practice.
Now apply my four questions.
His income and status came from the libertarian donor and think tank circuit before Shalem. Now they come from a particularist Jewish institution funded by donors who want Jews to know who they are. Two patron groups, two anthropologies, one man.
The people he risks angering by speaking plainly are the libertarian fellow travelers who still need his old framework. If he says the quiet thing, that liberalism cannot sustain a human life and a particular tradition can, he loses part of his old audience. If he stays vague, he keeps everyone.
Who benefits if his current framing wins? Roberts splits the difference. Markets and choice on the public side, tradition and faith on the personal side. This suits donors and audiences who want both. The honest Mearsheimer-compatible version says the public order rests on the private particularism, and the private particularism cannot survive a universalist public order. He has not said that out loud.
What truth might cost him his position? That liberalism is parasitic on the religious and tribal substrates it claims to transcend. That his own Jewish Orthodoxy is not a private hobby grafted onto a liberal life but the ground from which a tolerable life grows. That the libertarian economics he taught for thirty years rests on an anthropology Mearsheimer has shown to be false.
Roberts has been more honest than most in his cohort. The remaining step is to say plainly what his biography has already said.

The Invisible Heart: An Economic Romance‘ (2000)

This book attempts to fuse romantic narrative, economic pedagogy, literary humanism, and political philosophy into a single dramatic structure. Roberts does more than defend capitalism. He constructs a moral anthropology of liberal society grounded in individual agency, voluntary exchange, responsibility, and striving. The novel therefore belongs less to commercial fiction than to the older genre of the novel of ideas, where characters embody rival philosophical vocabularies competing for authority in modern life. Economics, in Roberts’s hands, becomes a rival account of what it means to be human.
Sam Gordon, an economics teacher at the elite Edwards School in Washington, D.C., stands at the center of the book. Sam is eccentric, combative, and pedagogically theatrical. His classroom serves as more than a setting for exposition. It functions as the novel’s primary moral battleground. Sam frames his course as “Life Skills 101,” signaling at once that economics, on his view, concerns not money in the narrow sense but the logic of human choice. Economics becomes the study of whatever gives a man satisfaction and contentment, a framework wide enough to include love, risk, vocation, art, charity, and moral aspiration.
This pedagogical commitment drives the book’s narrative engine. Sam does not lecture abstractly. He stages demonstrations. In one scene, he places money on his desk and invites students to seize it, escalating from a dollar bill to five dollars and then to a twenty dangling overhead. The exercise dramatizes self-interest as a universal motivator. Roberts uses the moment not just to defend market incentives but to strip away the suspicion surrounding them. Men respond to incentives because incentives are inseparable from desire, ambition, and agency.
Sam’s lesson on oil reserves introduces a recurring theme: the adaptive character of decentralized social systems. Students calculate how long global oil reserves might last under existing consumption patterns, and Sam explains that the world will not exhaust its oil because rising prices alter behavior, encourage conservation, and stimulate innovation. Roberts thereby introduces the Hayekian insight running beneath much of the book. Markets are not static stockpiles. They are systems of discovery shaped by dispersed knowledge and entrepreneurial adaptation.
Sam draws controversy inside the novel not for teaching economics but for teaching students to read society through a rival moral framework. Senator Hunt, a powerful member of the school board, eventually moves against Sam because his daughter Amy has come under his influence. The charge is not incompetence but “imbalance” and ideological “proselytizing.” Roberts thus exposes the deeper stakes of the educational conflict. The book asks whether elite institutions tolerate intellectual pluralism once foundational assumptions about authority, expertise, and social control come under challenge.
Roberts pairs Sam against Laura Silver, a young English teacher shaped by literary humanism and progressive moral instincts. Laura at first appears to embody the classic Romantic suspicion of commercial civilization. Her worldview rests on Wordsworth’s lament that “getting and spending, we lay waste our powers.” Roberts frames her through poetry, Dickens, sympathy, and moral introspection. Laura fears that market society reduces human value to calculation and weakens the moral imagination required for solidarity and compassion.
Roberts’s willingness to take Laura’s concerns seriously lifts the book above ideological caricature. She is not stupid, cynical, or malicious. Her literary sensibility gives voice to enduring anxieties about modern capitalism: the commodification of life, the loneliness of individualism, and the prospect that economic efficiency may coexist with spiritual impoverishment. Roberts grasps that literary culture often preserves forms of moral insight neglected by economic reasoning.
The Sam-Laura relationship therefore becomes more than romantic tension. It carries a sustained philosophical dialogue between two rival accounts of human flourishing. Roberts builds many of the book’s strongest scenes around this conflict. One concerns homelessness and charitable giving. Laura praises her brother’s practice of distributing cans of V-8 juice to homeless men so that they cannot spend cash on drugs or alcohol. Sam counters that such behavior transforms charity into disguised paternalism because it imposes the donor’s conception of the recipient’s good. Roberts does not argue that addiction is harmless. He argues that compassion becomes morally compromised once it shades into managerial control over the lives of others.
The critique widens into a broader attack on behavioral paternalism and technocratic governance. Sam mocks the mentality he calls “Mr. Knows-better-than-you-do,” the assumption that educated experts hold the authority to reorganize ordinary life because individuals misjudge their own interests. Long debates over motorcycle helmets, seat belts, and safety regulations carry the argument forward. Sam holds that when the state compels behavior on the claim that individuals underestimate risk, it strips adults of the responsibility required for human maturity.
The philosophical depth of the argument emerges through Sam’s invocation of the “Dream Machine,” Roberts’s adaptation of Robert Nozick’s “Experience Machine.” The premise is simple but searching. If a man could enter a machine that guaranteed endless pleasure, safety, and satisfaction while eliminating uncertainty and struggle, should he do so? Sam insists that such a life fails the test of human flourishing because flourishing rests not on comfort but on striving, risk, earned achievement, and authentic encounter with reality. The book therefore grounds its defense of liberty less in efficiency than in existential anthropology. Freedom holds value because responsibility, uncertainty, and the prospect of failure form the conditions of human life.
Roberts returns to this theme through Sam’s father, who insists that “danger and delight grow on the same stalk.” The phrase condenses the moral logic of the book. Efforts to eliminate risk diminish delight, initiative, and growth. Roberts therefore criticizes not only state paternalism but the broader cultural desire for managerial insulation from uncertainty.
Yet the book does not dismiss literary humanism in favor of economics. Roberts attempts a synthesis. A revealing moment occurs when Laura recites Tennyson’s “Ulysses” from memory in the school courtyard. The poem’s closing line, “to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield,” becomes central to Sam’s moral imagination. Roberts links capitalist striving with poetic aspiration. He argues that market society at its best channels the same restless human energy celebrated in Romantic and Victorian literature. Economic liberty is not merely material. It is existential and heroic.
This synthesis clarifies the meaning of the title. Roberts transforms Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” into an “invisible heart.” Markets earn defense not because they produce wealth but because they permit decentralized human striving, creativity, experimentation, and voluntary cooperation. The market becomes a moral ecology.
The political subplot of HealthNet and the Office of Corporate Responsibility carries these themes into the institutional realm. Erica Baldwin, director of the OCR, at first appears to embody idealistic public-interest regulation. Roberts reveals that the agency operates on incentive structures no less than corporations do. Baldwin acknowledges that the OCR needs not merely evidence against HealthNet but a dramatic scandal capable of expanding the agency’s jurisdiction and prestige. She distinguishes between ordinary “dirt” and politically transformative “mud.” The latter might elevate the OCR to Cabinet-level importance and give it the institutional teeth required to reshape corporate behavior.
These scenes draw on public-choice theory. Roberts rejects the moral binary under which markets represent selfishness while bureaucracies embody altruism. Regulators seek power, expansion, visibility, prestige, and career advancement. Bureaucratic incentives shape conduct no less than profit motives shape corporate behavior. Erica Baldwin is not only ideological. She is strategic.
Roberts also avoids collapsing into crude pro-corporate apologetics. Sam distinguishes between being “pro-business” and “pro-capitalism.” He opposes subsidies, tariffs, quotas, and state favoritism even when such policies benefit corporations, because they distort competition and harm consumers. Roberts defends competitive capitalism. The legitimate task of business leadership, on Sam’s view, is to create value inside a competitive order, not to cultivate political protection or symbolic moral prestige through fashionable philanthropy.
As literature, The Invisible Heart is uneven. Sam Gordon often speaks less like a psychologically realistic character than like an inspired economics lecturer who has wandered into a novel. Dialogue at times functions as exposition disguised as conversation. Some secondary characters, especially inside the OCR subplot, verge on schematic allegory. These limitations are inseparable from the book’s ambitions. Roberts writes in the tradition of the philosophical novel, where ideas drive characterization.
Roberts dramatizes economic reasoning as a moral framework. He grasps that debates over capitalism are not disputes over efficiency or production alone. They concern rival visions of adulthood, freedom, dignity, authority, and human flourishing.
In retrospect the book appears prescient. Long before the rise of behavioral economics, nudging, therapeutic governance, and modern technocratic paternalism, Roberts anticipated the expansion of managerial logic into ordinary life. He recognized that the central conflict of advanced liberal societies might come to turn on who holds the authority to define rational behavior for everyone else.
The Invisible Heart argues that capitalism at its best rests upon faith in ordinary men. Roberts believes that men, despite their flaws and limits, can navigate uncertainty without continuous supervision from moral or bureaucratic elites. The invisible heart of the book is not greed but striving: the human impulse “to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”

The Price of Everything: A Parable of Possibility and Prosperity‘ (2008)

This book dramatizes economic reasoning through narrative, character, romance, migration, and the texture of ordinary life. Roberts does more than explain economics. He tries to reshape the reader’s perception of social reality. The novel argues that modern prosperity emerges from decentralized cooperation so intricate that it becomes invisible to those who depend on it. For Roberts, economics is not the study of greed or money. It is the study of coordination, knowledge, adaptation, and the fragile arrangements that allow strangers to cooperate peacefully without central direction.
The novel announces its argument through its epigraphs. Roberts juxtaposes Oscar Wilde’s (1854-1900) aphorism about knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing, Deborah Gordon’s reflections on ant colonies, a passage from the film K-PAX on ecological interconnectedness, and Friedrich Hayek’s (1899-1992) warning that economics reveals how little human beings understand about the systems they imagine they can design. The combination signals twin ambitions. Roberts defends market coordination while rejecting the caricature of economics as spiritually barren utilitarianism. The project cuts both ways. It critiques centralized planning and recovers a sense of wonder about decentralized order.
The narrative opens with a natural disaster that turns into a moral and political crisis. After an earthquake in California, a giant retailer called Big Box doubles its prices. Customers searching for flashlights, batteries, milk, and emergency supplies encounter what looks like naked profiteering at a moment of collective vulnerability. Roberts stages the scene to provoke moral revulsion. Its force depends on a democratic intuition embedded in modern culture: prices should reflect fairness. The resulting outrage propels Ramon Fernandez, a charismatic Cuban-American tennis star at Stanford, into anti-corporate activism.
At first glance the novel appears to align with familiar critiques of corporate capitalism. Ramon condemns Big Box for exploiting frightened consumers. Protest movements emerge. Activists mobilize. Students radicalize. Roberts allows the emotional force of anti-corporate populism to unfold before he introduces the central intellectual challenge. The question is not whether the outrage makes sense. It does. The deeper question concerns whether moral outrage alone can coordinate scarce resources during a crisis.
This move from moral intuition to systemic analysis forms the book’s central argument. Roberts asks readers to separate intentions from consequences, emotional perception from informational function. Prices, in his framework, are not instruments of profit extraction. They are communication systems. The sudden price increase during the earthquake operates not as cruelty but as a signal that discourages hoarding, encourages conservation, and pulls additional supplies into areas of heightened demand.
The intellectual center of the novel resides in Ruth Lieber, an aging Stanford economist who serves as Roberts’s primary philosophical voice. Through Ruth, Roberts converts what might have become a straightforward libertarian polemic into a meditation on knowledge, complexity, and emergence. Ruth’s classroom lecture on pencils stands as the book’s most memorable sequence and its deepest theoretical statement.
Holding up an ordinary pencil, Ruth declares that no one can make a pencil. The statement first sounds absurd. Yet the point unfolds into an argument about distributed knowledge. The production of even the simplest object requires the coordinated labor of thousands of individuals scattered across continents. Cedar producers, graphite miners, transportation workers, paint manufacturers, machinery designers, chemists, factory operators, and retailers each contribute fragments of knowledge to a process no single participant grasps in full.
Roberts’s larger argument emerges through this example. Human civilization depends on cooperation that exceeds the cognitive capacity of any individual mind. No planner possesses the totality of information embedded in decentralized systems. Economic order arises not because someone controls society from above but because price signals allow scattered individuals to coordinate their actions without grasping the full structure of their participation.
The argument owes much to Hayek. His concept of dispersed knowledge runs throughout the novel. Roberts insists that the information necessary for economic coordination is local, tacit, and constantly changing. The graphite czar thought experiment later in the novel develops the insight further. Ruth asks students to imagine a central planner tasked with allocating scarce graphite among pencil manufacturers, automobile companies, and tennis racquet producers. The planner needs not merely technical data but intimate familiarity with shifting preferences, production alternatives, transportation constraints, substitution possibilities, labor availability, and future demand. Much of that knowledge cannot be articulated clearly because it exists only within the practical improvisations of individuals coping with changing circumstances.
Roberts therefore reframes economics as epistemology. The problem with centralized planning is not chiefly corruption or bad intentions, though those exist. The deeper problem is informational impossibility. Complex societies generate more local knowledge than central institutions can absorb or process. Prices solve the coordination problem by compressing information into signals that allow millions of individuals to adjust behavior without direct communication.
One of the novel’s distinctive achievements lies in its effort to aestheticize economic order. Roberts rejects the image of markets as cold machinery. He portrays decentralized coordination as organic, improvisational, even beautiful. Throughout the novel, economic order is compared to ant colonies, jazz improvisation, bird flocks, dance, wetlands, ecological webs, and biological adaptation.
The scenes at the Baylands marsh matter here. Amy, Ramon’s girlfriend and a biology student, watches shorebirds respond collectively to a hawk without central direction. The flock appears coordinated despite the absence of command. Roberts uses these scenes to collapse the boundary between economics and systems theory. Markets become analogous to ecological orders where structure emerges from decentralized interaction.
The ecological imagery serves several purposes. First, it naturalizes spontaneous order by linking market coordination to biological processes that readers already accept as legitimate. Second, it distances Roberts from simplistic models of homo economicus. Human beings in the novel are emotional, adaptive, relational creatures. Third, it lifts economics from a technical discipline into a source of philosophical wonder.
Wonder becomes one of the book’s recurring themes. Ruth insists that modern prosperity appears ordinary only because people have stopped noticing the extraordinary coordination beneath everyday life. The pencil, the grocery shelf, the bagel shop, and the availability of batteries after a storm all become objects of philosophical astonishment once their hidden informational complexity comes into view. Roberts wants to cultivate gratitude for systems that modern consumers take for granted because they function so reliably.
This emphasis on gratitude separates Roberts from more technocratic defenders of capitalism. He does not defend markets only because they maximize efficiency. He argues that decentralized systems have generated historically unprecedented improvements in human life. The novel points to safer childbirth, medical innovation, consumer abundance, and rising living standards as products of decentralized experimentation and entrepreneurial incentives.
The moral architecture of the novel therefore departs from caricatures of libertarian thought as socially indifferent. Roberts reconnects markets to human flourishing. Entrepreneurs receive praise not for accumulating wealth but because profit incentives unintentionally generate technologies and institutions that improve ordinary life. Wealth creation gains moral significance because it expands possibilities for millions of people who never meet the innovators responsible for those improvements.
At the same time, Roberts does not dismiss the emotional force of anti-market intuitions. Ramon’s outrage against Big Box reads as sincere. The novel’s strength lies partly in its refusal to portray economic misunderstanding as stupidity. Roberts suggests instead that human beings perceive visible suffering more readily than invisible coordination.
The tension between visible morality and invisible order drives much of the book’s dramatic energy. Centralized political action feels morally satisfying because it looks intentional, compassionate, and direct. Decentralized market arrangements often appear indifferent because their benefits arrive indirectly through impersonal coordination. Roberts therefore tries to reverse the moral optics. He argues that systems producing abundance, flexibility, and adaptation might prove morally superior because they avoid the epistemic arrogance of centralized control.
The Cuban backstory sharpens the argument. Ramon’s family history serves as a counterpoint to the decentralized American order Roberts celebrates. Ramon’s father, Jose Fernandez, is a legendary Cuban baseball player whose memory is effectively erased after the family flees Castro’s Cuba. The symbolism leaves little room for doubt. Centralized political systems possess not only economic power but cultural and historical power. They can determine memory, prestige, and legitimacy.
Cuba in the novel stands for a system organized around administered fairness and political control. America stands for adaptation, unpredictability, and decentralized possibility. Roberts does not claim that American society eliminates poverty or inequality. His claim is subtler. The poor in decentralized systems retain chances for mobility and reinvention unavailable in rigidly administered orders. Poverty becomes tragic but not permanent.
The distinction between static equality and permeable order underlies much of Roberts’s defense of market societies. The novel emphasizes movement, adaptation, migration, and improvisation. Human beings flourish not under engineered equality but within orders flexible enough to permit experimentation, failure, recovery, and mobility.
Roberts also builds the novel around a series of paradoxes designed to unsettle intuitive thinking. Competition harms producers while benefiting consumers. Business owners often dislike competition because it forces productivity gains outward through lower prices and improved goods. Bosses appear powerful but remain constrained by market conditions they cannot control. Ruth insists that even factory owners respond to larger systemic pressures.
Another paradox concerns creative destruction. Productivity improvements eliminate jobs and destabilize communities, yet they also free labor and capital for new forms of production. Roberts treats the tension seriously. He does not deny the pain of economic transformation. He argues, however, that efforts to freeze economic structures suppress innovation and long-term prosperity.
The paradoxes reveal Roberts’s pedagogical method. He asks readers to distrust first impressions and examine second-order consequences. The novel turns into an exercise in cultivating economic imagination. Roberts wants readers to perceive systems.
Important limitations follow from the perspective. Roberts pays far more attention to the informational advantages of markets than to the political and institutional conditions under which markets remain competitive. Concentrated corporate power, regulatory capture, inherited inequality, and financialization receive limited treatment. The novel often assumes competitive conditions under which prices transmit decentralized information.
Roberts’s account of globalization can understate the social dislocation tied to deindustrialization and labor precarity. The novel persuasively explains the complexity and productivity of global supply chains. It devotes less attention to the cultural and political instability that arises when economic transformations outpace institutional adaptation.
The didactic structure can grow heavy-handed. Ruth Lieber’s classroom speeches sometimes resemble philosophical lectures more than realistic dialogue. Characters function at times as intellectual representatives. Roberts’s strengths lie more in conceptual clarity than in subtle characterization.
These weaknesses do not diminish the book’s importance as a work of public intellectual culture. The Price of Everything succeeds because it attempts something increasingly rare. It treats ordinary economic life as philosophically significant. Roberts asks readers to notice the hidden cooperation embedded within daily existence. The pencil, the dance floor, the grocery shelf, the flock of birds, and the emergency supply chain all become windows onto a larger civilizational argument.
The title returns the reader to Wilde’s accusation that economists know the price of everything and the value of nothing. Roberts’s answer is not that prices replace values. His answer is that prices are among the indispensable informational tools through which complex societies coordinate human aspiration, knowledge, labor, and survival. To understand prices is not to reduce life to commerce. It is to recognize the fragility and sophistication of the decentralized order that sustains modern civilization.

Hybrid Vigor & Other Biological Frames

The hybrid vigor framework treats institutions, traditions, and intellectual systems through the analogies of population biology. Closed populations accumulate deleterious recessives. Crossed populations produce offspring with greater fitness. Both processes have limits. Outbreeding depression follows when crossing disrupts co-adapted gene complexes. Inbreeding becomes adaptive when the environment rewards depth and consistency over breadth. Applied to Russ Roberts, the framework illuminates the path of a man who began inside an unusually inbred intellectual population and engineered, across forty years, a controlled outcrossing program with himself as the subject.
Roberts’s origin tradition was Chicago price theory under Gary Becker. The Chicago department of the 1970s was a closed breeding population in the strict sense the biology requires. It selected for a narrow range of intellectual traits: facility with optimization models, comfort with strong assumptions about rationality, willingness to extend price-theoretic reasoning into domains where its assumptions strained. It reproduced through a hiring pipeline that ran through its own graduates and a small set of adjacent departments. It defended its boundaries through journal gatekeeping, citation networks, and the social discipline of peer review. By the framework’s standard, late twentieth-century elite economics shows the markers of inbreeding depression: accumulation of mathematical sophistication without matching gains in predictive power, an internal vocabulary incomprehensible to outsiders, escalating confidence about claims that later failed to replicate, and a series of failures (the 2008 crisis chief among them) that the closed system did not predict and could not explain after the fact.
Roberts began his career within this system and produced standard products: a Chicago dissertation on government transfer programs, journal articles, a tenure-track path through several departments. The pivot, which the framework lets us see, was a controlled outcrossing program. He moved from Chicago toward George Mason and the Austrian-influenced libertarian scene, importing Hayekian ideas about dispersed knowledge, the limits of central planning, and spontaneous order. Austrian and Chicago economics share enough common stock to remain compatible, both classical liberal in commitments and market-oriented in conclusions, but differ enough in temperament and intellectual style to produce hybrid vigor rather than outbreeding depression. The hybrid Roberts produced kept Chicago’s incentive analysis and added Hayekian humility about what economists can claim to know.
A second crossing followed. Roberts began reading Adam Smith as a moral philosopher, drawing more from The Theory of Moral Sentiments than from The Wealth of Nations. This brought eighteenth-century moral psychology into contact with twentieth-century economics. How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life and Wild Problems are the visible products. The crossing here looks less obvious because Smith stands at the origin of modern economics and seems internal to the tradition. Roberts’s reading recovers what Chicago had bred out: the recognition that human beings want to be praiseworthy and not only praised, the attention to sympathy and the impartial spectator, the moral seriousness about commercial society’s costs as well as its benefits.
A third crossing came with EconTalk. The podcast brings economists into contact with philosophers, novelists, physicians, religious thinkers, historians, and technologists. Each guest carries different intellectual genetic material. The format demands crossing because Roberts cannot run the conversation through a single discipline’s machinery. He has to translate, adapt, and find common vocabulary with guests whose traditions developed independent of his own. By the heterosis prediction, this should produce a richer intellectual phenotype than the closed Chicago system could generate. The evidence supports the prediction. Roberts’s later writing covers questions that his original training could not approach: meaning, vocation, religious belief, the limits of measurement, the moral psychology of decision under deep uncertainty. None of these belong to Chicago economics. All of them belong to the hybrid that Chicago economics crossed with literature, philosophy, and religious thought.
A fourth crossing came with the move to Shalem College in 2021. Here Roberts crossed not just intellectual traditions but institutional ones. American free-market economics and Israeli liberal Zionism share patrons, the Tikvah Fund, Hoover, the broader American Jewish neoconservative network, but represent distinct institutional populations with different selection pressures, different time horizons, and different relationships to political power. Shalem was constructed as a hybrid: an American great books model transplanted into Israeli higher education, intended to produce something neither pure American liberal arts nor pure Israeli technical education could generate. Roberts’s appointment placed him at the institutional level of the same experiment he had been running at the personal level. The framework predicts hybrid vigor when the crossing addresses an environment the parent populations could not handle. The environment Shalem addresses, Israeli civic life under conditions of deep religious-secular and Jewish-Arab division, exceeds what either pure American liberal arts or pure Israeli technical training has the resources to address.
The framework also predicts the limits. Outbreeding depression follows when the crossing disrupts co-adapted gene complexes the parent populations needed. Roberts’s intellectual hybrid carries this risk. The Chicago training and the Smithian moral philosophy do not always sit together. The first treats human beings as utility-maximizing agents under constraint. The second treats them as creatures wanting praise and praiseworthiness, susceptible to self-deception, formed by the regard of others. Roberts holds both. When he discusses markets, the Chicago genome expresses. When he discusses marriage, parenthood, or vocation, the Smithian genome expresses. The two have not produced a single coherent organism so much as a flexible phenotype that switches between two co-adapted complexes depending on the question. This works, and it has been productive, but the framework predicts costs the participant may not perceive. Some questions cannot be addressed by switching. They require an integration the hybrid has not yet achieved.
Niche construction adds another layer. Roberts has spent two decades engineering an environment that favors his trait combination. EconTalk creates a habitat for the slow, long-form, cross-disciplinary conversation his hybrid phenotype was bred to conduct. Cafe Hayek creates a habitat for the libertarian commentary his Chicago and George Mason genome can still produce. Shalem creates an institutional habitat for the great books, Smithian, Jewish-traditionalist hybrid he has become. Each environment selects for his existing traits and against competitors whose traits might dominate in environments not so constructed. By the biological logic, this is what successful organisms do: they engineer their environments to favor their own genotype. By the same logic, the constructed niche eventually becomes a constraint. Roberts cannot defect from the environments he has built. The audience, the donors, the institutional partners, and the colleagues all expect the existing phenotype. Changes that might be valuable for his intellectual development become costly because the niche no longer rewards them.
Costly signaling clarifies a feature of Roberts’s public posture. His steel-manning practice, his willingness to host guests whose views differ from his own, his refusal to engage in the polemical style that dominates economics commentary: all of these are signals expensive enough to be credible. A polemicist might fake openness by hosting one or two ideological opponents. Roberts has done it for two decades across thousands of hours of recorded conversation. The cost makes the signal honest in the Zahavian sense. It also produces benefits the signal was not designed to produce: alliance with educated readers tired of polemic, credibility with academic philosophers and religious thinkers who might dismiss a standard libertarian, and access to coalitions a polemicist could never enter.
The crypsis frame raises harder questions. Roberts has been restrained in his public commentary on Israeli politics under Netanyahu, on the failures of free-market policy his patrons funded, and on the donor classes whose support sustains his institutions. The restraint reads three ways at once: as principled commitment to civility, as the humility his epistemic position requires, or as adaptive concealment by an organism that has learned the costs of visible position-taking in environments where its patrons watch. The framework does not resolve which reading applies. It suggests that the same surface coloration can serve principle and self-protection at once, and that the participant cannot distinguish his own motives because the selection pressure has produced a phenotype in which the distinction has become difficult to maintain.
Life history theory captures something about Roberts’s strategic position. He plays a slow life history strategy in a media environment dominated by fast strategies. Hour-long conversations, century-long intellectual traditions, decade-long relationships with co-authors and guests, careful incremental movement of his views across years. The slow strategy succeeds when the environment is stable enough for long-term investments to pay off, when reputation accumulates over time, and when the organism can afford to forgo short-term reproductive opportunities for higher-quality long-term ones. EconTalk’s longevity demonstrates the strategy works. The audience it has produced is small relative to mass-market podcasts but durable, educated, and resourceful. The framework predicts that this audience might sustain Roberts through environmental shifts that destroy fast-strategy competitors, and the prediction has held through twenty years of media transformation.
Frequency-dependent selection adds one more piece. Roberts occupies a rare niche. The supply of serious, slow, cross-disciplinary economists who can host long-form conversations across coalitions is small. His success reflects not only the quality of his traits but the rarity of the type. As more imitators enter the niche, his relative advantage might decline. The framework predicts that successful niches attract competitors who reduce the original occupant’s fitness. EconTalk’s central position in the heterodox-intellectual podcast ecosystem might erode as similar formats proliferate, and the framework suggests Roberts faces the standard pioneer’s problem: the niche he created selects for organisms like himself, but the niche cannot keep them out.
The synthesis the biological framework produces: Roberts represents a successful hybridization program run against the inbreeding depression of late twentieth-century elite economics. The crossings he conducted, Chicago with Austrian, market analysis with Smithian moral philosophy, economics with literature and religion, American liberal arts with Israeli higher education, produced an intellectual phenotype more fit for the environment of post-2008 educated readers than the closed Chicago system from which he emerged. The niche construction he performed has built environments that favor his hybrid traits and select against pure-bred alternatives. The costly signaling has authenticated his coalition memberships across factions that might otherwise distrust him. The slow life history strategy has produced cumulative gains that fast-strategy competitors could not match. The framework also predicts the limits: outbreeding depression at the points where his hybrid carries incompatible co-adapted complexes, niche constraint as the environments he built come to require him to remain who he has been, and frequency-dependent erosion as the rare niche attracts imitators. None of these limits has bound him hard yet. The framework suggests they will.

The Guru

Russ Roberts produces books that drift from technical economics toward wisdom literature. The gurometer scores him low overall.

Galaxy-brainness (2/5)

Roberts mostly stays in lane. He sticks to economics, Adam Smith’s moral psychology, Hayekian arguments about emergent order, and decision theory. He rarely declares hot takes on physics, neuroscience, or consciousness. But his recent trajectory pushes him outward. Wild Problems takes economics to existential life decisions: whether to marry, whether to have kids, what kind of man to become. These are domains where an economist has no special standing, but Roberts speaks with the gentle authority of a man who has read Smith carefully. He drops references to Darwin, Tolstoy, and Aristotle. The references stay relevant. They do not function as performance. Still, the move from price theory to life wisdom is the same outward expansion that defines the galaxy-brain pattern, just executed with restraint.

Cultishness (2.5/5)

EconTalk has a devoted listenership that calls itself a community. Roberts cultivates parasocial warmth through tone: slow pace, audible smiling, deferential questions, frequent “yeah, yeah” affirmations. He brands the show “Conversations for the Curious,” which flatters listeners as people of a certain quality. The in-group framing is soft but present. EconTalk listeners are thoughtful people who want long-form ideas, not the cable-news rabble. Roberts also discriminates among guests. He hosts critics, but he chooses them. Adversarial economists with technical critiques of his Chicago training appear rarely. Friendly Hoover colleagues, Tyler Cowen (b. 1962), Mike Munger (b. 1958), Arnold Kling (b. 1954) appear often. He does not engage with hostile critics on Twitter or in journals. The community feels warm because the boundary is policed by selection, not by attack.

Anti-establishmentarianism (3/5)

This is where Roberts scores higher than first appears. He sits at Hoover and runs an Israeli college, so he is institutionally embedded. But his core intellectual move of the past fifteen years is internal critique. He argues that academic economics overclaims, that econometric studies often fail to replicate, that confident policy recommendations based on regressions are unjustified. The Numbers Game by Russ Roberts (his PolicyEd series) hammers this. He attacks the mainstream of his own discipline. The critique is grounded. Many of his points are correct. But the critique also serves a function. It tells listeners they cannot trust the New York Times when it cites economic studies, that the CDC overstepped during COVID, that climate models have wider uncertainty than reporters convey. The science-hipsterism the framework names sits here. Roberts often agrees with consensus, but he tells you the consensus knows less than it claims. That move keeps him valuable. If experts could be trusted, why listen to Roberts about what experts get wrong?

Grievance-mongering (1/5)

Almost absent. Roberts does not cast himself as a victim. He does not run personal narratives of suppression. He had a successful Hoover affiliation, a successful podcast, a successful career, and now runs a college. He occasionally notes that his housing-bubble warnings were ignored before 2008, but he does so in a wry register. This is the clearest place where Roberts breaks the pattern.

Self-aggrandisement and narcissism (2/5)

His public brand is humility. He admits when he changes his mind. He says “I might be wrong” often. He praises guests profusely. He defers to expertise on technical questions. The puzzle is that this performance of humility serves a positioning function. A man who says “I don’t know” with the right cadence appears wiser than a man who says “I know.” Adam Smith makes this point about the conduct of the prudent man, and Roberts has internalized it. The humility is sincere and also strategic. It deflects criticism (you cannot accuse a man of overclaiming when he keeps saying he might be wrong) while building authority (the wise man who has learned to doubt). The framework’s narcissism category fits him poorly. But the related trait of cultivating a particular self-presentation that flatters the cultivator is present in softer form.

Cassandra complex (2.5/5)

Roberts published Gambling with Other People’s Money in 2010, arguing that government bailout policy across decades produced the 2008 financial crisis by socializing risk for large banks. The argument has force. Roberts returns to it. He also warned about housing in the mid-2000s on EconTalk. The Cassandra posture is present, though restrained. He does not predict apocalypses. He warns of slow corrosions: bad incentive structures, eroded trust in institutions, the costs of central planning. The framework’s Cassandra category fits at low intensity.

Revolutionary theories (1.5/5)

Roberts claims no revolutionary theory. He works in inherited frameworks: Smith on moral sentiments, Hayek on dispersed knowledge, Becker on incentives, Taleb on uncertainty. Wild Problems offers a distinction between tame problems (solvable by data) and wild problems (not solvable by data), but he frames the distinction as a useful heuristic. He gives credit to others freely. This is a real departure from the guru pattern.

Pseudo-profound bullshit (3/5)

The strongest seam. As Roberts has aged, his podcast voice has shifted from technical economics toward wisdom dispensation. He reads Smith aloud and finds insight in passages. He invokes “flourishing” and “the examined life.” He tells listeners that we do not know what we want, that we do not know who we will become, that markets reflect moral choices, that gratitude matters, that we should be slower to judge. Some of this is true and good. Some of it is the genre Becker (1924-1974) would recognize from Ernest Becker’s analysis: the wise teacher reassuring the educated middle-class listener that the examined life is available through podcast subscription. The Adam Smith material in particular runs hot and cold. The careful exegesis of The Theory of Moral Sentiments is rigorous. The applications to modern life (“the impartial spectator helps you in your career”) can shade into the saccharine wisdom the framework names. Roberts does this with more taste than most. The taste does not eliminate the category.

Conspiracy mongering (1/5)

Almost absent. Roberts does not posit secret coordination. His complaint about institutions is incentive-based, not conspiratorial. The Fed bails out banks because the relevant officials face career incentives that point that way, not because a cabal coordinates. This is a clean break from the conspiratorial pattern.

Profiteering (1.5/5)

Books, speaking fees, normal podcast monetization. EconTalk runs free. He does not sell supplements, courses costing thousands, or proprietary frameworks. Shalem College pays him a salary. The Hoover fellowship pays him a salary. He sells books at normal trade rates. The shilling pattern the framework names is absent.

Aggregate

The score lands around 20/50, which puts Roberts well below the guru threshold. The framework illuminates him most at three points: the soft in-group framing of the EconTalk community, the science-hipsterism that lets him criticize consensus while remaining respectable, and the drift toward wisdom literature that risks the pseudo-profundity the framework identifies as the core guru activity. The humility is sincere, but it is also a positioning move that Smith himself analyzed two and a half centuries ago. Roberts is what a careful practitioner of public intellectual work looks like when held against the pattern: visible in outline at the edges, refused at the center.
The honest summary: Roberts is not a guru in the framework’s sense. He is a competent economist who shifted in late career toward avuncular wisdom dispensation, and the shift carries small amounts of the genre’s residue without becoming the genre. The interesting question the framework raises about him is whether the wisdom turn produces real insight or whether it converts the listener’s existing intuitions into the warm glow of having heard them confirmed by a man with a Chicago PhD.

A Big Misunderstanding

Russ Roberts makes his living telling people that experts know less than they think. His podcast EconTalk runs on a steady premise: humility, emergent order, the limits of central planning, the wisdom built into prices and traditions. He hosts long calm conversations. He pushes back gently. He cites Hayek (1899-1992) and Adam Smith (1723-1790). He has built a durable second act in popular economics, moving from George Mason to Stanford’s Hoover Institution to the presidency of Shalem College in Jerusalem.
David Pinsof’s (b. 1987, est.) framework asks a simple question. If everything wrong in the world comes from misunderstanding, then intellectuals get to play the role of savior. The intellectual class flatters itself by treating human stupidity as the world’s main problem. Roberts looks like a counterexample. He preaches against the technocratic conceit. He warns economists about their pretense of knowledge. He sounds humble.
But Pinsof’s framework cuts deeper than tone. The question is not whether Roberts performs humility. The question is what Roberts sells, who pays him to sell it, and what truths the sale conceals.
What does Roberts sell? He sells a story about markets and emergent order. In the story, voluntary exchange produces good outcomes. Central planners fail because they cannot gather the dispersed knowledge that prices contain. Tradition encodes wisdom that reformers ignore at their peril. Government action tends to make things worse. Religious life, family life, and small communities produce goods that policy cannot replicate.
The story has buyers. Hoover funds it. Mercatus at George Mason funded the earlier years. Liberty Fund, classical liberal donors, conservative-leaning podcast listeners, the entire world of free-market think tanks. Shalem College, where Roberts now presides, draws on donors who want a Jewish intellectual home outside the dominant left-academic mold.
Roberts’ real customers are not the listeners who tune in for free. The customers are the donors and institutions that pay him to host the podcast and run the college. The product is a coherent classical liberal vocabulary, delivered in a tone of warmth and humility, that flatters its consumers and protects them from harsher questions.
Pinsof might press the next question. What harsher questions does the vocabulary protect against?
Consider what Roberts rarely interrogates. He rarely interrogates whether markets concentrate wealth in ways that destroy the small communities he praises. He rarely interrogates whether finance capitalism, the part of the economy that pays his bills through Hoover and Shalem donors, produces goods or extracts them. He rarely interrogates whether Hayekian humility about central planning should also apply to corporate governance, military procurement, foreign policy adventures, or the institutional power of donor-funded think tanks. He rarely interrogates whether Israel’s settlement policy, ultra-Orthodox political power, or rabbinic authority structures meet his own standards for emergent order versus top-down imposition.
The selection of topics is not random. The topics he avoids are the ones his patrons might not want raised.
Pinsof calls this strategic stupidity. Not stupidity in the sense of low intelligence. Strategic in the sense of profitable ignorance. A man with Roberts’ training and curiosity could ask these questions if the asking paid. The asking does not pay. The asking might cost him his perch.
Now the misunderstanding myth proper. Roberts looks like he rejects it. He says markets work, central planners fail, humility is owed, expertise is overrated. He does not say everyone needs to be educated out of their biases. He sounds like the anti-technocrat.
But look closer. Roberts still runs a correction operation. The targets have shifted. Progressives misunderstand markets. Technocrats misunderstand emergent order. Behavioral economists misunderstand human rationality. Critics of capitalism misunderstand the source of prosperity. Modern reformers misunderstand the wisdom in tradition.
The frame is identical to Pinsof’s diagnosis. Roberts is in the business of correcting other people’s misunderstandings. He just selects different targets than a New York Times columnist. The structure of the business is the same. Pay me to tell you that the people you already dislike are confused, and the people you already respect have wisdom you have not yet articulated.
Listeners pay this fee in attention. Donors pay it in dollars. The product gets delivered in a tone of warmth and reasonableness that makes the transaction feel like education.
Pinsof’s deeper claim cuts harder. Most of what Roberts treats as misunderstanding is not misunderstanding at all. Take a progressive economist who supports minimum wage hikes. Roberts will say this man misunderstands the disemployment effects, the price effects, the substitution effects. Pinsof might say the progressive economist understands all of this fine and supports the policy because his coalition demands it, because his salary depends on it, because his audience cheers it, and because the policy serves the political ends he and his coalition share.
The progressive economist is not confused. He is rational in Pinsof’s sense. He produces the outputs his coalition pays him to produce.
The same applies in reverse. Roberts is not confused about the limits of free-market arguments. He produces classical liberal arguments because his coalition pays him to produce them, because his audience cheers them, and because the framing serves the political ends he and his coalition share. He is rational. He does his job well.
When Roberts and the progressive economist argue, neither corrects a misunderstanding. They run rival sales operations for rival coalitions. The argument format makes it look like a search for truth. The argument is a marketing contest with civility as a finish coat.
Roberts has an additional asset Pinsof’s framework illuminates. He performs humility better than most. Humility has become a high-status pose in elite intellectual life. The professor who admits he might be wrong wins the audience over the professor who insists he is right. The performance of doubt has become a status good. Roberts has mastered the performance. His listeners feel they participate in something more thoughtful than ordinary partisan combat. They do not. They buy a higher-grade version of the same product.
Now the religious turn. A >baal teshuva by age 20, Roberts has moved deeper Jewish religious life over the decades. He wrote about Adam Smith and moral sentiments. He took the Shalem presidency. He talks more about meaning, character, and tradition. His vocabulary has grown more theological.
A naive reading treats this as personal growth. A Pinsofian reading asks what the religious vocabulary does for the coalition. Religious framing helps classical liberal economics in three ways. It supplies a vocabulary for defending tradition against progressive reform. It connects the free-market argument to a transcendent source of value that secular utilitarianism cannot match. And it builds bridges to religious conservative coalitions that share donors and political projects with classical liberal coalitions.
Sincerity and strategic positioning usually coincide. Men move toward the beliefs their coalitions reward, and they experience the move as conviction. Roberts probably experiences his religious turn as a deepening. His coalition has rewarded the deepening at every step. Both things can be true at once.
What truths might cost Roberts his position?
Markets concentrate power in ways that destroy the small communities Roberts praises. If he developed this argument with the same care he brings to defending markets, Hoover donors might notice.
Hayek’s emergent-order argument cuts against the donor-funded think tank ecosystem that pays Roberts. The same logic that says central planners cannot gather dispersed knowledge says donor-funded intellectual production cannot represent dispersed interests. Donors are central planners with smaller budgets and better tax treatment.
Israeli settlement policy, ultra-Orthodox political power, and rabbinic authority structures fail Roberts’ own emergent-order standards. He has a college in Jerusalem. He cannot say this.
Finance capitalism, the source of the wealth that funds Hoover and Shalem, produces a smaller share of the goods Roberts praises (tradition, family, community, voluntary association) than the small-town productive economy he uses as an aesthetic backdrop. He cannot say this either.
Roberts can be humble about progressive economics, technocratic planning, and behavioral nudging. He cannot be humble about the political economy that pays him. The humility is selective.
The world does not want to be saved. Intellectuals tell themselves they correct misunderstandings because the story flatters them and pays them. Roberts is a high-quality, low-volatility version of this trade. He has built a brand on humility, order, and warm conversation. The brand sells. The donors pay. The listeners feel improved.
The misunderstanding Roberts corrects is the misunderstanding his coalition wants corrected. The misunderstanding he protects is the misunderstanding his coalition wants protected. That is the trade. The performance of humility is part of the product.
If you want to test the framework, watch what Roberts does over the next decade. He might continue to refine the classical liberal vocabulary for a religious-conservative audience that pays well. He might cite Hayek and Smith and the Hebrew Bible in increasing combination. He might host more guests who challenge progressives and fewer who challenge Hoover. He might write another book about meaning and wild problems and the limits of optimization, which will sell to thoughtful elites who want to feel they have transcended the technocratic mindset while still occupying technocratic seats.
None of this will look like coalition behavior to Roberts. It will look like deepening conviction. Pinsof might say the experience and the strategy coincide. They almost always do.

Charisma and Social Paradoxes

When I arrived at UCLA in 1988, the Economics department undergraduate advisor told me that Russell Roberts was the department’s most compelling teacher. So I took two of his classes in micro-economics and he did not disappoint.
After I left UCLA due to illness, Roberts made time for me when I was most lost. He took my calls. He answered my letters. He read my essays. He talked about us writing a book together on Judaism. He encouraged me when I most needed encouragement.
Everything I know about Roberts says he’s a good man, good friend, good professor, good neighbor and good citizen. I never detected an anti-social bone in his body. He knew when to be tough and when to be kind. He knew when to tell people hard truths and when to stay silent.
The man who hosts EconTalk is the man I knew. The humility he displays on EconTalk is the same humility he displayed at UCLA in 1989.
As with Dennis Prager, the gap between the public and private man seems small.
As with his fellow Modern Orthodox Jew Yoram Hazony, I suspect Roberts is more aligned with hereditarian positions than would be publicly convenient (though we never talked about this).
Roberts lacks conventional magnetism. He’s short and pudgy. He speaks slowly. He asks soft questions. He does not perform brilliance. And yet for two decades he has accumulated enormous standing through EconTalk and now through the presidency of Shalem College. The charisma framework explains the gap between his unassuming manner and his outsized position.
Consider the paradoxes Roberts executes.
The first is pursuing status while appearing not to seek it. Roberts opens each episode with a quiet, almost apologetic tone. He thanks his guest. He praises the guest’s book at length. He frames himself as a man learning rather than teaching. The persona is the curious listener, not the host. But the show carries his name, runs from his Hoover affiliation, and grants him the power to select which guests reach the audience and which do not. Each episode performs his erudition through the act of letting the guest speak. He drops references to Adam Smith (1723-1790), to Tolstoy, to Hayek (1899-1992). He has read everyone the guest has read and more. The not-seeking is the seeking. The audience hears a humble interlocutor and concludes that the humility is real, which means the standing must be earned rather than sought, which converts the standing into authority of a higher order than openly pursued standing might supply.
The second paradox is the insider who critiques the inside. Roberts trained at Chicago under Gary Becker (1930-2014). He sits at Hoover. He runs an Israeli college funded by major donors. He stands embedded at every institutional level. And yet his core public message for fifteen years has been that academic economics overclaims, that econometric studies often fail to replicate, that confident policy recommendations resting on regressions are unjustified. The critique comes from inside. It comes from a man trained in the discipline he questions. The biography holds, which makes the paradox work. The Chicago training is not invented. The critique is not posture. But the self he presents as the humble doubter maps onto what his coalition wants: a credentialed economist who will discredit the technocratic confidence of his profession from inside, without joining the populist right or the academic left. The coalition gets a critic who cannot be dismissed as ignorant of the field. Roberts gets the standing that accrues to internal dissent without paying the costs that internal dissent usually carries.
The third paradox is the authentic rebel who represents the group. Roberts presents as a man who left the technical mainstream of economics to defend an older tradition of moral and liberal learning. He writes about Adam Smith’s moral psychology. He talks about marriage, parenthood, vocation. He moved from George Mason to Stanford to Jerusalem, which reads as a journey of widening rather than ladder-climbing. The trajectory looks like the path of a man following his conscience away from the discipline that no longer satisfies him. But the trajectory tracks the institutional preferences of the Hayekian coalition: Mercatus, Hoover, Shalem. Each stop sits in the same network of donors, the same intellectual ecology, the same coalition of free-market traditionalists who fund a humanistic alternative to the academic mainstream. The journey looks like a private moral evolution. It also happens to be a career path. Both descriptions are true. The paradox holds because the first description produces the status, and the first description requires the audience to not see the second.
The fourth paradox is the norm violation that earns praise. Roberts violates several norms of his profession. He admits uncertainty in a discipline that rewards confidence. He praises books outside economics. He hosts critics of his own school. He says, on air, that he has changed his mind. Within the EconTalk audience these violations read as integrity, as the honesty of a man secure enough to question his training. Within the academic economics profession, the same violations read as a man who left the technical work and now plays the role of public sage. Both reactions exist. The first dominates inside the coalition. The second dominates outside it. The same behavior earns praise in one audience and dismissal in another. Pinsof’s frame predicts this. Charisma is always coalition-relative.
The fifth paradox is the not-trying-to-impress-you posture. Roberts presents the opposite of the cable-news performer. He moves slow, deferential, given to long silences and circling reflections. He does not interrupt. He does not show off. The audience experiences the absence of performance as the absence of pretension. But the slow, reflective, audibly smiling manner is a signal, and a precisely tuned one. It signals that he does not need to impress, which is a higher form of impressiveness than any direct display. Tyler Cowen (b. 1962) once said something to the effect that Russ has an unusual gift for making you feel heard. Pinsof might say that the gift is real, and that the gift is also doing coalition work. Russ’s attention becomes a small status token in the listener’s social world. Listeners cite EconTalk the way some cite Tolstoy or Aristotle, as evidence of membership in a community of careful thinkers.
The social paradoxes paper adds the recursive mindreading layer, and this is where Roberts becomes harder to analyze than he first appears. Pinsof’s argument runs that paradoxes succeed when the speaker and the audience are each inferring what the other knows, and when the strategy stays concealed from both at once. Roberts’s case has a thicker concealment than most. He has read enough moral philosophy to know status games when he sees them. He has read Adam Smith on the impartial spectator. He has read Hayek on the limits of knowledge. He is not naive about himself. And yet the public persona requires that the self-knowledge stay below the surface. If Roberts said, in plain English, that EconTalk runs as a status engine for a particular coalition of free-market traditionalists, the spell might break. He does not say that. Whether he thinks it remains unknowable. The audience also does not say it. The audience suspects, at some level, that the show carries more than what it claims. But the audience has no reason to push the suspicion to consciousness, because the value the show delivers, intellectual pleasure, parasocial warmth, coalition belonging, depends on the suspicion staying suspended. This is Pinsof’s symbiotic deception at full strength. Both sides know enough to know. Neither side has reason to know fully.
A behavior starts as an honest cue, becomes a deliberate signal, and then flips into a negative cue when the deliberateness becomes salient. Roberts has reached a stage of his career where the deliberateness shows through to outside observers. The Decoding the Gurus podcast hosts have flagged him. Critics inside economics have begun to note that the humility act also functions as a positioning act. The cue might be approaching the flip. Inside the coalition the signal still reads as authentic. Outside it the signal might already read as too rehearsed to credit. Whether the flip completes turns on how long the recursive concealment can hold. Roberts has held it for two decades, which is a long run for a public intellectual.

Cultural Trauma & Watergate as Democratic Ritual

Jeffrey Alexander (b. 1947) gives us two frames that pull Russ Roberts into sharper focus than the standard “thoughtful classical liberal podcaster” reading allows. The cultural trauma essay supplies a vocabulary for what Roberts constructs at the level of meaning. The Watergate essay supplies a vocabulary for the ritual register of EconTalk and the sacerdotal posture Roberts has cultivated over twenty years.
Roberts is a carrier group of one for a sustained trauma narrative about modern economics. The pain is that the discipline lost its humility. Economists abandoned Adam Smith (1723-1790) and Friedrich Hayek (1899-1992) for mathematical pretension, confident regressions, and policy advice that fails on contact with the world. Central planners overrode the wisdom built into prices, traditions, and small communities. The 2008 housing crisis, COVID lockdowns, education reform, monetary policy, urban planning — each appears in the EconTalk catalog as a station of the same cross. Experts overstepped. Ordinary people paid.
The victims are doubled. At the visible layer, the victims are families, workers, small communities, and the institutions of civil society that get steamrolled by technocratic confidence. At the deeper layer, the discipline of economics is itself a victim, corrupted by physics envy and divorced from the moral psychology Smith laid out in The Theory of Moral Sentiments. Roberts’ audience gets to mourn for the country and for the science at the same time. The doubling is shrewd. It lets the listener feel both civic concern and disciplinary belonging.
The connection to a wider audience runs through Smith’s moral universalism. Roberts has spent fifteen years translating Smith out of the eighteenth century and into the language of midlife reflection, marriage, child-rearing, and personal meaning. How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life by Russ Roberts and Wild Problems by Russ Roberts perform this universalization. The trauma of bad economics becomes the trauma of a life lived without the right moral compass. The EconTalk listener is no longer a wonk getting a policy briefing. He is a man trying to live well in a culture that has forgotten how. That move is the same upward generalization Alexander describes in the Watergate case, where a third-rate burglary became a crisis of the republic.
Responsibility is the most telling part. Roberts almost never assigns blame to named living people. He blames “economists,” “experts,” “central planners,” “the technocratic class.” The diffuseness is structural and protective. Naming names risks coalition damage, especially against fellow members of the Hoover-Mercatus-Liberty Fund-Shalem world. Pinning the trauma on abstractions lets Roberts preserve the trauma narrative without exposing himself to the costs of direct conflict. Alexander would call this a tell. The carrier group’s material interests shape the architecture of responsibility. The diffuseness is not a literary choice. It is a coalition adaptation.
Alexander poses four questions about how carrier groups construct a trauma narrative:
What was the pain? What injury or wound is the narrative naming?
Who were the victims? Which group suffered the wound?
How do the victims connect to a wider audience? By what universalizing move do non-victims come to feel implicated, so the trauma becomes “ours”?
Who bears responsibility? Which agent or force gets named as the cause?
For Roberts, the pain is the loss of disciplinary humility and the corrosion of moral life under technocratic pressure. The victims are ordinary families and small communities at the visible layer, and the discipline of economics itself at the deeper layer. The connection to a wider audience runs through Smith’s moral psychology, which lets any reflective man see himself as implicated. Responsibility falls on the abstract technocratic class rather than on named living people, which is the coalition-protective move.
Alexander’s naturalistic fallacy point lands hard here. Roberts presents his diagnosis as if it follows from looking honestly at the world. The diagnosis is a construction. Other economists who have looked at the same events — Paul Krugman (b. 1953), Joseph Stiglitz (b. 1943), Mariana Mazzucato (b. 1968) — produce opposite trauma narratives in which markets are the polluting force and the technocratic state is the wronged victim. Roberts treats his version as the obvious one. The treatment serves the coalition that pays him.
EconTalk is a weekly ritual that creates liminal space. The slow pace, the long format, the audible smiling, the deferential questions, the recurring liturgy of “I want to push back on that gently” — these are not stylistic accidents. They are the procedures of sacred time. The listener leaves ordinary commercial life and enters a register where ideas matter, where humility is performed, where the priest and the guest commune over the deep texts of the tradition.
Roberts is a priest in Alexander’s precise sense. He speaks the language of civil religion, not the language of partisan combat. The civil religion he serves is a particular Anglo-American classical liberalism rooted in Smith, Hume (1711-1776), Hayek, and Friedman (1912-2006). The sacred values are emergent order, voluntary exchange, dispersed knowledge, the wisdom of tradition, the humility of the careful inquirer. The profane is the opposite of each: central planning, coercion, technocratic confidence, contempt for tradition, the arrogance of the credentialed expert.
The guest selection is the clearest evidence of the ritual function. Tyler Cowen (b. 1962), Mike Munger (b. 1958), Arnold Kling (b. 1954), and a rotating cast of like-minded fellows appear often because their presence reinforces the sacred-profane structure. Hostile critics with technical objections to the Chicago-Hayek tradition appear rarely. The exclusion is not personal. It is liturgical. A priest does not invite the heretic into the sanctuary during high mass. He invites him into a debate held somewhere else, on different terms.
The five conditions Alexander identified for the upward generalization of Watergate map onto Roberts’ project, though incompletely. Consensus that the technocratic class pollutes? Real within the EconTalk audience, contested outside it. Perception of threat to the center of society? Yes, framed as a slow corrosion of the moral and economic foundations Smith laid down. Activation of social controls? Roberts treats the podcast itself as a control, a counter-institution to the mainstream economics profession. Mobilization of elite countercenters? Hoover, Mercatus, Cato, Shalem, and the various classical liberal nodes function exactly as Alexander’s elite countercenters. Ritual processes of purification? The podcast, the books, the conferences, the Adam Smith readings, the Sabbath reflections — these are the purifications.
Roberts’ trauma narrative has generalized within a coalition that already shared the basic premises. The ritual works for its congregation. It does not convert outsiders. That asymmetry might be why Roberts can sound so calm. He is not fighting a contested ritual. He is conducting a settled one for people who already belong.
Alexander’s Watergate essay offers a theory of pollution transfer. Pollution travels through proximity. Whom you sit beside, whom you platform, whom you defend — these contacts carry symbolic charge.
Roberts has managed his proximity with care over the past decade. He has not embraced the Trump-era populist economics. He has not embraced the Davos technocratic consensus the populists attack. He has stayed clean of both polluting attractors. The cleanness is part of what makes him valuable to donors who want classical liberalism delivered without the embarrassments of either flank.
His move to Shalem College in 2012 and to the presidency in 2018 added another dimension of pollution management. Shalem sits outside the American culture war. It is a Jerusalem institution promoting a Western humanities tradition in Israel, funded partly by American donors who want a Jewish intellectual home outside the dominant left-academic mold. Running Shalem gives Roberts an institutional identity that is hard to attack from any American direction. The Israeli setting also lets him develop the religious turn his American audience increasingly hears.
Alexander argues that traumas generalize upward from goals and interests to sacred values when the conditions align. Roberts’ own intellectual trajectory has performed this generalization in miniature. The early Roberts wrote technical work on price theory and trade. The middle Roberts wrote economic novels and policy commentary. The late Roberts writes about Sabbath, family, marriage, the meaning of a life (though he talked about these same things inside and outside of class at UCLA in 1989). The trajectory tracks the upward generalization of his trauma narrative. Bad economics is no longer a discipline problem. It is a soul problem. The cure is no longer better regressions. It is reverence, tradition, Sabbath rest, gratitude, attention to what cannot be measured.
This generalization is what Roberts shares with the priests Alexander described at the Senate Watergate hearings. They started by talking about a burglary and ended by talking about the republic. Roberts started by talking about price controls and ended by talking about how to live. The grammar of the move is the same.
Roberts is not simply a thoughtful economist who has drifted toward humanistic reflection. He is the rabbi of a particular civil religion, the carrier of a particular trauma narrative, and the keeper of a particular set of sacred-profane distinctions that serve a particular coalition. The literary calm is real. The humility is real. The trauma narrative is constructed. The ritual is constructed. And the coalition that pays for both gets exactly what it pays for, delivered in a voice so gentle that the transaction registers as wisdom.

Everything is Signaling

The audience for EconTalk values intellectual humility, charitable engagement, careful argument, moral seriousness, and a distaste for the combative style of Joe Rogan or Ben Shapiro. Roberts knows this audience. He has trained them and they have trained him. Every choice he makes on the show passes through the “what will people think” filter calibrated to that crowd.
The gentle interviewing style sends a defensive signal first. It says: I am not a hack. I am not a partisan. I am not the kind of economist who shouts down opponents on cable news. The signal protects him from the worst sins available to a public intellectual. It doubles as offense once defense holds. The style says: I am wiser than the combatants. I have the patience and the security to listen at length.
Roberts has softened his libertarianism over the years. He says so. He admits markets do not solve everything, that his earlier confidence was excessive, that 2008 humbled him. A classic defensive move from a thinker who has watched his tribe lose status. Hard-line free-market economics carries a stain after the financial crisis and during the populist turn. To say “I have changed my mind” sends a signal that protects him from being grouped with the discredited. The same signal positions him above his former allies, who lacked the wisdom to update.
Wild Problems by Russ Roberts. This book argues that the biggest questions in a life, whether to marry, whether to have children, what work to do, cannot be solved by cost-benefit analysis. The book recommends embracing uncertainty. The book signals that Roberts has transcended the technocratic limits of his discipline. It defends him against the charge that economists are spreadsheet-brained reductionists. It also attacks rival economists who still think they can optimize a life.
How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life by Russ Roberts. This book argues that Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments tells us more about Smith than The Wealth of Nations does, and that Smith was a moral philosopher concerned with virtue and the desire to be loved and lovely. The book signals moral seriousness. It rescues Roberts from the Gordon Gekko association that haunts free-market economists. It says: my tradition has depth. We are not the cold heartless utilitarians you think we are.
The move to Jerusalem and the presidency of Shalem College carry their own signals. Roberts left Stanford and Hoover, an elite American perch, for a small liberal arts college in Israel built on Hebrew language and Jewish texts. The choice signals rootedness, religious commitment, and a willingness to bet on something smaller and weightier than the prestige he could have kept. Defensively, it says: I am not a deracinated cosmopolitan. I have a home. I have a people. Offensively, it says: I have the courage to leave the imperial center for the periphery, where the action lies.
His Orthodox Jewish practice sends a similar signal in a different register. American intellectual life rewards a certain skeptical secularism. Roberts breaks with that. The break protects him from the charge of being another credentialed liberal academic and aligns him with a counter-elite that values tradition, family, and continuity over the latest progressive fashion.
Pinsof points out that defensive signals often crouch in the dark because revealing defensiveness reveals weakness. Roberts is skilled at this concealment. The humility serves as cover. By always positioning himself as the man who knows what he does not know, he forecloses the criticism that he is overreaching or grandstanding. The humility runs deep and it doubles as armor.
The book endorsements, the guests he picks, the way he laughs at his own confusions, the careful preface to every controversial topic. All of these pass through the filter. Pinsof’s point holds. Signaling and sincerity coexist. Roberts likely believes everything he says. He still selects what to say with an exquisite sense of what his audience will reward and what they will punish.
Who provides his status, income, and protection? The Hoover Institution donor class, where he kept ties for years. Shalem College board members and Israeli funders. EconTalk listeners and subscribers. The American Jewish institutional world. The audience that wants him moderate and curious. Each constituency sets a limit on what he can say. The signaling system tells him where the limits sit.
Who benefits if his framing wins? A version of economic discourse that is humane, philosophically literate, and politically moderate benefits a layer of conservative intellectuals who want a respectable face for free-market ideas after 2008 and after Trump. Roberts contributes to that rehabilitation project. He gives free-market thinking a Smith-and-Burke gloss rather than a Friedman-and-Hayek edge. The framing helps a coalition of moderate conservatives, donor-class Republicans, and centrist Jewish institutional figures hold their position against both populist right and progressive left.
What truths might cost him? Plain talk about Israeli politics could lose him donors or staff. Plain talk about where free-market policy has failed could lose him his ideological base. Plain talk about which guests he has hosted and why might puncture the illusion of pure intellectual openness. Plain talk about the gap between EconTalk’s charitable register and the policy preferences of his network might cost him the trust of his listeners.
Pinsof’s framework predicts that any public intellectual operating in a status economy, with hyper-judgy listeners and recursive mind reading, will signal as a matter of nature. Roberts signals with grace. He has built a long and admired career by doing it well.

Convenient Beliefs

Stephen Turner argues that intellectuals do not pick beliefs from a neutral menu. They adopt the beliefs compatible with their coalitions, funders, audiences, and career path. The beliefs that survive in a man’s head are the ones he can afford to keep. Inconvenient beliefs get edited out, softened, or buried under qualifications. The man does not lie. He sincerely believes what his social location lets him believe.
Roberts trained at the University of Chicago under free-market economists. He taught at George Mason, then moved to Stanford’s Hoover Institution, then to Shalem College in Jerusalem as president. Each station rewarded a particular cluster of beliefs.
Chicago and GMU rewarded skepticism of government, faith in markets, and suspicion of macroeconomic confidence. Hoover paid him to keep producing those views. Shalem hired a Jewish public intellectual with a global audience to lend prestige to a small Jerusalem college. Each move tightened the fit between belief and position.
Consider the EconTalk format. Long interviews. Civil tone. Charitable engagement with guests across the spectrum. Roberts presents this as a principled commitment to civil discourse. Turner’s frame asks a different question. What does this format let Roberts avoid?
It lets him avoid taking sides on the questions that might cost him guests, sponsors, donors, or audience. The civility is real. The convenience is also real. A combative host cannot interview both Thomas Piketty and Charles Murray. A neutral host can. The brand of openness protects the host from the costs of judgment.
Roberts has moved over twenty years from confident free-market positions toward humility about economics. He now stresses the limits of empirical work, the role of narrative, the importance of meaning over measurement. This shift gets framed as intellectual maturation. Maybe it is. The frame also notes that humility costs him nothing and gains him much. Confident free-market claims have aged badly since 2008. Skeptical humility lets him keep his Chicago lineage without owning its embarrassments. He need not defend predictions because he no longer makes them.
His turn toward religion follows the same logic. Adam Smith on moral sentiments. Maimonides. The Jewish humanities. These themes carry him into territory where economics gave him no authority, and where he can speak as a sage. The Shalem presidency consolidates the shift. He now runs an institution whose mission matches his late-career identity. The fit is so tight that one cannot tell whether the beliefs produced the position or the position produced the beliefs. Turner’s point: the question has no clean answer.
The Hayekian humility position is the most useful belief Roberts holds. It does heavy work for him. It lets him criticize anyone who claims to know what policy will produce, without having to make claims of his own. It positions him above the empirical economists who fight over standard errors. It pairs with his religious turn because both rest on the limits of human knowledge. And it gives him a way to discuss politics without partisan commitment. He can question the confidence of progressive economists and the confidence of populist conservatives from the same chair.
Roberts avoids Trump. He avoids the immigration fights. He avoids the campus speech battles. He avoids Israel-Palestine in any direct policy form, though he now lives in Jerusalem. Turner’s frame says this is the predictable shape of beliefs held by a man whose audience, employer, and donor base cross every fault line in American intellectual life. EconTalk’s reach depends on this avoidance. The avoidance gets rationalized as humility, as civility, as the limits of economics. The rationalization is sincere. It is also convenient.
Wild Problems sells the same package to readers. Big life questions cannot be solved by economic optimization. Choose by who you want to become. Honor your obligations. The book’s audience is midlife professionals who already feel that economics left them empty. The message confirms what they want to hear. Roberts gives them permission to value family, faith, and character without abandoning their identity as men who think in cost-benefit terms. He charges them nothing they do not already want to pay.
His move to Jerusalem caps the pattern. An American libertarian economist becomes president of a Jewish liberal arts college in Israel. The beliefs that travel with him are the beliefs the move requires. Jewish learning is central. Western liberal education has roots worth preserving. Markets are fine but not enough. Meaning comes from tradition. None of these claims are false. None of them are independent of his location.
Turner’s frame says the beliefs he holds are the ones a man in his position can hold without strain. A different career might have produced a different Roberts with different sincere convictions. The man we have is the man his stations have made. His convictions track his coalitions.

‘Arguing is BS’

Roberts has built a career out of appearing to do the opposite of what Pinsof describes. He asks questions. He admits when his mind has changed. He platforms men who disagree with him. He keeps his voice low. By every item on Pinsof’s checklist of pseudoargument warning signs, EconTalk looks like the rare real argument.
That is what makes him a test case.
Pinsof’s claim says arguing is tribal performance disguised as persuasion. The form does not fit the supposed function. Roberts has built a form that fits the supposed function almost too well. So either he is the exception that breaks the rule, or his show is the most sophisticated cover operation in the genre.
Look at what gets the long Roberts treatment. Adam Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments. The history of the Phillips Curve. Whether Hayek predicted the 1970s correctly. Mike Munger on rent-seeking. Arnold Kling on three languages of politics. These are technical conversations or methodological conversations or conversations with men in or near his coalition. The coalition is classical liberal, free-market, Jewish, Smith devotee, broadly skeptical of central planning and credentialed expertise. Hoover, GMU, Mercatus, Liberty Fund supply the protective ring around his working life for decades.
Now look at what does not get the long Roberts treatment. The costs of Israeli policy to Palestinians, in a serious adversarial frame. Jewish overrepresentation in American elite institutions and what it produces. Human biodiversity in the Cofnas or Murray sense. Strong attacks on Smith from the left or the right. Strong attacks on the project of classical liberalism from communitarians who think the project corrodes the things that make life worth living. He does host some heterodox men. Glenn Loury (b. 1948) has appeared. Yoram Hazony (b. 1964) and Patrick Deneen (b. 1964) have appeared. The conversations stay polite. The foundational commitments do not get tested.
So the small admissions of error are real, and the large tribal commitments stay intact. Roberts has said he was wrong about housing. He has said Hayek’s prediction record is weaker than he once thought. He has said the empirical economics he was trained on does not settle the questions he thought it settled. These admissions cost him nothing inside his coalition because his coalition does not require these positions. He has not admitted, and might never admit, anything that costs him his standing.
Pinsof would say that is the trick. By admitting small errors loudly, Roberts builds credibility he can spend on the silent loyalties that matter. The admissions are deposits. The loyalties are withdrawals. The books balance. No one notices.
His move to Shalem matters here. Shalem is a Jewish liberal-arts college with a particular vision: Western canon, Jewish particularism, classical liberalism, soft Zionism. Running Shalem ties him to a coalition formally. His income, status, and protection come from a network of donors and board members and faculty who share a specific picture of what Jewish life and Western thought should look like. Who provides his status, income, and protection. Who he risks angering by speaking plainly. Who benefits if his framing wins. What truths might cost him his position. The answers are clean and unambiguous.
His signature methodological move shows the structure. He deflates empirical confidence in economics. He says we do not know whether minimum wage causes unemployment, whether the stimulus worked, whether trade liberalization produced the gains attributed to it. Fine. He is right that the empirical literature is weaker than its practitioners pretend. But the skepticism runs in one direction. When data threatens his priors, the data is weak. When data supports his priors, he finds the data more interesting. Asymmetric skepticism is a coalition tool, not a tool of inquiry.
The Smith move is similar. How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life is gentle and humane and full of good observations about pride and vanity and the desire to be loved. It also signals coalition. Smith is the patron saint of compassionate classical liberalism, the man who lets you say I am for markets but I am not Ayn Rand. Putting Smith at the center of your moral vision says our tribe is humane, our tribe cares about character, our tribe is not what its critics say.
Becker would call this a hero system. Roberts has built an immortality project around being the gentle interlocutor, the man who listens, the economist with a soul. The project is high status and high purpose. It is also fragile. Any sustained challenge to the brand threatens the project, and threats to immortality projects produce defensive behavior even in men who do not look defensive.
So what is EconTalk in the Pinsof frame? A sanctuary. A place where classical liberal commitments can breathe in a culture that mostly does not respect them. The form looks like inquiry because the conversations are long and the host is patient. The function is closer to chant. Smart men gather to confirm that markets are subtle and central planners are crude and Hayek had a point and Smith was deeper than the textbooks say. The dogmas get reinforced gently, over hours, with anecdotes and laughter and the occasional admission that some detail was wrong. The form sits so far from a Twitter brawl that no one calls it tribal. That is the achievement.
Roberts knows that politics is mostly tribal and that economics is weaker than its practitioners pretend. He has read enough Smith and enough Hayek to understand that men reason badly and that institutions matter more than arguments. He has not drawn the full Pinsof conclusion. The full conclusion: his own show is a coalition operation, his own admissions of error are credibility deposits, his own gentleness is a status strategy, the topics he avoids tell you more about him than the topics he covers. Drawing that conclusion might end the show.
The Pinsof warning signs partly catch him and partly do not. He asks questions. He interprets charitably. He does not shout. He does not engage in whataboutism. By those signs he passes. Other signs apply. The topics central to tribal identity stay off the table or get a soft frame. The terms stay undefined when defining them might force a confrontation. The what-would-change-my-mind question never gets answered for the questions that matter.
Roberts confirms the Pinsof arguing theory. A man can perform inquiry well and still run a coalition operation. The performance does not have to be cynical. He might believe his own brand. Most men running coalition operations do. That is what makes the operations work.
The lesson for the rest of us is grim. If Russ Roberts, the gentlest and most curious man in economics, plays The Opinion Game with better manners, then the rest of us play it too.
I had the following Twitter exchange with Roberts in 2015:

Russ Roberts (@EconTalker), Oct 27, 2015: “If immigrants scare you b/c you think they won’t assimilate, then I don’t have a good answer for you. Very old fear. Never materializes.”
Luke Ford (@lukeford), Oct 27, 2015: “@EconTalker @1800tweets Like all peoples, they are afraid of those who are very different from them in genes/religion/culture/race.”
Russ Roberts: “@lukeford @1800tweets Historically, in US, that has fear is repeated often. Jews, Germans, Irish, Japanese, Vietnamese. Turned out fine.”
Luke Ford: “@EconTalker @1800tweets Would you wish Israel to be destroyed as a Jewish state as the USA has been destroyed as an Anglo state? Turn fine?”
Russ Roberts: “@lukeford @1800tweets I reject the analogy. Better: should Israel have accepted Ethiopians? Yes. US an Anglo state? When? 1880?”
Luke Ford: “@EconTalker America was an approximately 90% caucasian country until 1960, no citizenship for non-white immigrants until circa 1948.”
Russ Roberts: “@lukeford I thought it was an Anglo thing. So it’s a white thing. Ugly.”
Luke Ford: “@EconTalker So why is Jewish identity beautiful, black identity beautiful, Anglo identity beaut, but white identity ugly? Which people ID ok”
Russ Roberts: “@lukeford Sorry, Luke. Not interested in this conversation. Good night.”

Roberts holds the higher-status position here. He opens with an unfounded confident assertion and treats the assimilation question as settled. I walk him toward the move he cannot answer. Why does Jewish identity earn celebration, Black identity earn celebration, and White identity earn condemnation? He answers by calling White identity ugly, then exits.
His Ethiopian analogy collapses on inspection. Israel admits Ethiopian Jews because they count as Jews.
His historical claim has soft edges. Jews, Germans, Irish, Japanese, and Vietnamese arrived under different terms, at different scales, into different countries. Germans and Irish arrived when the country had open frontier, Protestant supermajority, and no welfare state. The 1924 Act shut the door for forty years and gave the previous waves time to settle in. The country Roberts calls a success absorbed these groups under conditions that no longer exist. The 1965 Act changed the source countries and removed the pause.
The deeper move shows in his exit. He gives a verdict (“ugly”), then closes the conversation. That sequence reveals the rule for this kind of polite liberal discourse. White ethnic identification sits outside the permitted set. The asymmetry needs no defense because the verdict precedes argument. When I press him on the asymmetry, he stops talking. The silence does the work the argument cannot.
My final question applies one standard across groups and asks which groups get permission. He has no answer that holds the moral position he started from. The exit preserves his standing at the cost of the argument. Good night becomes a jurisdictional act, not a fatigue signal. He retreats to higher ground rather than fight on terrain he cannot win.
The exchange anticipates the next decade. My question on asymmetric ethnic permission moves from edge to center over the next ten years. In 2015 Roberts can dismiss it and walk away. By 2025 the same question runs through Supreme Court arguments, university admissions, and immigration debate. I asked the question early, on the wrong platform, with the wrong interlocutor, and got the predictable closing move.
I had a a similar exchange with economist Noah Smith Oct. 28, 2016 where I linked to this Linda Gottfredson paper on the link between IQ and education results.
Noah Smith responds: “Yes yes, now kindly go away.”
Same shape as the Roberts exchange, tighter form. Smith offers no argument. He concedes the empirical point with “yes yes” and exits with “kindly go away.” The concession does the diagnostic work. He does not say the data are wrong. He does not cite contrary research. He does not name a flaw in Linda Gottfredson’s work. He acknowledges what I wrote and refuses the conversation.
That sequence reveals the rule. Within his coalition, the topic earns dismissal, not refutation. Treating it as a serious empirical question signals the wrong things. The professional position is not “these claims are false.” The professional position is “these claims fall outside the permitted range.” Smith knows the rule. His audience knows the rule. The “kindly go away” performs the rule in public.
Linda Gottfredson holds serious academic standing. She drafted the “Mainstream Science on Intelligence” statement, signed by 52 researchers and published in the Wall Street Journal in December 1994. She lost University of Delaware funding in the 1990s for accepting Pioneer Fund money and won a settlement on academic freedom grounds. Her work sits inside the academic literature on intelligence and life outcomes, not outside it. Smith knows this. The “yes yes” concedes it. The dismissal protects status, not truth.
The wrinkle sits in the “yes yes.” Smith does not bother to fake disagreement. He concedes and dismisses. An honest position would either dispute the data or engage them and explain what they mean. He picks neither. He performs acknowledgment plus refusal. That move only works where refusal carries no cost and engagement carries cost. The 2016 Twitter ecosystem rewarded the refusal.
Compare the two exits. Roberts argues, gets pressed, calls White identity “ugly,” and signs off politely. Smith skips argument entirely. The progression from one to the other shows the rules tightening across the decade. By 2016 the permitted range had narrowed. Engagement on substance had become contamination.
Who does Smith risk angering by treating my tweet as a serious empirical claim? All of his coalition. The topic carries professional radioactivity. Engaging on substance, even to refute, signals the wrong things. “Kindly go away” is not for you. The dismissal performs for his audience. They read it as: this man knows the rules and applies them.
The pattern repeats across this kind of exchange. The interlocutor concedes the data privately, refuses the data publicly, and treats the refusal as the morally serious move. The move trains observers. Anyone watching learns the cost of raising the topic. The Twitter exit functions as a public warning shot. Smith knows I will not be persuaded. He knows his audience needs the demonstration.
On Mar. 11, 2016, Russell Roberts said on KCRW: “Trade with China has accelerated the job loss in [America’s] manufacturing.”
“On the plus side of the ledger, hundreds of millions of Americans have been able to buy relatively inexpensive goods from China, which they love to buy.”
“I want to add something equally important that has not been mentioned by any of the candidates, which I find deeply depressing and may not be mentioned by anyone else on this program — that trade with China has transformed the lives of the Chinese people and I don’t think that’s irrelevant. I don’t know why people on either side of the political spectrum… ignore the tremendous benefits that have accrued to desperately poor people [in China]. Yes, it is hard for certain Americans with low levels of education to find work when they have to compete with people outside the United States. Let’s fix that by improving their skills and their opportunities and not by artificially keeping out foreign products that help those workers who are even poorer than ours. As a person who cares about humanity, I don’t know understand how you can suggest that we should not bring in their goods and allow them to be as poor as they have been in the past.”
He then tweets:

* Dear Donald Trump: Self-sufficiency is the road to poverty. Replacing foreign factories w/US ones makes us poorer, not richer.

* Why do we only get one side of trade? Immigrants compete w/US workers, yes. But they also help consumers and themselves.

* Can’t someone explain that opening our borders doesn’t destroy American jobs, just certain kinds of jobs?

I reply to Roberts (jpeg):

* China is our enemy. As they grow richer, they threaten the countries around them and US power. China cannot rise peacefully.

* You say the welfare of Chinese is equally important as the welfare of Americans. You are a globalist, not an American patriot.

* Do you not favor your children over other children? Why do you not favor the welfare of your country over other countries?

* Free trade with Germany in the 1930s would have boosted Germany’s capacity to wage war, same with China today.

Roberts responds: “Does u care at all about the Chinese escape from poverty?”
He states his cosmopolitan-libertarian position. He treats Chinese welfare as equally weighted with American welfare. He treats American manufacturing job loss as a transition cost to be addressed through retraining. He treats opposition to free trade as a failure of humanitarian feeling.
My four responses raise the questions orthodox free-trade economics cannot answer cleanly.
The 1930s Germany analogy targets the realist concern. Free trade with a rising hostile power enriches your future adversary. Static gains-from-trade models say nothing about the relative-power consequences of mutual enrichment. John Mearsheimer’s realist case on China has gained ground across the next decade. By 2026 the bipartisan consensus has shifted hard in this direction. Roberts in 2016 treats the question as outside his framework. His framework has no place for relative-power consequences. The model treats both parties to a trade as private actors maximizing utility, not as state-power vehicles whose relative strength shifts with the trade.
The globalist-patriot label fits him. He says on KCRW: “As a person who cares about humanity…” The phrase places the universal above the particular. You named the position. Roberts dislikes the label. The label tracks his stated view.
Parents favor their children over other children. We do not call this a moral failing. We call it parenting. Roberts’ framework treats national preference as bias to be overcome. The children analogy shows that preference for one’s own is the basic structure of moral life, not an aberration from it. The cosmopolitan position has to either reject the children case (almost no one will) or explain why kin preference stops at the family boundary and cannot extend to the nation. Roberts does not answer.
The enemy point names what American foreign policy elites have largely accepted by 2026. China cannot rise peacefully without displacing US power in Asia. The realist case has won the empirical argument over the decade since this exchange.
Roberts’ KCRW remarks rest on three claims.
First, the consumer surplus argument. American consumers get cheap goods. True at the static level. The model treats consumption as the primary good and production as a means to consumption. The displaced worker loses his livelihood and gains cheaper TVs. The model counts this as net positive if consumer surplus exceeds wage loss. The model says nothing about social standing, community, fatherhood, or the difference between a man with a job and a man on disability. The losses are not only economic. The Tucker Carlson and J.D. Vance critiques of free trade across the next decade pick up this point.
Second, the retraining solution. Roberts says fix the worker side through skills and opportunities. Thirty years of evidence show this does not work at scale. Displaced manufacturing workers do not retrain into coders. The communities they live in do not recover. David Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon Hanson published “The China Shock” in 2016 showing durable wage and employment losses in trade-exposed communities. Anne Case and Angus Deaton documented the deaths of despair across these same regions. Roberts treats retraining as a tractable problem. The tractable retraining program does not exist.
Third, the moral framing. Roberts converts a policy disagreement into a character test. “I don’t understand how you can suggest…” If you oppose free trade, you do not care about humanity. The framing prevents the empirical comparison from happening. The comparison sits between Chinese poor and American consumers gaining on one side, and American workers, American manufacturing capacity, American community structure, and American strategic position on the other. Roberts has not done the comparison. He has stipulated the answer.
The framing trick to watch for. Roberts presents his cosmopolitan position as universal humanitarianism and the opposing position as parochial selfishness. He does not say: “You weigh Americans more, I weigh Chinese equally, and we are arguing about whose welfare counts.” He says: “I care about humanity, and I do not understand how you can fail to.” The contested claim, that Americans count no more than Chinese, sits as the unstated premise. The framing converts a moral disagreement into a question of whether you have moral feeling at all. This is the standard cosmopolitan move and it works on audiences that share the premise.
The decade since 2016 has moved in my direction on trade and China, not Roberts’. The Trump tariffs survived the Biden administration. The bipartisan China hawk consensus hardened. The China Shock literature reshaped academic economics. Roberts has not, to my knowledge, updated publicly. The same coalition still funds him. The same audience still rewards the position.

Stephen Turner Against Essentialism

Roberts speaks of markets as if they share a deep structure across time and place. The price system coordinates dispersed knowledge. Voluntary exchange produces order without design. These statements have the shape of claims about a thing. Turner’s response: what we call the market is a name for many different bundles of practice held together by legal forms, tacit conventions, social networks, family arrangements, religious habits, and state apparatus. A medieval fair, a Soviet black market, an American suburban grocery, and a high-frequency trading desk share a label, not an essence. When Roberts says the market does X, he generalizes across an enormous variety of arrangements held in place by tacit work no economist has described.
Take the canon. Roberts treats Smith as the source of enduring insight, How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life as a manual for using ancient wisdom to live now. Turner’s sociology of knowledge: canons form because coalitions need them. Smith became Smith because particular readers in particular decades had reasons to make him the founder. Other readers made him into other figures. The Smith of the Scottish Enlightenment, the Smith of postwar Chicago, the Smith of George Mason in the 2000s, and the Smith of Roberts’s humanistic turn are not the same man. To say Smith teaches us something is to join the work of a coalition that selects which Smith to read and which passages to weight.
Take the wisdom tradition. Roberts’s later work, Wild Problems above all, argues that traditional sources, religion, literature, family, give better guidance for life’s hard choices than economic models. Turner’s view: wisdom is tacit. It lives in practice, not in propositions. The Jewish tradition Roberts now draws on is not a set of teachings sitting in books waiting to be applied. It is a way of life carried by communities through repetition, correction, and shared embodiment. A man can read Pirkei Avot and miss everything that makes the tradition function. The teacher who knows the tradition cannot state what he knows. To treat wisdom as a thing one extracts from texts and applies to one’s life misunderstands how wisdom travels.
Take humility. Roberts has built a brand on the posture of the curious inquirer who admits what he does not know. EconTalk runs on this posture. Turner’s sociology of expertise might ask whose humility this is and what work it does. The humble inquirer at the top of a profession occupies a different position than the humble inquirer at the bottom. Roberts’s humility is the humility of a man who has tenure, fellowships, a college presidency, and a global audience. The posture functions as a coalition signal: I am one of you, I am not threatening, I am open to your view. The signal is honest about his disposition and quiet about his position. Turner does not say the humility is fake. He says it does work the speaker does not name.
Take economics. Roberts treats economics as a discipline with a subject matter, the study of human action under scarcity, exchange, and choice. Turner might treat economics as what economists do, which is historically contingent, shaped by funding, professional incentives, and the convenient beliefs that let careers proceed. The economics of 1960 is not the economics of 2025. The line between economics and what is not economics has been redrawn many times by coalition work, not by discovery of the field’s essence.
Roberts is more open to these criticisms than most free-market economists. He has admitted limits to his discipline. He has turned toward narrative, tradition, and religion. But the turn keeps the essentialist shape. He moved from one set of essences, market, exchange, choice, to another, wisdom, tradition, Torah. The categories changed. The form of thought did not. Turner’s challenge is harder than choosing better essences. The challenge is to think about social life without essences at all, to see practices, tacit habits, and coalitions where one used to see things.
A Turner-style portrait of Roberts might press four points. First, his career has tracked the rise and partial decline of a coalition, libertarian academic economics centered at George Mason, with Hayek as patron saint. Second, his religious turn has placed him inside a different coalition, the modern Orthodox intelligentsia that funds Shalem and reads Jonathan Sacks (1948-2020). Third, his interview style produces a particular kind of public good for both coalitions: a tone of seriousness, generosity, and learnedness that lets the listener feel he thinks when he is mostly soothed. Fourth, the wisdom he now offers, slow down, choose family, read old books, honor tradition, serves the men who already hold what he tells them to honor. The advice is not wrong. It is positioned.
Turner does not require a hostile reading of Roberts. He requires a reading that does not take Roberts’s categories as given. The market, the canon, the tradition, the humble inquirer, the discipline. Each is a coalition’s tacit habit dressed as a thing with a nature. Roberts is a careful man working in good faith inside this dress. Seeing the dress is the point.

Stephen Turner on the Normative

Stephen Turner argues that the normative is not a real domain. When philosophers say something is normative, they claim it binds. But where does the binding come from? Turner says the question has no good answer. What looks like normativity is the verbal performance attached to dispositions, habits, expectations, and sanctions. Strip away the verbal layer and you find behavior, training, and social pressure. No separate binding force remains.
This frame applies to Russ Roberts.
Roberts makes normative claims throughout his work. Economists should be humble. We should read Smith. Conversation should be slow and charitable. Policy should respect human limits. Each “should” claims a binding force. Each invokes obligation. Turner asks where the obligation comes from.
Roberts cannot say it comes from logic. He rejects rationalist construction. He admires Hayek because Hayek warned against building social arrangements from first principles. Roberts cannot say it comes from empirical evidence. He spends much of his career attacking empirical overconfidence in economics. He cannot say it comes from authority without naming the authority and defending it. He cannot say it comes from tradition without conceding that tradition is inherited disposition rather than binding obligation.
So when Roberts says economists should be humble, Turner asks: what binds the economist who refuses humility? The honest answer is nothing. The economist who keeps building macro models and selling confident forecasts pays no normative price. He pays social prices, professional prices, sometimes reputational prices if his predictions fail. None of these counts as normative in the philosophical sense. They are sanctions, not obligations.
The same operation runs on Roberts’ Smithian project. Smith should teach us about moral sentiments. The cultivation of virtue should guide a good life. The desire to be loved and to be lovely should shape conduct. Turner deflates each claim. The “should” cannot be cashed out. Roberts wants the reader to share his disposition toward Smith. He uses normative language to recruit. The language has rhetorical force. It has no philosophical force.
Roberts’ conversation ethic offers the clearest case. EconTalk operates on the norm that interlocutors should be treated charitably, that disagreement should not sharpen past comfort, that depth should win over scoring. Roberts treats these as binding. Turner says they bind only those who already have the disposition to honor them. The man who shows up combative violates no obligation. He violates a social expectation that lives in Roberts and his audience but not in him. The norm has no independent existence.
This does not mean Roberts is wrong about anything substantive. Turner does not argue against Roberts’ positions. He argues against the way Roberts presents them. Roberts presents his positions as if they carried obligation. They carry only invitation. Roberts invites the reader to share his dispositions. The invitation comes dressed as a “should.” Strip the dress and the invitation remains, but the obligation vanishes.
The deeper move Turner makes against thinkers like Roberts: the gap between descriptive claims and normative ones cannot be bridged by any philosophical operation. Roberts can describe how careful economists behave. He can describe what humility looks like in practice. He can describe the conversations he likes. None of these descriptions generates an obligation. The conversion from “this is what we do” to “this is what should be done” requires a step Turner says no one can supply. Hume saw this. Turner repeats it without Hume’s hesitations.
Roberts proceeds as if the step had been taken. He talks like a moral teacher with access to obligations. Turner says he has access to dispositions and the verbal repertoire that comes with them. The teaching is the transmission of dispositions through speech. The dispositions are real. The obligations are not.
What does Roberts do when challenged on this? In his book and on his podcast he retreats to a quasi-religious or quasi-traditional ground. Smith said it. Hayek said it. The Bible suggests it. The tradition holds it. Turner’s response is direct. Smith said many things. So did Hayek. The Bible can be read many ways. Tradition is the name we give to dispositions that have lasted. Citing tradition is citing the very dispositions whose binding force is in question. The citation moves in a circle.
The circle is not vicious in any practical sense. All normative talk works this way. Turner is not telling Roberts to stop. He is telling readers to see what the talk is doing. When Roberts says economists should be humble, hear an invitation to a shared disposition. Do not hear a discovered obligation. The invitation might be wise. The obligation does not exist.
Roberts gains something by speaking in the obligation register. He gains rhetorical weight. He gains the standing of a moral teacher. He gains the authority that comes with claiming access to “should” rather than to “I would prefer.” Turner does not say Roberts does this in bad faith. Roberts has the disposition to speak this way because everyone who teaches has the disposition to speak this way. The disposition is common among teachers. Turner’s point is that the disposition produces obligation-talk without producing obligations.
The cleanest test of Turner on Roberts: subtract the normative language and see what remains. What remains is a man with strong dispositions toward humility, conversation, Smith, religious life, and respect for human limits. The dispositions are coherent and admirable. They are not obligations. They are how he lives. He invites his audience to live the same way.

Status is Weird

Russ Roberts plays an anti-status game with rare skill.
The standard economist’s status game runs on credentials, models, predictions, and citations. You win by appearing certain, technical, and indispensable to power. Roberts spent his early career inside this game. Chicago PhD. Washington University in St. Louis. Stanford via Hoover. The Keynes vs Hayek rap videos with John Papola landed him a popular audience most academic economists could only envy.
Then he switched ladders.
Around the time EconTalk matured in the late 2000s, Roberts began staging a different posture. He started saying “I don’t know” on air. He questioned whether macroeconomic models tell us anything reliable. He wrote How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life, pulling Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments out of the moral philosophy attic and treating it as the deeper Smith. He wrote Wild Problems, arguing that the largest choices in life resist data. Each move ratcheted him further from the certainty game his profession plays.
This is a Pinsof move. The Chicago-style certainty game was already cracking. The 2008 financial crisis had embarrassed the macroeconomists. Behavioral economics had begun puncturing the rational-agent model. Roberts saw the game collapsing and shifted to the anti-status game before most of his peers noticed the lights had come on. The anti-status game in his subculture rewards a particular pose: epistemic humility, narrative thinking, philosophical seriousness, suspicion of expertise.
Roberts plays this game better than almost anyone.
His sacred values map onto the anti-status game point for point. Restraint. Humility. Conversation. Adam Smith on sympathy. Hayekian skepticism about planning, now extended into a general skepticism about anyone who claims to know how to fix things. He cites poets. He cites rabbis. He pulls from Stoics and from Jane Austen. The signal is clear: I am not the economist who thinks he can run your life with a regression. I am something deeper.
The Pinsof point is that this remains a status game. Roberts trades certainty for the higher-status currency of wisdom. Anyone trying to attack him on his own terrain runs into a soft wall. He already agreed he might be wrong. He already conceded that economics has overreached. You cannot beat him at his own humility. He has pre-confessed every sin you might accuse him of.
The Jewish religious turn fits the same pattern. Roberts grew more observant over decades and in 2017 took the presidency of Shalem College in Jerusalem. From outside this looks like a renunciation of status. He left Stanford and Hoover for a small undergraduate college in Israel. From inside the anti-status game it reads differently. Shalem occupies a high-prestige node in a different circuit, a Western-canon liberal arts college tied to the Jerusalem intellectual scene, funded by serious donors, oriented toward an elite Jewish project. The move trades one form of status for another, and the trade reads as principled.
Apply the four diagnostic questions.
Who pays Roberts. Hoover, Shalem, his publishers, his Patreon audience, the donor class that funds heterodox-but-respectable intellectual life. None of these payers want him to become partisan. All of them want him to keep the seminar tone.
Who he risks angering by speaking plainly. The libertarian base that gave him his early audience, if he drifts too far from free markets. The Jewish institutional world, if he stakes out positions inside Israeli politics that alienate donors. The centrist liberal listeners who like his even-handedness, if he picks a side.
Who benefits if his framing wins. Anyone who profits from a depoliticized, philosophical register of public talk. Donors who want serious-looking intellectual life without partisan exposure. The Hoover-Shalem network of post-political conservatism. Listeners who want to feel thoughtful without committing to a fight.
What truths might cost him his position. That his humility is a brand. That EconTalk’s even-handedness operates as a coalition-management tool, keeping a varied audience together by never forcing them to disagree about anything sharp. That his religious turn looks like a status move from a Pinsof angle, whatever Roberts’s own experience of it. That the Smith of Moral Sentiments has become a vehicle for a particular bourgeois consolation. That his refusal to predict or prescribe, framed as wisdom, sometimes serves as a refusal to take risks that might damage his coalition.
The fragility is real. Roberts has to keep playing in the dark. If he ever names the humility as a status play, the play stops working. He has to mean it, every episode, every book, every podcast intro.

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Yes, Minister

Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister dramatize Turner’s argument about tacit knowledge as well as anything in popular form has. Antony Jay (1930-2016) and Jonathan Lynn (b. 1943) built the shows on long interviews with civil servants, and they caught what Stephen Turner (b. 1951) spent his career articulating.
Sir Humphrey Appleby runs Whitehall through layered fluency, not codified rules. Jim Hacker can never acquire it fast enough to use. Hacker keeps trying to make the tacit explicit. He demands clear answers, written procedures, named decisions. Sir Humphrey defeats each attempt by reabsorbing the inquiry into the very fluency Hacker lacks. The minister asks what something means; the answer arrives in three subordinate clauses, four Latin tags, and a smile.
Turner’s argument against Michael Polanyi (1891-1976) runs through the shows. The civil service does not share some inner content called “how Whitehall works.” Each senior civil servant has been processed through the same selection: PPE at Oxford, the right colleges, the right examinations, the right early postings, the same vocabulary of “courageous” and “interesting” learned by correction at desks over years. The coordination looks like shared tacit knowledge. Turner argues it is parallel training producing convergent outputs. Sir Humphrey and his peers behave alike because the same forces shaped them, not because they hold a common substance.
The shows make this visible in the Bernard Woolley scenes. Bernard gets trained on camera. Sir Humphrey corrects his grammar, his manner, his timing, his choice of words. None of it sits in a manual. Bernard absorbs it by repetition and correction, the way one absorbs a first language. By the late episodes Bernard has become a junior Sir Humphrey, fluent in evasion, alive to the Greek roots of a word, capable of producing a memo that says nothing while appearing to say something definite. He has been formed, not informed.
Turner’s three-layer frame fits the shows scene by scene. The doctrine layer is ministerial responsibility and democratic accountability. Hacker invokes it whenever the room moves against him. The organizational tacit layer is Whitehall’s procedures: which red box arrives when, which paper gets filed where, which committee can be quietly dissolved. The embodied tacit layer is Sir Humphrey himself, his accent, his timing, his instinctive sense of when to flatter and when to threaten. The comedy comes from the doctrine layer pretending to govern the other two while the other two govern it.
The vocabulary jokes are the cleanest demonstrations. “Brave,” “courageous,” “interesting,” “novel,” “imaginative” form a gradient of warnings, and no one teaches Hacker the gradient. Sir Humphrey expects him to know. Turner’s principal-agent inversion shows up here. The minister is supposed to be principal, the civil servant agent. Asymmetric tacit knowledge inverts the relation. The agent who controls the vocabulary controls what can be said, and what cannot be said cannot be decided.
Jay came at the civil service from outside as a critic. Lynn came from theater. Neither had the embodied fluency of Whitehall. They had to study it from the outside, which is why the shows work as ethnography. An insider could not have written them. The fluent do not see their fluency.
One closing point. Turner’s correction of Polanyi cuts against the view that some “secret of statecraft” or “wisdom of the service” might be acquired by ministers through humility and apprenticeship. There is no secret. There is only the long training Hacker never had time for and Sir Humphrey had decades of. The mystique is the byproduct of the asymmetry, not its source.

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Yoram Hazony & the Custodianship Question

Hazony inverts the consensus school’s move at every step. The consensus historians dissolved Jewish particularity into American universalism so they could enter Protestant institutions. Hazony reconstructs particularity to defend a Jewish nation against the universalism those same Jews helped build. The two projects sit at opposite ends of the same Jewish century.
The consensus school needed a thin America. Hofstadter (1916-1970), Hartz (1919-1986), and Boorstin (1914-2004) wrote a history that emptied American identity of its Anglo-Protestant content and refilled it with abstract liberal principles available to anyone. That thinning was the price of their entry and also its justification. If America was Lockean proceduralism rather than Anglo-Protestant inheritance, Jews belonged not as guests but as full participants. The dissolution of particularity served their position by eliminating the ground on which they could be excluded.
Hazony needs a thick everything. He wants thick Israel, thick Jewish identity, thick American Christian conservatism, thick national tradition. His project assumes thin polities collapse and that the consensus historians’ victory was a Pyrrhic one for both Jews and gentiles. The universalist America that made room for assimilated Jews has, in his reading, dissolved the cultural inheritance that gave the country its cohesion, and the dissolution now threatens Jewish security because a fragmenting America cannot continue to underwrite a Jewish state.
On custodianship, Hazony might side with the 1930s WASP gatekeepers on the structural question and against them on the particular exclusion. He thinks custodianship is real, necessary, and ineliminable. Every institution transmits a particular formation. The claim of neutral procedural transmission is always a cover for the actual coalition doing the transmitting. Lowell (1856-1943) at Harvard was right that custodianship is unavoidable and wrong only in thinking it could be limited to Anglo-Saxon Protestants in a country with substantial Jewish populations whose particularist tradition was equally serious.
That last clause is where Hazony’s project gets interesting and also where its tensions emerge. He wants a custodianship model that allows multiple thick traditions to coexist within a constitutional framework drawn from a shared Biblical inheritance. His Hebrew Republic argument runs that American Protestantism and Jewish covenant share enough common Biblical ground to support a national constitutionalism that respects the particularity of both. This is custodianship as confederation rather than custodianship as singular WASP guardianship.
Whether the model holds up under sociological pressure is another question. The consensus historians did real work that Hazony’s framework has trouble accounting for. Hofstadter’s psychology of mass movements caught something true about the relation between status anxiety and political paranoia, even if his Eastern European Jewish formation shaped what counted as paranoid and what counted as legitimate grievance. Trilling (1905-1975) reading of American literature exposed evasions the WASP critics could not see. The outsider’s gift was a real gift, even if it came packaged with the assimilation strategy.
Hazony’s framework treats this gift as a corrosive solvent. The same distancing capacity that lets you see Hawthorne’s repressions also lets you dissolve the cultural inheritance the next generation might have needed. Once you train scholars to read every tradition as a coalition operation, you have eliminated the possibility of receiving any tradition. The hermeneutics of suspicion eats its host.
Can Hazony’s Biblical framework avoids becoming another interested coalition strategy? The honest answer is no, and Hazony might half-concede this if pressed. His framework serves a coalition: religious Jews who want sovereign Jewish nationhood to be philosophically respectable, American religious conservatives who want intellectual ballast against secular liberalism, post-liberal intellectuals who want a critique of universalism that does not collapse into pure ethnonationalism, and Israeli political and donor networks that want a sophisticated case for Jewish particularism in English. Apply your four diagnostic questions to Hazony and the coalition shape becomes visible. The Tikvah Fund, the Herzl Institute, the national conservative conferences, the religious Zionist publishing world all provide the status, the income, and the protection. Speaking plainly against religious Zionism, against American Christian Zionists whose theology he half disagrees with but politically needs, against Israeli ethnonationalism in its harsher forms, might cost him part of his base. The truths that might cost him his position include the awkwardness that his particularism extends to Jews and Anglo-Protestants but not symmetrically to Palestinian Arabs or to White European Christians making structurally identical arguments to his.
The defense Hazony might offer is that all positions are coalition positions and the choice is between honest and dishonest particularism rather than between particularism and neutrality. That is a real argument and possibly correct as a meta-principle. But the move converts coalition operation from something to be analyzed into something to be performed openly, which lets the analyst off the hook for examining his own coalition’s operations. The consensus historians performed neutrality while doing coalition work. Hazony performs particularism while doing coalition work. The performance is more honest in his case, but the underlying logic is the same.
The deepest difference between Hazony and the consensus school is not philosophical but historical. The consensus historians wrote when American Jews needed access to institutions from which they had been excluded. Hazony writes when American Jews have unprecedented access to those institutions and when the institutions themselves have decayed in ways that threaten Jewish security. The consensus framework served Jewish interests in 1955. The Hazony framework might serve Jewish interests in 2025, though only for Jews who locate their safety in Israel and in religiously serious American Christianity rather than in the secular liberal consensus their grandparents helped build. The two strategies represent different Jewish bets about where safety lies, and they cannot both be right.
The WASPs lost their nerve. Hazony has not. He could write a defense of Anglo-Protestant custodianship that no living Anglo-Protestant intellectual would write, and he could write it without the embarrassment that paralyzes contemporary heirs of that tradition.
The reasons are several and they compound.
Hazony does not carry the guilt freight that disabled WASP self-defense after the 1960s. The civil rights movement, the Vietnam War, and the immigration debates of the Hart-Celler period taught WASP elites that defending their inheritance sounded indistinguishable from defending segregation, imperialism, and racial exclusion. The vocabulary of cultural particularism became the vocabulary of George Wallace and Strom Thurmond, and respectable WASPs spent the next sixty years demonstrating that they had nothing in common with those men by relinquishing the cultural inheritance those men had claimed to defend. Hazony has none of this baggage. He can say that Anglo-Protestant tradition built American freedom, that Puritan covenant theology grounds American constitutionalism, that the King James Bible shaped American moral imagination, and the sentences carry no implication that he personally is defending his own racial privilege. He is a foreigner praising a tradition not his own, which gives him standing the inheritors no longer claim.
He also has theological reasons that WASP intellectuals abandoned. Hazony takes covenant seriously as a political category. He thinks the Hebrew Bible is a political document and that Puritan readings of it produced a tradition of national constitutionalism worth defending. Contemporary mainline Protestant intellectuals cannot say this because they no longer believe it. They demythologized their inheritance two generations ago. Hazony, an Orthodox Jew, treats their grandfathers’ theology with more seriousness than they do. He can defend Cotton Mather’s framework better than any living Congregationalist because he still inhabits a covenantal worldview that the Congregationalists abandoned for ethical culture.
The coalition logic also points this way. Hazony’s project needs American religious conservatives as partners in a common defense of national particularism. He cannot have that partnership if those conservatives have no inheritance to defend. So he has every incentive to talk the Anglo-Protestant tradition back into existence as a living thing rather than a closed museum. He needs the Southern Baptist Convention and the Presbyterian Church in America and the conservative Episcopalians and the Reformed networks to recover confidence that their tradition is defensible. His Biblical Christian audience cannot be a coalition partner if it is ashamed of itself.
WASP elites cannot perform this recovery because they have spent four generations defining their respectability against it. The transformation Klingenstein describes in literary academia, where the heirs of the Anglo-Protestant tradition first lost confidence and then conceded transmission to outsiders, has its parallel in every other elite institution. The Episcopal Church, the Ivy League boards, the major foundations, the Northeast investment banks, the corporate boardrooms: all of them spent the postwar period demonstrating that they were no longer the parochial institutions of their grandfathers. The demonstration succeeded so completely that they no longer have grandfathers to invoke. To defend Anglo-Protestant inheritance now would require them to reverse the entire course of their family histories over three generations, which is asking a lot of any class.
There is also a personality difference. Hazony has the combative temperament of the Israeli intellectual class, which sees argument as a normal mode of political life rather than a breach of civility. He will say plainly what an American patrician finds vulgar to say. The patrician tradition of understated authority, of letting institutions speak for themselves, of treating overt cultural defense as bad form, was a luxury available only when the institutions were secure. Once the institutions came under sustained attack, the patrician style became a disability. WASP elites continued performing understatement while their inheritance was being analyzed out of existence. Hazony does not perform understatement about anything.
The deeper point is that defending a tradition requires belonging to a community that still believes the tradition is worth defending, and the WASP elite no longer constitutes such a community. They have intermarried, secularized, and dispersed into the general professional managerial class. There is no Boston Brahmin community left to defend Boston Brahmin culture, no Philadelphia Main Line community to defend Main Line manners, no Virginia gentry community to defend Virginia gentry tradition. The institutions persist but the communal substrate has dissolved.
Hazony belongs to a community that has not dissolved. Orthodox Jews retained the dense communal structure, the religious authority, the marriage patterns, and the textual tradition that American Anglo-Protestants lost. He speaks from inside something. When he tells American religious conservatives to recover their tradition, he is modeling something he can do because his tradition is still operational. The model is unavailable to people whose tradition has been on life support since the 1960s.
The grim joke is that the strongest contemporary case for Anglo-Protestant custodianship of American institutions will likely be written by an Orthodox Jew, published by a Jewish institute, funded by Jewish donors, and read by religious conservatives who lack the formation to write it themselves. The consensus historians thinned Anglo-Protestant America to make room for Jews. Hazony might thicken it back up to make room for a different Jewish strategy. The same Jewish community, two strategies apart, working both sides of the WASP inheritance because the WASPs cannot work it themselves.

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Nathan Cofnas: ‘Cambridge University’s War on Free Speech’

Nathan Cofnas writes May 11:

After accepting a job at Cambridge on the promise of free speech, I was betrayed the moment the administration determined that free speech was inconvenient for them. I was effectively driven off campus with threats of violence against me brushed off as not a big deal. I was forced to resign from my paid position as undergraduate examiner. A senior administrator and two philosophy professors (including the chair of the faculty) met with student protesters to conspire about how to “[get] rid of him” even before they had bothered filing trumped-up charges against me. The Faculty of Philosophy adopted new policies to ensure that controversial scholars could never be hired again. I was subjected to a year-and-a-half-long investigation straight out of Idiocracy. Emmanuel College, where I held the position of College Research Associate, terminated me on the grounds that my belief in hereditarianism “amounted to, or could reasonably be construed as amounting to, a rejection of Diversity, Equality and Inclusion (DEI and EDI) policies.”
…We now have the absurd situation where the limits of philosophical inquiry are set by the most emotionally fragile students at each university. Except for the libertarians, philosophers who publicly challenge conventional left-wing views have been virtually purged from academia.
I recently started a one-year, part-time postdoc at Ghent University. I’m very happy to be here, except when students are throwing bottles at my head because they disagree with my lecture. However, I am hanging on to an academic career by my fingernails. I would ask my critics to think about the day after I am banished for good. Will philosophy really be more interesting or better equipped to address important problems when there is no room for someone like me?

Cofnas writes well. The doggerel opening, the line about “Cofnas” not rhyming with anything, the deadpan list of philosophers who never held a university post, his comic timing pulls you through a long piece. The Aileen McColgan section lands a clean hit. She seems to have confused “0.76% of Americans with IQ 135+ are Black” with “0.76% of Black Americans have IQ 135+.” That is an elementary base-rate mistake. Writing a long report that turns on it is bad work and embarrasses her and Cambridge University.
Who would hire her now? Who promoted her to a task beyond her abilities? This is damning.
Administrators meeting with student protesters to plan how to “get rid of him” before any charge, then commissioning an inquiry that ran out the clock on his three-year contract, fits a pattern other targets at other universities describe. Death threats downgraded to a writing exercise while the faculty member faces a year-and-a-half investigation tells you what the institution prioritizes. The contrast he draws between the Gopal case (speech is allowed unless criminal) and his own (speech is allowed unless we can find an excuse to punish it) is a fair one, and the documentary record he reproduces supports it.
Where the essay strains is in his self-presentation. He casts every administrator as a coward or a fanatic and every critic as part of a mob. Some of them are. Some of them are doing their jobs. He treats his views as plain mainstream science. They are not. Robert Plomin, who appears in his supportive letter, is more cautious in his published work than Cofnas is in his blogging.
The word “betrayal” pings me. After reading Betrayals: The Unpredictability of Human Relations by Gabriella Turnaturi, I’ve adopted her framing of betrayal as that overwhelming pain I feel when I see that other people have different priorities from what I expected and I don’t want to say I was wrong. Instead, I must describe the other parties as diabolical.
I love this bit from the book: “Furthermore, if it is true that not only in every relationship but in every interaction parts of ourselves that we were unaware of come to light, we cannot even be sure that we will never betray. Betrayal, both as an act on our part and as an action we undergo, is always relational and always possible. When we enter into relations with others, a step that is necessary for the construction of our own identity, we put into play our desire to be with the other — but also our desire not to lose ourselves in the other.”
Turnaturi’s frame turns betrayal into a sociological event rather than a psychological wound. Betrayal is an asymmetrical rearrangement of role content, started by one party while the other does not see it coming. It requires a prior relationship with disclosure and exchange of trust. It emerges from complexity. Until the 16th century, treason against the sovereign was the paradigm case. After that, the act privatized. Today adultery and similar personal violations carry the gravitas the word once reserved for matters of state.
Cofnas reaches for “betrayal” to describe his Cambridge experience. The word is doing more work than the situation can bear.
What relationship did he have with Cambridge as an institution? A three-year contract for a Leverhulme fellowship in the Faculty of Philosophy. An unpaid affiliation with Emmanuel College. A piece of paper, the December 2020 Statement on Freedom of Speech, approved by 87% of the governing body. None of these constituted a personal covenant. The 87% did not know him. The document did not name him. The administrators who hired him for the fellowship were not the same administrators who moved against him eighteen months later.
What Cofnas calls a betrayal is the collision of priorities that always coexisted at Cambridge. The free-speech coalition won the vote in December 2020. The DEI coalition was already present, growing, and waiting. Pro-Vice-Chancellor Vira affirmed his right to free speech on February 16, 2024, then reversed course one week later under student pressure. That looks like betrayal if you read Vira as a single moral agent with a stable commitment. It looks like coalition arithmetic if you read him as a man balancing forces that differed in strength at different moments. The first reading produces betrayal. The second reading produces information.
Turnaturi’s point that betrayal requires a prior relationship sharpens this. Cofnas had no relationship with Cambridge as a unified actor, because Cambridge as a unified actor does not exist. He had relationships with specific people: his hiring committee, his fellowship sponsor, the colleagues who supported him quietly. The administrators who acted against him were either different people or the same people responding to coalition pressure they had not previously revealed. The asymmetrical rearrangement Turnaturi requires for betrayal happens between parties who share a role frame. Cofnas and the Cambridge administration did not share a role frame. He read the document as a covenant. They read it as a procedural norm subject to override under enough social pressure.
Betrayal as a category dresses up the discovery that other people had priorities I did not anticipate. The cry of betrayal converts a failure of prediction into a moral injury. It protects the speaker from the harder conclusion: I read the situation wrong. I projected unity onto a system of competing forces. I treated procedural language as personal commitment.
Cofnas has reasons to choose the betrayal framing. It places him in a clean moral story with a wronged party and a wrongdoer. It justifies the lawsuit. It justifies the public essay. It mobilizes allies who recognize the betrayal grammar from their own coalition memberships. The alternative framing, that he made a forecast about how the institution worked and the forecast failed, gives him nothing to organize a narrative around. There is no allied coalition for the man who simply made an error.
Another framing is that Cofnas erred by moving into the Substack register and he would have been better served producing serious academic work and avoiding polemics.
Cofnas had a choice of register. He had a peer-reviewed paper trail in Evolutionary Psychological Science, philosophical work on debunking arguments, a respectable academic position in philosophy of biology. He could have continued in that register: technical papers, careful hedging, peer review, the slow accumulation of academic credibility on a difficult topic. The academic register has a protective function. Even colleagues who disagree must defend the legitimacy of peer-reviewed work, because attacking it threatens their own claim to academic freedom. The register encodes a tacit alliance among academics across ideological lines.
He chose the Substack register instead. “Why We Need to Talk about the Right’s Stupidity Problem.” “A Guide for the Hereditarian Revolution.” The titles are not academic. The word “Revolution” is a political call, not a scholarly proposal. The contents discuss what happens if affirmative action ends, what social arrangements might be needed in a colorblind system, what Sowell’s theory says in stark unhedged language. This is policy advocacy in the register of online combat.
The choice of register changed what Cambridge could do to him. Aileen McColgan’s report leans heavily on the question of academic competence in the published material she was reviewing. If she had been reviewing a peer-reviewed paper in Philosophy of Biology, that line of attack might have been harder to land. The journal’s review process supplies presumptive evidence of competence. The Substack register supplies no such presumption. The polemical title alone gave her something to work with.
Tacit knowledge about what an academic can and cannot say is encoded in register, venue, peer review, and hedging conventions. The academic register provides protective armor that the Substack register strips off. The protection is not absolute. Academics with controversial views still face attack. But the attack must work harder against academic-register publication than against Substack polemic. Cofnas chose the more direct register and lost the armor.
He cannot see this. The essay treats the Cambridge response as ideological persecution of his views. It treats his choice of venue and register as transparent or invisible. The framing is: I held heterodox views, Cambridge punished me for the views, therefore Cambridge betrayed academic freedom. The unstated middle term is the register choice that altered what Cambridge could plausibly do.
Several reasons might explain the blindness.
The Substack register may feel more honest to him. Academic hedging reads as cowardice or obfuscation to many writers who break out of it. The polemical register feels like truth-telling against the academic norm of softening everything. From inside that experience, the trade-off does not register as a trade-off. It registers as moral clarity.
The Substack platform supplies rewards the academy does not. Chiefly, attention. The reward structure pulled him into the register. Once in, the rewards reinforce the choice. He cannot see what he gave up because the platform he chose keeps paying him in the currency he traded for.
The polemical register is a coalition signal. By writing this way, Cofnas signaled his break from the academic left and his alliance with the heterodox right. The break was the point. Acknowledging that the register cost him something means acknowledging that the break had costs, and the heroic-rebel narrative has no room for self-imposed costs.
The lineage he closes the essay with includes Socrates, Diogenes, Spinoza, Hume, Nietzsche. None of them are peer-reviewed academics. The lineage is one of direct speakers who refused institutional softening. From inside his frame, the academic register reads as betrayal of the lineage he wants to inhabit. So he cannot say “I should have written more peer-reviewed papers and fewer polemical essays” because that admission shrinks him from the lineage he claims.
The strongest counterargument on Cofnas’s behalf is that the academic register has narrowed. Hereditarians have trouble publishing even in technical journals. Reviewers reject manuscripts on coalition grounds. The protective function of the academic register may have eroded. The Substack reach might have been worth the institutional risk because the academic alternative was closing.
Even granting this counterargument, the trade-off was still a trade-off. He chose. The essay erases the choice. A clear-thinking analyst might write: “I chose the Substack register because I wanted reach, I knew it carried risk, the risk materialized, Cambridge then punished me using the register as evidence of incompetence, I now reconsider whether the trade was worth it.” Cofnas does not write that. He writes: Cambridge promised free speech and lied. The first version is what self-examination looks like. The second is what coalition mobilization looks like.
Cofnas cannot see his own agency in producing the situation because seeing it unwinds the narrative that sustains him.
Cambridge is a complex institution with multiple competing coalitions, an explicit free-speech text, tacit norms of administrative response, separate college and faculty governance, and a long history of selective application of stated principles. The complexity is where his expectation diverged from reality. The complexity is where the felt betrayal lives. A simpler institution might have spared him the experience because his expectations would have matched its operation.
The media handling of betrayal has shifted to an indifferent tone. As the review puts it, “what once toppled monarchies now sells mops.” Cofnas’s case plays out in Daily Mail headlines, Varsity articles, Substack essays, Twitter mockery. The gravitas the word once carried has thinned. He reaches for the strong version of “betrayal” because the cultural register no longer supplies it freely. The strain shows. The schoolyard mockery in his essay sits alongside the lofty Spinoza-Hume lineage claim. Both are needed because neither alone can carry the weight he wants the situation to bear.
The schoolyard register and the betrayal framing do the same work in different keys. They both inflate the encounter beyond what its structure can support. A man whose priorities differed from those of the institutional coalitions around him met the result. He calls it betrayal. The word does the heavy lifting the situation refuses to do for him.
The Sowell passage is where Cofnas’s framing wobbles most in this essay. He quotes Sowell’s list, aversion to work, proneness to violence, sexual promiscuity, drunkenness, and treats McColgan’s reading of it as crude stereotyping as self-evidently ridiculous. A reader can hold both that Sowell is a serious scholar and that printing that list in a Cambridge essay reads as a sweeping characterization of Black Americans, whatever Sowell intended. Cofnas wants the protection of “I am only describing the data” while writing prose engineered to provoke. He gets to do that. He does not get to act surprised when people react.
The closing comparison to Socrates, Diogenes, Spinoza, Hume, Descartes, and Hobbes is where he loses me. A three-year fellowship cut short and a part-time postdoc in Ghent is not a hemlock cup. The pose is overwritten and it cheapens the parts of the case where he has the goods.
What he does have is a real grievance about how Cambridge processed him. The bait-and-switch between the December 2020 free speech statement and the standard McColgan applied is a documentable shift. The Faculty of Philosophy’s new procedure of circulating finalists’ dossiers for ideological vetting, if he describes it accurately, is a chilling thing for any institution that calls itself a university. He is more persuasive when he stays on the procedure and less when he tells you he is Diogenes.
The last paragraph is a plea for mercy. “Hanging on by my fingernails.” “The day after I am banished for good.” “I would ask my critics to think about…” Strip the rhetoric and you have a man asking the people trying to destroy him to please consider that he might fully lose. That posture forfeits ground he built in the procedural sections.
It signals weakness, and his enemies will read it that way. His Cambridge antagonists already believe they won. They got him off campus, ran out the clock, made hiring him a reputational risk anywhere in the Anglosphere. The fingernails line confirms their scoreboard. Worse, it broadcasts to any administrator at any future institution that hiring Cofnas is hiring a man near the end of his rope. That is the perception he most needs to fight, and he hands it to them in his own voice.
The closing also clashes with what comes right before it. He compares himself to Socrates and Diogenes and Spinoza, men who refused to flinch in front of power. Then he flinches. The reader feels the gear change. Either you are the heir to Diogenes, telling Alexander to stop blocking your sunlight, or you are the postdoc on year-to-year contracts asking critics for clemency. You cannot hold both poses in the same paragraph without one collapsing the other. The Diogenes pose collapses first.
There is a counter-case. He runs a Substack and the post is also a fundraising vehicle. Vulnerability sells subscriptions. The Free Speech Union case needs public sympathy, donors, witnesses willing to come forward. For those readers the fingernails line works. So there is a tension. The plea helps with money and helps with sympathy. It hurts with hiring committees, hostile press, and the activists looking for proof they broke him.
A stronger ending might have closed on the lawsuit. He has a live legal argument that hereditarianism is a protected belief, the judge in Cambridge County Court accepted that point, and Maya Forstater also lost in round one before winning on appeal. That is the threatening note. The opposition does not fear his sadness. It might fear his persistence and his lawyer.
Alistair Penbroke writes:

Nathan Cofnas is such a curious guy. I am fascinated by his mindset.
After years of writing about how smart and brilliant leftists must be because there are no right wing academics, he pens a giant essay in which he admits he was completely duped by a single document in which Cambridge claimed to care about free speech and intellectual freedom. So he went to work there and discovered the reality was one of violent mobs texting each other stuff like, “can we just all order ski masks and turn up on a voi and beat the shit out of him.”
He even describes the entire situation there as “retarded,” says the leadership “pour[ed] gasoline on the fire”…

Cofnas writes that he made the “fateful decision” to go to Cambridge because of the December 2020 Statement on Freedom of Speech, approved by 87% of the governing body, no escape clause. He took the written document at face value. He read the institutional self-description as binding reality.
This is the move he had spent years diagnosing in others. The credentialed liberal reads the university mission statement and believes it. He reads the official line on diversity and believes that. The gap between the formal text and the operative practice is where Cofnas’s analysis used to live. Then he stood in front of the most consequential text of his career and treated it as truth.
The warning signs were present. His friends told him not to accept. He had an offer from a top university in Asia where, he writes, the students do not care about Western political correctness. The Noah Carl precedent sat right there: Cambridge had fired a researcher in 2019 for almost exactly the kind of work Cofnas does. The document overrode the priors. A man trained to spot the move fell for the move.
That sentence might be the most useful one in the essay if he chose to write it. He has not chosen to write it.
The language problem is smaller but real. The piece shifts register as the stakes get personal. Section titles like “Cambridge University: Cofnas Is a Gay Nazi, LOL” and “Emmanuel’s Kangaroo Court” sit alongside careful statistical reconstructions of McColgan’s errors. He calls the investigation “straight out of Idiocracy.” He describes Chalmers “pouring gasoline on the fire.” He cracks wise about the Daily Mail journalist becoming his “old friend.” None of this is wrong. It might even make the piece more readable. But it represents a different Cofnas from the man who wrote in measured cognitive-science prose about between-group IQ differences.
The measured prose came easier when the question concerned other people’s groups. When the question concerns his own livelihood, the measured prose breaks down and the schoolyard voice emerges. That shift carries information. It suggests the prior dispassion was a posture enabled by his standing on the safe side of the inquiry, treating other men’s coalition positions as objects of study while his own sat secure. Once his own coalition position came under attack, the detachment evaporated. He started to write the way the people he had previously dismissed write.
Most men write differently when their own neck is on the line.
Cofnas’s sacred values at Cambridge were the right to publish hereditarian conclusions, the legitimacy of his professional standing, and his self-image as a man who follows the data wherever it leads. The Cambridge apparatus came for all three. He responded with the moves the woke deploy when their sacred values come under attack.
The list runs longer than his allies might want to count. He frames himself as the victim of mob rule. The students framed themselves as victims of his scholarship. He gathers a coalition of named allies (Singer, Pinker, Plomin, Srinivasan, the Free Speech Union) to sign letters and write public defenses. The students gathered petitions of hundreds and then more than a thousand signatures. He mocks his opponents in the register of social-media combat: McColgan as a “math expert,” section titles like “Cofnas Is a Gay Nazi, LOL,” the investigation “straight out of Idiocracy.” The students mocked him in Varsity and in ROAR. He files a lawsuit under the Equality Act. The students filed seven formal complaints. He says his career hangs by his fingernails and bottles fly at his head in Ghent. The students said his presence on campus traumatized them and threatened their educational environment. Both sides perform the same routine. The content of the sacred value differs. The shape of the defense converges.
Alliance Theory predicts this. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. When the coalition is under attack, members reach for the strongest available moral words. For the woke that vocabulary runs through harm, trauma, safety, White supremacy. For Cofnas it runs through free speech, academic freedom, Socrates, Spinoza, Hume, the Enlightenment lineage. Each vocabulary feels to its user like bedrock truth and to the other side like obvious cant. Both sides are sincere. Sincerity is what makes the routine work.
Becker fits here too. Cofnas closes the essay by placing himself in a chain of philosophers who were poor, exiled, sold into slavery, and self-publishing in obscurity. Socrates with the hemlock. Diogenes in the wine jug. Spinoza turning down Heidelberg. Hume rejected by Glasgow and Edinburgh. Nietzsche selling 250 copies. That is a hero-system claim. He is not just an academic with grievances. He is a link in the chain of truth-tellers crushed by institutions. The students at Cambridge make a parallel hero-system claim about themselves. They stand in the lineage of those who resisted scientific racism and protected vulnerable groups from dressed-up biological determinism. Two hero systems collide. Each side reads the other as a threat to the cosmic order their lineage protects.
Trivers handles the self-deception piece. Cofnas does not experience himself as performing a coalition defense. He experiences himself as the rational man stating obvious truths against a mob that has lost its mind. The students do not experience themselves as performing a coalition defense. They experience themselves as protecting their classmates from a dangerous bigot. Both sides feel the moral clarity. Neither side sees the structural match. Self-deception is more persuasive than conscious deception, which is why both sides come across so confident.
The asymmetries should not be erased. The woke side issued threats of physical violence. Cofnas did not. The woke side built its case on emotional injury that resists external check. Cofnas built his on documented errors in McColgan’s report and on the text of Cambridge’s own free-speech statement. Cofnas was the one whose livelihood was at stake. The students lost nothing. These differences are real.
But the form of the response is the same. The framing of self as victim, the recruitment of named allies, the public mockery of opponents, the resort to legal and procedural machinery, the moral lineage claim, the absolute confidence in one’s own clarity. These moves do not change when the content of the sacred value changes. That is the lesson the essay does not draw. If Cofnas saw himself in the structural mirror, the piece might have a different ending. He might write that he had spent years studying the woke and never expected to perform their script when his own coalition position came under fire. He might treat the experience as evidence about human coalition behavior in general, not about the unique pathology of one side.
He may get there. The essay does not show it yet.

FAFO (F– Around and Find Out)

FAFO does specific work the academic frames cannot easily do.
Start with what it captures. FAFO centers the actor’s agency. Cofnas chose to take the Cambridge job after his friends warned him not to. He chose to publish “A Guide for the Hereditarian Revolution” with that title on Substack. He chose to remain publicly visible during the controversy rather than withdraw and write quietly in journals. Each choice was a fuck-around move. The Cambridge response was the find-out.
The frame strips moral inflation. The betrayal language Cofnas reaches for converts his choices into wounds. FAFO converts them back into choices with predictable consequences. It does not deny that Cambridge behaved badly. It refuses to treat the bad behavior as surprising or as evidence that Cambridge broke a unique covenant with Cofnas. The institution does what the institution does. He should have known. His friends told him. Noah Carl’s case sat in the public record from 2019. The Substack platform had a track record of attracting institutional pushback. He fucked around. He found out.
FAFO also flattens the heroic framing. Cofnas closes the essay placing himself in the lineage of Socrates, Diogenes, Spinoza. FAFO says: nah, you took a job your friends warned you about and published a piece called “Hereditarian Revolution.” That deflation is brutal and might be approximately accurate.
The frame is folk-vernacular Turner. The person who fucks around is the person who did not absorb the tacit norms of the institution. The person who finds out is learning the tacit norms the hard way. Stephen Turner’s academic apparatus and FAFO point at the same phenomenon. FAFO does it in three syllables.
It is also folk-vernacular Pinsof. The fucking around is operating outside coalition norms. The finding out is the coalition response. Cofnas violated coalition norms on race, IQ, affirmative action, and academic register. The coalition responded. FAFO summarizes the structure without the theoretical vocabulary.
And it is folk-vernacular Trivers. Self-deception lets the actor tell himself he did not know. FAFO refuses that move. It says: you knew, or you should have known, and the universe is now informing you of what you pretended not to see. Whether this is fair depends on the case, but in Cofnas’s case the warnings were explicit, written, repeated.
Cofnas fucked around in foreseeable ways and got the foreseeable response, AND Cambridge’s response included real failures (McColgan’s math, Vira’s reversal under pressure, Emmanuel College’s reasoning) that are evaluable on their own terms. The two frames sit in productive tension. FAFO covers his agency. The institutional analysis covers their conduct.
The frame is useful as a private check on betrayal claims. When you find yourself reaching for the language of betrayal, FAFO is a useful pause: did I fuck around? Did the other party do anything I could not have predicted from prior evidence? The pause does not always resolve the question, but the question is the right one to ask.
For Cofnas: he was warned, he had the Noah Carl precedent, he had the published track record of academic responses to his earlier paper, he had the Substack reward structure pulling him toward escalation. He fucked around. He found out. The find-out included some real institutional misconduct, and he is entitled to call that out. He is not entitled to frame the whole thing as betrayal of a covenant he projected onto a document. The first move is FAFO discipline. The second move is honest evaluation of institutional response. Cofnas has done the second. He has not yet done the first.

Posted in Censorship, Nathan Cofnas | Comments Off on Nathan Cofnas: ‘Cambridge University’s War on Free Speech’

‘Medicine Without Merit’

Dr. Forrest Bohler writes for Compact:

The requirements for admission into medical school vary markedly depending on who the applicant is. According to data from the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), the academic thresholds required for acceptance differ substantially between racial groups. The average MCAT score of a white applicant who is accepted into a medical school is 512.4, approximately the 85th percentile nationally. By contrast, the average MCAT score for accepted American Indian applicants is 502.2 (56th percentile), for accepted black applicants 505.7 (67th percentile), and for accepted Hispanic applicants 506.4 (69th percentile).

The disparities are even more pronounced when we look at the applicant pool as a whole. White applicants overall, including those who are rejected, have an average MCAT score of 507.8, roughly the 73rd percentile. In other words, accepted black, Hispanic, and American Indian medical students matriculate with lower MCAT scores, on average, than white applicants who have not yet been accepted to medical school. The same pattern appears when we turn to undergraduate GPA. White applicants apply with an average GPA of 3.7, but require an average GPA of 3.8 to gain admission, while accepted black, Hispanic, and American Indian applicants matriculate with average GPAs of 3.593.66, and 3.64, respectively.

I ended that phone call with a realization: If I wanted to succeed in medicine, I couldn’t leave room for doubt. So I pursued a NIH research fellowship, received research training, published scientific papers, and obtained letters of recommendation from prominent virologists. When I reapplied, I was accepted to multiple medical schools and received significant scholarship offers to many of them. But once again, my state’s flagship institution rejected me. I don’t claim to know precisely why. But patterns are hard to ignore. 


When I arrived at medical school, it became clear that admissions were only the beginning. The same ideological framework that governed entry into the system shaped the culture inside it. Orientation included an entire day devoted to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). We were asked, and even pressed, to publicly recount moments of discrimination from our lives. The exercise assumed a shared framework of identity and victimhood. At one point, a student asked the DEI instructor to explain the meaning of “demisexual,” which was written next to the “Gender Unicorn” they were teaching us about. After a long pause, the instructor admitted she didn’t know how to define it.

Similar things were happening at medical schools nationwide. The same year, students in the first-year cohort at the University of Minnesota were presented with an “anti-racism” pledge during their White Coat Ceremony that went well beyond traditional professional oaths. The pledge, read aloud by the entire incoming class, included a formal land acknowledgment and required students to affirm a recognition of “inequities built by past and present traumas rooted in white supremacy, colonialism, the gender binary, ableism, and all forms of oppression.”
…The consequences of DEI policy adoption have manifested, in some cases, at the level of institutional performance. One of the most prominent recent examples comes from the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, which publicly embraced aggressive DEI initiatives and race-conscious admissions practices. In the years that followed, reporting based on internal data and whistleblower accounts described a precipitous decline in student academic performance, including more than 50 percent of medical students failing standardized clinical exams in core subjects in family medicine, internal medicine, emergency medicine, and pediatrics. For context, the national failure rate for these same exams is roughly 5 percent.
Now the Justice Department has found that UCLA violated civil-rights law. But the response to outcomes like these has not been a reckoning with preparation or admission standards, but an assertion that standardized exams and graded assessments are the problem. Instead of addressing deficiencies, institutions are encouraged to mask them, relabeling objective measures of knowledge as inequitable and biased rather than confronting what the results reveal. This impulse ultimately reached the USMLE Step 1 exam, one of the most consequential national board exams medical students must take to graduate, which was converted to pass/fail in part to “minimize racial demographic differences that exist in USMLE performance.” Rather than addressing differences in academic competency, medical education chose to discard the ruler.

The data Bohler cites checks out. AAMC numbers do show large gaps in MCAT scores and GPAs between admitted students of different races. The pattern he describes, that admitted Black, Hispanic, and American Indian students matriculate with lower averages than rejected White applicants, tracks the published data. The UCLA David Geffen failure rates have been reported and the DOJ did find civil rights violations there. The Step 1 conversion to pass/fail did cite racial score differences in its rationale. The AOA suspensions happened at Mount Sinai, UCSF, and Washington University. The renaming of DEI offices to euphemistic alternatives is documented. LCME Standard 3.7 (formerly 3.3) and the ACGME diversity language did lock diversity goals into accreditation. The decline in White male medical students from 31 percent to 20.5 percent is accurate to AAMC reporting.
His strongest passage is the self-reinforcing cycle. Admit students with divergent academic preparation, watch performance gaps persist, declare the assessments biased, weaken the assessments, repeat. The AOA story illustrates this cleanly. Washington University expanded eligibility for URiM students while keeping a top-third cutoff for everyone else, then suspended inductions when even that did not fix the numbers. The logic of the apparatus is to discover that every objective measure is the problem.
Now where the piece weakens.
The admissions officer phone call. Admissions officers rarely tell rejected applicants they did not fit the demographic. Legal exposure makes that kind of candor uncommon. The story might be accurate. It might also be reconstructed through later resentment. Either way an unverifiable anonymous conversation cannot carry the weight he places on it as the inciting moment.
The personal arc undermines parts of his case. Bohler wins the Outstanding Student Award twice, seven institutional scholarships, AOA induction, and the Excellence in Diversity Award. He frames this as strategic adaptation. Fair enough. But a White man who collects most of the top distinctions at his medical school is not the cleanest example of a system that grinds down White men. His success cuts against his framing and he handles the tension only obliquely.
The Kirk operating room anecdote and the “pregnant female surgeon of color about to get an abortion” line are appalling if accurate. Specifics that ugly call for specifics. No city, no specialty, no date, no identifying detail. The reader has to take it on faith. For a piece that wants to indict a profession this is thin sourcing.
The merit baseline goes undefended. Bohler treats MCAT and GPA as the natural measure of who should become a doctor and any departure from them as corruption. The MCAT predicts Step 1 scores well. It predicts clinical performance less well. It predicts patient outcomes weakly. Medical school admissions have always weighed legacy ties, geographic origin, athletic background, mission fit, personal essays, and interview performance. The contrast is not between pure merit and corrupted merit. It is between one set of preferences and another.
He skips history. American medicine excluded Black physicians by law and custom for most of its existence. The Flexner Report of 1910 shut most Black medical schools. The current shape of the profession was not generated by a neutral process either. None of this justifies lowering standards now. But the omission is convenient and it lets him present the pre-DEI baseline as the natural order.
He skips the concordance research. Studies on Black patients with Black physicians, and on Black infant mortality under Black pediatricians, show effects on outcomes and trust. The research has limits and the magnitudes are contested. But a piece arguing DEI harms patient care should engage the strongest empirical case on the other side. He does not.
He flattens the faculty. The “old White men in medicine” comments, the Tuskegee Airmen confusion, the preceptor’s mass shooting rant. All presented without naming anyone or providing context. Some faculty say stupid things. Some institutions push ideological orthodoxy. None of these episodes tell us how representative they were of his training. He admits as much late in the piece, where he writes that most faculty are not ideological crusaders and most students are trying to learn medicine. That admission is buried. It deserves to sit higher in the structure.
The piece is a mix of solid institutional reporting and personal score-settling. The reporting holds up. The score-settling colors the presentation in ways that make the argument easier to dismiss for readers who do not already share his priors.
An editor’s pass might cut 40 percent of the anecdotes, link the empirical claims to sources, engage the strongest counterarguments on concordance and on the limits of MCAT/GPA as predictors of clinical quality, and let the AAMC numbers, the AOA story, the UCLA failure rates, and the accreditation pressure carry more of the load. The piece is most convincing where it is most concrete and least personal.
The closing recovers some of what the middle loses. The line about people the rest of us will be deprived of as physicians pulls the focus back to patients, where it belongs. That is the argument that might land with readers outside the audience that already agrees with him. He gets there. The piece would land harder if he got there sooner and stayed there longer.

Posted in Affirmative Action, Medicine | Comments Off on ‘Medicine Without Merit’

Covenant Against Empire: The Project of Yoram Hazony

Part Two

Yoram Reuben Hazony (b. 1964) belongs to a small group of contemporary thinkers who build not only books but movements. He writes philosophy, founds institutes, recruits donors, organizes conferences, and places himself at the center of a global ideological coalition. To assess his intellectual significance one must read both his arguments and the conditions under which those arguments acquired their reach.
He was born in Rehovot to parents who had come to Israel from the United States. His father Yehonathan Hazony (1932-2011), a physicist, soon took up a post at Princeton, and Hazony grew up between American suburbs and Israeli national life. Israel offered him a country still arguing over its founding categories: sovereignty, Zionism, religion, memory, the rights of minorities. Princeton offered analytic philosophy, Anglo-American liberalism, the legacy of John Rawls (1921-2002), and the Cold War defense of liberal universalism. He studied East Asian Studies as an undergraduate, founded The Princeton Tory in 1984, and went on to a doctorate in political theory at Rutgers. His dissertation studied the political teaching of the prophet Jeremiah. The choice announced his program. He treated the Hebrew Bible as a source of political philosophy rather than a body of religious literature subordinate to Athens.
In the early 1990s he served as an aide and speechwriter to Benjamin Netanyahu (b. 1949), then a rising opposition figure. The work taught him how political coalitions form and how a public language gets built. It also gave him a close view of Israel’s intellectual situation. Israel had no equivalent of the Anglo-American conservative magazines or the European center-right party intellectuals. Its right was electorally strong and intellectually thin. Its left held the universities, the courts, and the prestige journals. Hazony concluded that political durability requires elite-producing institutions, not only votes.
That conclusion produced the Shalem Center, founded in Jerusalem in 1994. Shalem combined a research institute, a press that translated Western philosophy into Hebrew, and in 2013 it became Israel’s first liberal arts college (currently presided over by economist Russ Roberts). Shalem trained Israeli students in the Anglo-American canon while attempting to recover Jewish political and philosophical sources. Hazony launched the Herzl Institute in 2012, which focuses on Jewish philosophical theology. By the late 2010s he had added the Edmund Burke Foundation, based in Washington, and through it the National Conservatism Conferences, which began in 2019. The career, read as a sequence, shows a man who long ago decided that ideas travel through institutions and that institutions require patient construction.
His scholarly project rests on a contrast. The dominant tradition of Western political philosophy descends from Athens and Jerusalem unevenly. Athens supplies the language of universal reason, abstract rights, perfect being, and rational consent. Jerusalem, in Hazony’s reading, supplies a different vocabulary: covenant, inheritance, loyalty, particular peoples bound by shared law and shared memory. Modern political theory, from Hobbes through Locke and Kant, draws on the Athenian register and treats the Hebraic register as religious decoration. Hazony’s lifelong argument, set out across his books, holds that the Hebraic register contains a coherent and superior account of how political communities form and sustain themselves.
The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture (2012) makes the case in philosophical terms. Hazony argues that the Hebrew Bible is a work of political and moral philosophy. The biblical God is no abstract Perfect Being. He acts in history, responds to human choices, binds Himself to a particular people through covenant, and reveals truth through narrative rather than syllogism. Knowledge in the biblical mode comes through experience across generations. Wisdom accumulates. It cannot be deduced. Hazony reads Jeremiah, Genesis, Samuel, and Kings as offering arguments about kingship, prophecy, law, exile, and national survival that compete with anything in Plato (c. 428-348 BC) or Aristotle (384-322 BC).
The political extension of this Hebraic empiricism appears in The Virtue of Nationalism (2018). The book reframes modern political conflict as a struggle between two rival visions of order. The first is a world of independent nations, each governing itself according to its own traditions. The second is recurring imperial ambition, the attempt to impose one law, one creed, one administrative system on diverse peoples. Hazony places the European Union, the post-1945 liberal international order, and the universalist rights tradition on the imperial side of this divide. He places the Hebrew Bible, the Westphalian settlement, the Anglo-American common law tradition, and modern Zionism on the national side.
The argument has three moves. First, the historical claim: that the worst political evils of the modern age, including the totalitarian projects of the twentieth century, stem from universalist ambitions to remake humanity according to a single template.
Second, the philosophical claim: that abstract universal rights are constructions, not discoveries, and that political communities cohere through inherited loyalties rather than rational consent.
Third, the normative claim: that nationalism is morally good because it preserves human plurality, protects local self-government, and grounds political obligation in concrete relationships. The empire flattens. The nation distinguishes. The empire issues edicts from a center. The nation argues with itself in an inherited language.
Conservatism: A Rediscovery (2022) extends the project from political philosophy to genealogy. He distinguishes the Anglo-American conservative tradition tradition from a rival Lockean liberalism that he argues took over American conservatism in the mid-twentieth century and hollowed it out.
The book also has an autobiographical chapter where Hazony writes about marriage, large families, religious observance, and the costs of liberal individualism for the cultivation of children and the transmission of tradition.
Several tensions run through the project.
The first concerns the Anglo-Hebraic synthesis. Hazony reads the American founding as a Hebraic-Burkean settlement rather than a Lockean one. Critics across the political spectrum have argued that this account underplays the Lockean and natural-rights vocabulary at work in 1776 and 1787. The Declaration of Independence speaks the language of self-evident truths and inalienable rights. Hazony either has to read this language as a thin overlay on a substantively Hebraic-customary order, or he has to concede a Lockean strand he prefers to minimize.
The second tension concerns the diaspora question. Liberal universalism, with its talk of universal rights independent of religion or ethnicity, served Jews well across two centuries. Emancipation, civil rights, equal citizenship, the dismantling of legal antisemitism: these owe much to the abstract universalism Hazony treats as suspect. His bet, in effect, is that Jews are now safer in a world of nationalist regimes that recognize Jewish nationhood than in a world of universalist regimes that treat Jews as one tolerated minority among many.
The third tension concerns interstate order. A world of sovereign nations governing themselves needs some account of how they cooperate, restrain themselves, and resolve disputes short of war. Hazony’s writing on this is comparatively thin. He treats supranational institutions with suspicion bordering on contempt. Yet pre-1914 Europe was a world of sovereign nations and it produced the worst military catastrophe to that point in human history. The challenge is to give a serious account of what stable peace among nations requires.
The fourth tension is harder to name. Hazony’s coalition stretches from religious traditionalists to economic nationalists, from American Catholics drawn to integralism to secular populists worried about migration, from European post-liberals to Israeli religious Zionists. The shared enemies are clear: the European Union, progressive cultural authority, transnational managerial elites, the post-1989 liberal consensus. The shared affirmations are less clear. The coalition holds together so long as the enemies feel more threatening than the internal disagreements. When the alliances begin to strain, the architect has hard choices to make.
The events of 2025 and 2026 have brought those choices into the open. The American populist right has produced a string of antisemitism controversies, most visibly through Tucker Carlson (b. 1969), Nick Fuentes (b. 1998), and the spread of anti-Jewish content across the right-wing podcast world. Hazony’s response has been complicated. In late January 2026, at the Second International Conference on Combating Antisemitism in Jerusalem, he gave a keynote condemning Carlson’s program in strong terms, calling it a circus of anti-Jewish propaganda. In the same speech he argued that mainstream Jewish organizations had failed to make the case against Carlson with sufficient skill, charging the “anti-Semitism-industrial complex” with incompetence. He called for a fifteen-minute video assembling the evidence.
His former spokeswoman Orit Arfa published an essay in Tablet days later. She wrote that she and other Edmund Burke Foundation staff members had assembled exactly such an explainer, fourteen minutes and fifty-seven seconds in length, and that Hazony had kept it unlisted in an obscure account rather than release it. The essay broke publicly with him and accused him of erasing the work of his employees. The episode placed him at an uncomfortable intersection. He had built a coalition that includes the figures whose audiences are now consuming antisemitic content. He needs the coalition. He also needs to oppose the antisemitism. The speech tried to do both at once and satisfied neither side. Several Jewish conservative writers, including Gabriel Schoenfeld at The Bulwark, charged him with absolving the Republican right at the expense of the Jews who built the case against Carlson.
The moment exposes a structural problem in the national-conservative project. A politics of inherited national community offers no neutral procedural ground from which to defend minorities when the inherited community turns against them. Hazony’s reply across his career has been that strong nationalism produces room for Jewish particularism. The American situation in 2026 puts that thesis under field test.
The fifth tension concerns biology. Hazony treats the nation as an inheritance of language, religion, custom, and historical memory. He writes as though cultural transmission carries the full weight of national continuity. The biological substrate stays out of view. Yet his project depends on the assumption that nations remain durable across generations, that they resist dissolution into universal mush, that imported populations cannot be assimilated quickly or perhaps at all without harm to the receiving order. The cultural account alone struggles to carry that weight.
Behavioral genetics has produced four decades of evidence that traits like cognitive ability, time preference, impulse control, and personality run high in heritability and stable in their population distributions. If those traits sit downstream of biology to a substantial degree, then no amount of civic instruction remakes a population in one or two generations. The malleability premise shared by liberal universalists and culturalist nationalists alike comes under pressure. Hazony needs the premise to fail. He cannot say so.
To name the genetic constraint places a writer in the company of Charles Murray (b. 1943), Steve Sailer, Amy Wax, and Nathan Cofnas. That company carries professional and reputational costs Hazony has spent his career avoiding. His project sits in the respectable wing of national conservatism, hosted at universities and policy institutes, courted by senators and prime ministers. The figures who make the heritability argument openly sit outside those rooms. Hazony wants the political conclusion that flows from limited malleability without the social cost of arguing for it.
His readers feel the gap. The audiences drawn to national conservatism include many who suspect the universalist anthropology is false and who quietly read Murray, Sailer, or Cofnas. They take Hazony’s customary nationalism as the polite surface of a harder argument running underneath. Whether he intends that effect or resents it, the structure of his rhetoric leaves room for it.
Hazony picks public fights happily. He names Hayek, Buckley, the fusionist establishment, Bret Stephens, the progressive Jewish institutional world, and a long roster of liberal theorists. He seems to enjoy the combat. While he condemns racial determinism, he does so in broad, general terms without naming prominent hereditarian thinkers. His heart isn’t in the fight.
Several forces operate together, and they pull the same direction.
Coalitional cost comes first. NatCon needs Jewish donors, evangelical allies, Catholic populists, and working ties with Heritage, Claremont, and the respectable conservative apparatus. Engaging Charles Murray, Richard Lynn (1930–2023), Arthur Jensen (1923–2012), or Nathan Cofnas by name requires a fight on their data. Win or lose, the engagement legitimates them as serious interlocutors. The tent cannot afford that.
Terrain matters next. Hazony trained as a political theorist and biblical scholar. Behavioral genetics and psychometrics are foreign country. A named engagement with Cofnas or Murray drags him onto ground where he might lose on facts.
Buckley purged the Birchers by name once and let the principle do the work afterward. Hazony skips the naming step and goes straight to the principle. Naming creates martyrs and forces a public debate about underlying claims. Principled exclusion accomplishes the same exile without the debate. The figures stay outside the tent and the data stays unexamined.
NatCon offers covenant, loyalty, tradition, religion, history, mutual obligation. Hereditarian nationalism offers kinship, genetic interest, ethnic continuity. Both can produce nationalism, and they sometimes produce the same nationalism by different routes. Direct engagement reveals the family resemblance and risks contamination. Hazony needs the covenantal frame to read as the only respectable nationalism on offer, which requires keeping the rival frame nameless and fringe.
Cofnas argues the right cannot answer disparate-impact arguments without hereditarian premises. If group outcomes differ for partly genetic reasons, structural-racism claims lose their force. Hazony’s answer is that the disparate-impact framework should be rejected on covenantal and traditional grounds. The answer holds together only as long as he does not engage Cofnas. Direct engagement might force him to address the empirical claim that left-wing premises about equal innate ability are false. The moral argument is easier to make than the empirical one is to refute.
Hazony’s role is the philosopher who recovers biblical-Anglo-American conservatism and builds a respectable nationalist tent. The hero who debates hereditarians is a different hero, the truth-teller against pieties. The two heroisms compete for the same conservative intellectual audience. Hazony keeps the field by refusing to share the stage.
The Jewish case sharpens the problem. Jewish peoplehood in halakhic terms runs through matrilineal descent. The Israeli Law of Return takes Jewish ancestry as a basis for citizenship. Hazony stands inside a polity that operates on a principle his framework cannot defend in the open.
The Jewish Agency exists to bring Jews home. Birthright pays for young Diaspora Jews to visit. The Chief Rabbinate controls conversion inside Israel and rejects most applicants. Marriage in Israel runs through religious courts; a civil marriage cannot be performed on Israeli soil. Mixed marriages happen abroad and get registered on return. The state takes inherited Jewish identity as a real category and builds its civil law around it.
Population genetics has confirmed the descent claim with hard data. Studies by Doron Behar, Harry Ostrer, and others document shared ancestry among Ashkenazi, Sephardic, and Mizrahi populations. The Cohen modal haplotype appears in roughly half of self-identified kohanim across communities separated for two thousand years. Studies show that Ashkenazi mean IQ runs around 110 to 112 and that this distribution, combined with other heritable traits and urban concentration, accounts for much of the Jewish overrepresentation in cognitively demanding fields. These results circulate openly in Israeli and Jewish American discussion. They feature in mainstream coverage and synagogue education programs. The same category of finding about other groups receives a different reception. Hazony has not needed to defend the genetic side of Jewish peoplehood because his own community treats the data as unremarkable.
Cofnas complicates the picture from the diaspora side. He attacks the MacDonald (b. 1944) accusation that Jews preach universalism for gentile countries while practicing separatism at home. The Pew 2020 study shows 72 percent of non-Orthodox American Jews who married after 2010 have a non-Jewish spouse, while the Orthodox marry in at 98 percent. The intermarriage rate among children of intermarried parents runs 82 percent. By the Reform movement’s own analysts, three quarters of newly formed American Jewish households are interfaith. The Reform Jewish establishment promotes intermarriage and interracial conversion as a stated priority and treats the racial diversification of the Jewish community as a major goal. Felix Adler, the German-born American Reform Jewish thinker who founded Ethical Culture, said the Jewish race should die through assimilation once it had completed its mission of spreading monotheism. The argument has run for over a century inside Reform Judaism that Jews should universalize themselves out of existence. The 2020 data shows the argument winning.
The result splits world Jewry into two camps pulling apart in real time. The Orthodox and the Israeli political establishment operate on halakhic and statutory descent and reproduce above replacement. The Reform and secular American mainstream operates on universalist principles and dissolves at 72 percent intermarriage and rising. Hazony belongs to the first camp and writes for a coalition that includes the first camp. His American Reform critics, who make up most of organized American Jewry now, do not apply descent-based nationalism to their own community. They apply it to Israel as a special case and apply universalism at home, and the home community is going away.
The Anti-Defamation League illustrates the move that holds the two camps together. The ADL opposes immigration restriction and replacement language in America while opposing a one-state solution that turns Israeli Jews into a minority. Cofnas treats this as the strongest case for Jewish hypocrisy that MacDonald has ever built, and then defends the ADL as non-hypocritical. The ADL does not treat Jewish as a race. The ADL says Israel exists as a haven for a persecuted religious minority. The ADL lobbies the Israeli government to accept African refugees and promotes Jewish religious pluralism inside Israel. The ADL operates on something close to Hazony’s official framework: nations as cultural and historical, Israel as special because of persecution. The accusation of hypocrisy fails on this framework. It succeeds only if you insist that the underlying logic of Israeli citizenship law is descent rather than culture and persecution.
The descent logic is the operating principle of Israeli citizenship law. The Law of Return runs on descent. The Chief Rabbinate runs on halakhic descent. The Jewish Agency runs on descent. The public theory says cultural inheritance plus refuge from persecution. The civil law says grandparent clause modeled on Nuremberg. The ADL maintains the gap. Hazony maintains the gap. Cofnas does not address the gap.
Hazony’s American allies cannot reproduce the Israeli arrangement at home. An American who proposed a Law of Return for descendants of the colonial settlers, or who said the United States should restrict immigration to maintain Anglo-Protestant founding stock, or who argued the nation has a biological core that mass immigration dilutes, faces immediate expulsion from respectable institutions. The phrase “blood and soil” carries the charge of Nuremberg. The phrase “Law of Return” does not, even though the second statute inverts the first. A French intellectual who treats French identity as ancestral runs into the same wall. A Hungarian writer can say more than a German one, and a German one almost nothing. Israel sits at the top of the permission scale. The American conservative sits near the bottom.
Cofnas shows the cost. He is Jewish, he writes from inside a Jewish intellectual frame, he makes the heritability argument, and Cambridge forced him out for related claims about hereditarianism and group differences. The Israeli philosophy journal Philosophia, which had published a MacDonald reply to him, retracted the reply under pressure. The editor-in-chief lost his post.
This creates a coalition problem Hazony does not address. The American Catholic integralists, the Evangelical post-liberals, the secular populist writers, and the European national conservatives who attend his conferences look at Israel and see a model. They cannot reproduce the model at home. They cannot even articulate the model at home. They develop a workaround: cultural nationalism, civic nationalism, common-good constitutionalism, anything that gestures at inherited community without naming descent. Hazony provides the theoretical cover. His books treat the nation as cultural-customary inheritance, which is the version the American can repeat in public.
Tucker Carlson, Nick Fuentes, and the constellation of online figures around them have noticed the gap. The accusation runs: Diaspora Jews lecture us about the dangers of nationalism in our countries while supporting a Jewish nationalism abroad that operates on the principles they tell us we cannot use. Cofnas rebuts the accusation in its strong form. Most Diaspora Jews are not separatists.
Hazony cannot answer the observation because the framework he has built cannot answer it. He could say Jews are a special case because of two thousand years of persecution culminating in extermination. He believes that. But the answer concedes that descent-based nationalism is sometimes legitimate, which opens the question of when, and who decides. He could say every nation has the right to its own form, and the American form is civic rather than ancestral. But this contradicts his Burkean theory of inherited community, which sounds closer to the Israeli arrangement than the American one. He could say the Jewish form does not depend on blood at all, conversion is open, peoplehood is cultural. The halakhic and statutory facts contradict him.
The asymmetry sits inside the coalition unaddressed because no answer holds. The framework needs a theory of when descent-based nationalism is legitimate and when it is not, and the theory cannot be constructed without either elevating Jews to a unique category, which destabilizes the coalition on different grounds, or extending the same legitimacy to other peoples, which produces conclusions Hazony will not sign. Cofnas pushed the genetic argument further than Hazony permits himself, and Cambridge cast him out. Hazony watched the expulsion and did not defend the man. The reader notes the silence and draws the lesson.
Hazony doesn’t spend much time attacking antisemites (there’s no commandment in Torah to fight antisemitism). Instead, he reserves his sharpest polemics for Jews inside the gate. In The Jewish State, he attacks Martin Buber (1878–1965), Hannah Arendt (1906–1975), Hans Kohn (1891–1971), and Judah Magnes (1877–1948) as Zionism’s internal saboteurs. In The Virtue of Nationalism and across the National Conservatism project, he aims at liberal elites, secularizing Jews, post-Zionists, and Reform Judaism.
The pattern has several sources.
Coalition logic comes first. Hazony builds a transnational traditionalist alliance with Christian conservatives, Catholic integralists, Hindu nationalists, and post-liberal philosophers. Attacking external antisemites costs him nothing inside that coalition but earns him nothing either. Attacking internal Jewish liberals defines the boundary of his coalition and tells his Christian allies who counts as a serious Jew worth taking seriously. Internal enemies do coalition-defining work.
Hero system threat comes second. Hazony’s hero system is an Orthodox-flavored Zionism rooted in Hebrew scripture and national tradition. Liberal Jews offer Jews an exit from that hero system. Antisemites push Jews back toward it. The internal critic is the deeper threat because he offers an alternative path that competes for the same souls. The external enemy confirms Hazony’s frame.
Alliance hazards come third. His American allies include figures with uncomfortable proximities to antisemitism. Some NatCon speakers and adjacent voices have flirted with Holocaust revisionism, with “Christ is King” trolling, with replacement theory. If Hazony made antisemitism his primary target, his coalition fractures. So his polemic shifts toward targets that pose no risk: Reform rabbis, Tikkun Olam Jews, J Street, secular Israeli academics, the New York Times.
Market positioning comes fourth. The American Jewish establishment produces vast quantities of anti-antisemitism content already. ADL, AJC, the Federation system, Bari Weiss (b. 1984), the Tikvah-adjacent press. Hazony adds little by joining that chorus. He distinguishes himself by attacking those organizations as compromised by liberalism.
Psychic stakes come fifth. The internal critic wounds identity in a way the external enemy cannot. The antisemite hates Jews for being Jews and confirms the boundary. The assimilated liberal Jew suggests the boundary is optional. To a nationalist sensibility, the second figure cuts deeper.
A nationalist who fears assimilation more than pogrom tells you something about where he thinks the Jewish people lose itself. For Hazony, the answer sits closer to home than across enemy lines.

The Five Strands of Nationalism

Every functioning nationalism runs on five strands at once: blood, soil, faith, custom, and creed. Blood is descent and biological inheritance. Soil is territorial attachment and the particular landscape. Faith is the religious tradition that consecrates the people. Custom is the language, manners, food, family forms, work habits, and everyday rituals transmitted across generations. Creed is the explicit political and moral commitments the people takes itself to embody. No real nationalism runs on one strand alone. The American Founding generation were Anglo-Protestants who inherited English liberty and English Protestantism, settled American land, and committed to a republican creed. All five strands were present and integrated. The same holds for every nationalism that has held a polity together for more than a generation.
What changes across cases is not the presence of the strands but which strand the public theory foregrounds. The choice is strategic. The surrounding moral climate sets which strands a writer can name. A Christian nationalist in America leads with faith and custom because the blood strand is unspeakable in public. A civic nationalist leads with creed because creed is the strand that polite society rewards. A cultural nationalist leads with custom and inheritance because it’s convenient. An ethnic nationalist leads with blood and accepts the social cost.
Almost every right-wing intellectual I know privately accepts the Charles Murray-Steve Sailer perspective on group differences in IQ. I suspect that Hazony does so as well. He stands inside an Orthodox Jewish framework that defines membership through the body.
For him to hold the strict cultural-customary position with no blood strand operative in his private thinking, he must be an extraordinary outlier inside his own community, his own theoretical tradition, and his own intellectual class. Possible, but unlikely. The simpler reading is that he holds something close to the standard view of educated Zionists, which assumes a biological substrate to Jewish peoplehood and treats the cultural-customary frame as the public-facing layer rather than the whole story.
Hazony’s national conservatism is the maximum nationalism he can put in public. The view he holds privately likely sits a few clicks past it in the direction of blood and inheritance. The exact distance between the public framework and the private view is a question for biographers who can read his letters and listen to him talk in Hebrew at his own Shabbat table.
The hidden strands of nationalism keep operating regardless of public performance. A creed-first nationalism still depends on a population that reproduces, a territory that holds, a customary inheritance that transmits the creed across generations, and a religious or quasi-religious account of what makes the creed binding. Strip out the other four strands and the creed has no carrier. Pure civic nationalism has never held a polity together for long anywhere it has been tried. The creed-first description is the polite story a nation tells once the other strands are already in place and doing the work.
Walker Connor (1926-2017), the political scientist who spent his career on this question, argued that all durable nationalisms are ethnic at their root and that civic framings are public-relations decisions taken by nations that already have the ethnic substrate. Eric Kaufmann (b. 1970) makes the related case in Whiteshift, which Cofnas cites, that ethnic majorities are now reasserting majority identity politics under various civic and cultural covers because the direct ethnic frame is closed off. Anthony D. Smith (1939-2016) showed that even the most apparently civic nations have an ethnic core, an ethnie, that supplied the original carrier population and continues to do most of the cultural transmission. Jürgen Habermas (1929-2026) proposed the cleanest pure-civic alternative, Verfassungspatriotismus or constitutional patriotism, as a postwar German solution to the problem of belonging after Nazism. The proposal has produced essays and conferences and no functioning polities.
Hazony promotes nationalism, which has blood and soil and faith and custom and creed in it, and he chooses which strands to put on the public surface. The choice is rational under the constraints he faces. The customary frame is the strand his audience can hear. The descent strand stays operative inside the Law of Return, the Chief Rabbinate, the Jewish Agency, and the halakhic definition of who is a Jew. He does not need to name it. The institutions name it for him by their existence.
His American allies face a tighter palette. They have access to creed, faith, custom, and a thin version of soil. The blood strand is closed off. They make do by emphasizing the available strands and trusting the hidden ones to do the rest. Christian nationalism is the most flexible of the available frames because faith can carry custom, soil, and creed at once and can imply blood without naming it. Civic nationalism is the safest frame and the emptiest. Cultural nationalism is the Hazony-style middle position. Each frame is a strategic vocabulary, not a description of a different underlying phenomenon.
The asymmetry inside Hazony’s coalition is not between his nationalism and his allies’ nationalism. They are running the same five-strand machine. The asymmetry is in which strands they put on the surface. Israel can put descent in the statute book and call it haven-from-persecution theory. America cannot. France cannot. Hungary partly can, and Germany cannot. The same machine, different ventilation systems. The coalition holds when the members agree to respect each other’s permitted vocabularies. It strains when one member, like Carlson, decides the permitted vocabulary lies about what is running underneath.
Paul Gottfried reviewed The Virtue of Nationalism in 2019:

Israeli scholar Yoram Hazony has produced a book on the merits of nationalism that is well worth reading. Hazony treats the development of nation-states in early modern Europe as one of the unique, invaluable accomplishments of the West. Moreover, Hazony, who is a proud Israeli Jew, recognizes the value of ethnic and cultural identity in providing cohesion and meaningful self-government to societies throughout the world. It is not “diversity” but homogeneity, as the German political theorist Carl Schmitt pointed out, that distinguishes self-governing peoples from empires. In the absence of a sense of the nation generated and sustained by shared ancestry and shared history, countries become a battlefield for contending ethnicities that require an iron hand to prevent continuing civil strife. The only apparently less coercive alternative, which has come with the expansion of the modern managerial state, is a pervasive form of social engineering. This is intended by globalist elites to “sensitize” majority populations and to render them more accepting of ethnic and lifestyle minorities…
Hazony at least intermittently gives the impression of throwing together all empires and imperialists into one undifferentiated heap; thus he lists as seemingly related evils neoconservative megalomania, the imperial overreach of the EU, and such creatures of the past as the British, Roman, and Austro-Hungarian Empires…
Kudos to Hazony and the German philosopher Hegel for explaining that the nation-state may be the best political means for reconciling freedom and order…
It pays to look at the context in which supranational governments have functioned to understand their relative value. Some of these governments were the best ones available in a particular time and place. The Hapsburg Empire protected ethnic minorities that were later persecuted under the newly formed nation-states that arose in East Central Europe after World War I. The British Empire often played a similar protective role, and one would be hard-pressed to present the failed or highly problematic nation-states that emerged in Africa after Britain’s retreat from empire as politically more beneficial than what preceded them.
…Hazony correctly observes that the Nazi experiment in universal biological reconstruction cannot be viewed in the framework of the nation-state. The Third Reich did not represent a supersized nation-state. It was something far less grounded in real-ity and humanity and exemplified imperialism at its worst…
…the modern West coming out of early modern Europe is essentially Protestant and that the Reformation more than any other development gave birth to the nation-state…
Hazony is also correct to view Kant and his tract On Perpetual Peace as a “hateful” attack on the national principle… In Kant’s political conception, however, there are no nations and peoples. There are only collections of autonomous individuals who must educate themselves to be governed by universal rational principles. Only in the “republic of reason,” stripped of national specificity, can humankind allegedly achieve perpetual peace in a world community of rationalists.
…Hazony tells us a truth that most Jews outside his country adamantly refuse to hear: “If Germany and France have no right to exist as independent states, why should Israel? And if so many are prepared to remain dry-eyed on the day that Britain and the Netherlands are gone, why should they feel differently about Israel?” Those Jews who cheer on the victory of multiculturalism in gentile lands but who hope to preserve the national principle in Israel are not only applying a hypocritical double standard but also pursuing a course that, according to Hazony, will delegitimize a Jewish nation-state while sowing discord elsewhere.

Lineage

Hazony’s father Yehonathan Hazony was an experimental physicist who later crossed into computer science. His early academic work was in Mössbauer spectroscopy and the electronic structure of transition-metal complexes. In 1972 he published “3d(t2g) density distribution in covalent transition metal complexes from Mossbauer and EPR experiments” in the Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics. He came up through the Brookhaven National Laboratory circle that built the early American Mössbauer program. By the mid-1970s he held an appointment at Princeton in the School of Engineering, which is why the family relocated from Rehovot to Princeton, New Jersey while Yoram was a small child.
By the late 1970s Yehonathan’s work had moved into computer graphics, interactive cartography, and APL-based engineering tools. He published “Algorithms for parallel processing: curve and surface definition with Q-splines” in Computers & Graphics in 1979, plus papers on interactive cartography and APL-graphics tools the same year. He later went to Boston University, where he led the Boston University Manufacturing Expert System (BUMES) project and published on customized engineering systems, nested-array databases for engineering design, and APL system generators through the early 1990s. His later work ran in the IBM Systems Journal. He maintains a Boston University academia.edu page to this day.
In the dedication to God and Politics in Esther, Yoram describes his father’s “ongoing research into the behavior of quantum bodies, and his dissent from accepted theory on this subject despite the hardship of such an unpopular road.” That dissent has continued into Yehonathan’s later years. He co-published with Dov Hazony in Physics Essays a paper framed as an apparent challenge to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, drawn from monochromatic ultrasonic phonon studies of condensed matter. The unfashionable physics matters for understanding Yoram. The son of a man who builds his career around dissent from accepted theory grows up watching what that costs.
Yehonathan was raised in a pro-Ben-Gurion home in pre-state and early-state Israel and went through the labor-Zionist youth movement HaNoar HaOved VeHaLomed. His political formation was secular labor Zionism, not religious Zionism and not the right. Yoram has said his parents had “a leaning towards tradition” but did not run a religious home.
Yoram’s mother appears in the autobiographical chapters of Conservatism: A Rediscovery. He describes a home shattered by his father’s three marriages and by what he calls a “violent and mentally ill” mother. No public sources name her. Yoram notes that most of his New Jersey high-school friends were going through the breakup of their families at the same time, and that few of them ended up married with children of their own. The book gives little more detail and pivots to the conservative life Yoram and his wife Yael (born Julie Fulton, an American Princeton classmate who converted to Judaism) have built in answer to that childhood.
The paternal grandparents are the Hazanovich family, who came to Mandate Palestine from Poland and Ukraine at the end of the 1920s. Hazony is the Hebraized form of Hazanovich. The grandparents arrived inside the labor-Zionist migration of the late Yishuv period and settled into the world that elected Ben-Gurion’s coalition.
Yehonathan’s brother is Yitzhak Hazony, who with his wife Linda raised six children in Elon Moreh and was among the founders of Kedumim, the first Gush Emunim settlement in Samaria, established on Hanukkah 1975 after the Sebastia confrontation with the Rabin government. Yoram spent Shabbatot and festivals with his uncle and aunt during his post-high-school year in Israel and credits those visits with his decision to make aliyah and become observant. The two sons of the Hazanovich home split. Yehonathan went into physics, then computer science, left for the United States, and lived a secular American academic life with three marriages. Yitzhak went religious-Zionist and into the post-1967 settlement project, raising six children in a cubicle-sized apartment in Elon Moreh.

Literary Analysis

Yoram Hazony writes in a register few American intellectuals attempt. His sentences carry the cadence of a pulpit and the syntax of a 19th-century essayist. He builds arguments through the accumulation of declarative premises rather than through the testing of objections. The prose performs authority before it earns it.
Consider the opening of The Virtue of Nationalism. The first sentence runs nearly ninety words. It announces two antithetical visions of world order, ranks them, and assigns the reader a side. The structure is periodic, the parallelism balanced, the diction high. Hazony writes as if addressing a synod. He stages a confrontation. He casts himself as the only man willing to name what everyone has been thinking.
This is a Burkean costume, but the tailoring is biblical. Edmund Burke argued through historical example, layered qualification, and a willingness to admit human limitation. Hazony argues through ex cathedra declaration. He cites Burke often. He sounds nothing like him. The closer prose ancestor is the Hebrew prophet, retooled for political philosophy seminars.
His vocabulary clusters around a small set of nouns. Nation. Family. Tribe. Honor. Loyalty. Transcendence. These words appear in patterns that imply hierarchy without proving it. A nation rests on tribes; tribes rest on clans; clans rest on families. The sequence reads like genealogy. The argument hides inside the cadence. By the time a reader asks whether tribes in fact compose modern nations, the prose has already moved three rungs up the ladder.
Hazony’s sentences reward reading aloud. He builds in triplets. He repeats key terms across paragraphs rather than varying them. He resists the academic urge to qualify. Where a contemporary political theorist might write “tends to,” “often,” “in certain conditions,” Hazony writes “is.” The copula does heavy work in his prose. He uses it the way scripture does, to fix categories.
The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture deploys the same instrument on a different surface. Hazony reads the Tanakh as political philosophy, not narrative. He treats Jeremiah and Isaiah as theorists. The book reverses the standard scholarly humility about reading ancient texts through modern categories. Hazony does not apologize for the projection. He insists the categories were there first and that the Greeks renamed them late. The prose performs a recovery operation.
The literary effect is initiation rather than persuasion. Hazony’s prose recruits. He writes to confirm a tribe, not to test a hypothesis.
By Conservatism: A Rediscovery, the register tightens. The book reads as a catechism. He numbers his principles. He states each as obvious. He builds toward a program rather than an inquiry. The earlier echoes of Burke and the prophets give way to something closer to a party platform. The prose adjusts to the new audience. Where The Virtue of Nationalism still tried to persuade liberals, Conservatism: A Rediscovery addresses men who have already crossed over and want their crossing dignified.
The proportion of metaphor falls across his career. Early Hazony reaches for analogy, parable, and biblical example. Later Hazony states. The prose grows shorter, blunter, less ornamented. The man who once wrote sentences shaped like classical arches now writes sentences shaped like signs.
His family analogy deserves attention as a literary figure. The nation is a family writ large. The family teaches honor, loyalty, sacrifice. The state extends these habits. Hazony returns to this figure across every book. He never tests it against the cases that strain it. He never asks what happens when families fail, when loyalty turns abusive, when honor demands cruelty. The figure operates as a closed circuit. It produces a feeling of rightness rather than an argument.
This is the literary signature of a writer who has chosen his audience. Hazony does not stoop to convert. He dignifies. He supplies vocabulary. He gives the willing reader sentences he can quote in his own arguments. The Virtue of Nationalism became a manual not because it persuaded its critics but because it equipped its allies.
His treatment of opponents follows the same pattern. Liberalism, in his prose, is a thin abstraction. He refers to “the liberal,” “the rationalist,” “the Enlightenment thinker” as composite figures. He does not engage particular liberal arguments in their strongest forms. He paints a movement. The reader who already mistrusts liberalism finds his mistrust confirmed in vivid type. The reader who came to test Hazony finds the air thin.
The God of the Hebrew Bible appears throughout Hazony’s prose, named and capitalized, His authority assumed rather than argued. The reverence is constant. His sentences treat scripture as binding without flagging the move. This is unusual in contemporary political theory written in English. Most American conservative intellectuals who appeal to scripture do so through Christian frames and with apologetic care. Hazony writes from inside the Hebrew Bible as a living political constitution. The literary effect on a Jewish reader who shares his orientation is profound. The effect on a reader outside that orientation is that the argument feels addressed to someone else.
His prose almost never admits a counter-example. When Hazony discusses Britain or Israel or America, he selects episodes that fit. The selection is invisible because the cadence is confident. A patient reader can list the missing cases. Hazony does not list them.
His punctuation is restrained. He prefers the period to the comma, the comma to the dash. He rarely uses parenthesis. He almost never qualifies a sentence mid-clause. The visual field of his page is clean, almost severe. The reader sees rows of confident declarations rather than the cluttered hedging of academic prose.
His paragraphs build by repetition rather than by argument. He states a claim. He restates it with a slight variation. He restates it again with biblical illustration. He moves on. The progression feels like liturgy. A reader who tries to extract a chain of premises and conclusions finds the chain thinner than the music suggests.
His tone never breaks. He does not joke. He does not wink. He does not allow himself the small ironies that lighten Burke or the self-deprecation that humanizes Hume. The voice stays elevated from first page to last. This is rare in contemporary English prose, and it accounts for much of Hazony’s reach. Readers exhausted by the snark and qualification of mainstream commentary find his seriousness restorative.
The price of that seriousness is a prose that cannot examine its own foundations. A writer who never lowers his register cannot ask whether his register has misled him. Hazony has built a sound chamber. The chamber holds. The cost is that nothing outside it can be heard.

Influence

Hazony draws his influence from coalition coordination, not from scholarly accuracy. He could be wrong about Bismarck, wrong about Locke, wrong about Westphalia, and his standing inside the national conservative coalition would not change.
His real product is the convening. National conservatism needs a brand, a conference circuit, a vocabulary, and a figurehead who credentials the project across Jewish, Christian, and secular nationalist audiences. Hazony supplies all of it. The NatCon conferences gather senators, donors, journalists, and activists. The Edmund Burke Foundation issues manifestos. The books give the movement something to cite.
Academics have flagged serious problems with the work. His reading of the Hebrew Bible as sustained political philosophy strains the text. His historical claims about Westphalia, Bismarck, the development of European nationalism, and Locke have drawn criticism from historians and political theorists on the right and left. Patrick Deneen (b. 1964), Samuel Goldman, Daniel Drezner (b. 1968), and several reviewers of The Virtue of Nationalism have pushed back. None of it has slowed him down.
The books target the senator’s chief of staff, the donor looking for a frame, the magazine editor commissioning a piece, the aide to Orbán, the Heritage Foundation fellow drafting talking points. These readers want a coherent-sounding story that licenses positions they already hold. They will not check the footnotes. They want the story tellable, not airtight.
Hazony’s credentials do quiet work. A Rutgers PhD gives him academic cover. His Israeli base lets him speak to American Jewish donors as a peer and gives him distance from American culture wars. His Hebrew Bible work earns him standing with Christian Zionists who treat the text as sacred. His decades running the Shalem Center and now the Herzl Institute supply institutional infrastructure. He crosses between worlds that rarely share a figurehead.
The political theory world treats Hazony as a polemicist, not a thinker. Academic journals in political philosophy rarely cite him. The major figures in conservative political thought, the Straussians, the Catholic integralists, the post-liberal communitarians, operate from different sources. J.D. Vance (b. 1984) cites Deneen. Adrian Vermeule (b. 1968) cites de Maistre and Catholic social teaching. Thiel cites Girard. None cite Hazony as having shaped their thinking.
When serious people praise him, the praise tracks his use. Roger Scruton (1944–2020) praised The Virtue of Nationalism, but Scruton stood as the senior philosopher articulating his own long-held views, not as a student of Hazony’s. Christopher DeMuth (b. 1946) has called the project important, but DeMuth speaks as a movement architect celebrating a coalition asset. R.R. Reno (b. 1959) at First Things runs friendly coverage. None of this reads as “this argument changed how I think.” It reads as “this man does useful work for our side.”
Hazony’s work functions as chizuk (strengthening) for the national-conservative/traditionalist camp. He rebuilds intellectual, cultural, and moral foundations for those who are already inclined in a traditional direction by giving them stronger arguments, historical grounding, and communal confidence so they can stand up for themselves.
One qualification: the Hebrew Bible scholarship has earned engagement. The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture and his subsequent biblical work get cited in Jewish thought, biblical studies, and some Christian theology. Joshua Berman, Jon Levenson, and the late Jonathan Sacks (1948–2020) treated the work as a contribution.
Politicians cite Hazony for cover. Donors back him for convening. Movement editors praise him for output. Academics do not adopt his arguments. The praise that comes from serious thinkers reads as coalition affirmation, not testimony of intellectual debt.
Hazony’s authority comes from holding a position the coalition needs filled, not from arguments that change minds. He holds the figurehead role. The coalition accepts his claims because he holds the role, not because the claims convince.
Money runs through the operation. Tikvah Fund networks, Adelson-adjacent donors, and a long roster of American Jewish and Israeli philanthropists have backed the Shalem project since the 1990s. This funding base does not ask for peer review. It asks for ideological output, conference convening, and political access. Hazony delivers.
Defenders treat scholarly criticism as the predictable hostility of academics who oppose Zionism, nationalism, and conservatism on principle. The criticism becomes evidence of his importance, not evidence against him.
Hazony must avoid disgrace, not error. He must keep convening. His skill is entrepreneurial and ecumenical, not philosophical. The books are the calling card. The conferences are the product.

‘God: A Biography’ by Jack Miles (1995)

Jack Miles (b. 1942) and Yoram Hazony both read the Hebrew Bible as a unified literary object. Both reject the historical-critical fragmentation that dominates academic biblical studies. Both write for educated readers outside the seminary. There the agreement ends.
Miles reads the Tanakh as a novel and treats God as its protagonist. Hazony reads it as political philosophy and treats God as its authority. Two incompatible Gods result.
Miles’s God develops across the canonical sequence. He creates, then floods, then promises, then liberates, then legislates, then conquers, then woos, then divorces, then falls silent. Miles tracks the change. He treats the contradictions between divine acts and divine words as the dramatic material of the book rather than as embarrassments to be smoothed. The God of Genesis 1 who calls the world good is not the God of Genesis 6 who drowns it. The God who chooses Saul is not the God who rejects him. The God who hardens Pharaoh’s heart is not the God who later complains that Israel will not soften its own. Miles lets these tensions stand. He reads them as character.
Hazony reads the same text and finds none of this drama. His God speaks with one voice from Genesis to Chronicles. The political philosophy is consistent because the teacher is consistent. Where Miles sees a character in motion, Hazony sees a doctrine unfolded. The contradictions Miles foregrounds, Hazony either harmonizes or sets aside. The biblical text becomes a curriculum rather than a story.
Take the Book of Job.
In Miles’s reading, Job is the hinge of the Tanakh. God permits the destruction of an innocent man on a wager, refuses to explain Himself when challenged, and never speaks to a human again in the Hebrew canonical sequence. The God who has dominated the text for thirty-five books goes quiet. The remaining books trace the consequences of that silence. By Chronicles, God has receded into a temple. The drama ends with absence.
For Hazony, Job is a wisdom text about the limits of human inquiry. The Voice from the whirlwind teaches humility before created order. The political lesson is that men must accept the bounds of what they can know. The silence Miles makes the engine of the entire canon does not register in Hazony’s reading. His God does not withdraw. His God presides.
Each writer’s prose performs his theology.
Miles writes like a novelist. He varies his pace. He lingers on small scenes. He allows the reader to hear the text’s hesitations. He admits that he might be wrong about a passage. He distinguishes his reading from rabbinic and Christian readings without dismissing either. His sentences breathe. He treats his subject the way a serious biographer treats a serious man, with sympathy, attention, and the willingness to register flaws.
Hazony writes like a prophet. His sentences are long, periodic, declarative, untroubled by hesitation. The prose performs the authority it ascribes to its subject. A reader who finds Miles’s God conflicted, jealous, regretful, and finally silent cannot find that God in Hazony’s sentences. The prose will not let Him appear.
The two writers also handle the canonical ending differently. Miles reads the Tanakh in its Jewish order on purpose, because the Christian reordering changes the close. The Tanakh ends with Chronicles and the imperial decree of Cyrus, a God all but gone. Hazony’s God speaks at the end of Chronicles as fully as at the beginning of Genesis.
Miles wants to recover the literary power of a text that centuries of theological harmonization have flattened. He wants to show that the Hebrew Bible is stranger, wilder, and more dramatic than its custodians admit. His God is recognizable to anyone who has read King Lear or the Iliad. He is a great character.
Hazony wants to recover the political authority of a text that centuries of liberal interpretation have domesticated. He wants to show that the Hebrew Bible teaches nationhood, family, honor, and the limits of reason. His God is recognizable to anyone who has stood at attention during a national anthem. He is a foundation.
Miles’s God can lose. Hazony’s God cannot. That is the deepest difference between the two readings.
A character who can lose is one a reader can love. A foundation that can lose is no foundation. Miles can afford a fallible God because the book is literature. Hazony cannot afford a fallible God because the book is politics. Each writer’s project sets the constraint, and the constraint produces the God on the page.
Miles’s literary God cannot ground a political order. He is too conflicted, too withdrawing, too much the protagonist of a tragedy. A reader cannot build a nation on a God who falls silent after Job. Hazony’s political God cannot withstand sustained literary attention. He is too consistent, too unbroken, too much the principle of a system.
Between the two readings sits the text, which is large enough to support both and to embarrass both. Miles has the better ear. Hazony has the firmer purpose.

The End of Zionism?’ (1996)

Hazony published this in the summer 1996 issue of Azure shortly after Benjamin Netanyahu won his first national election and three years into the Oslo period. The essay reads as a political intervention written in the heat of a national argument, but its lasting interest lies in the broader claim it makes about how nation-states survive. Hazony argues that Israel’s gravest threat does not lie in territorial concessions or military weakness but in the loss of belief among Israeli elites in the legitimacy of Jewish nationalism. The Jewish state, he claims, keeps its institutions and symbols while losing the historical purpose that once justified them.
Hazony opens with an exchange between two columnists at Ha’aretz, both on the left. Yoel Marcus celebrates the readiness of an Israeli government to return to the pre-1967 borders. He argues that Israelis have tired of carrying Zionism on their shoulders and seek “personal safety and a ‘normal’ life.” Gidon Samet replies that the Oslo agreement has broken down “the ingredient that was the cement in the wall of our old national identity,” opening Israel to Madonna and Big Macs and the end of “the terrible fear of everything that is foreign and strange.” Hazony seizes on the shared keyword: normaliut. The Hebrew term carries an older Jewish coding. It means “like the gentiles.” A people that prizes normaliut above all has decided that Jewish distinctiveness is a burden to shed.
This opening sets up the essay’s central claim. The argument over Oslo at heart is not a debate over guns and butter. The argument runs over whether Jewish national identity remains an asset or a problem.
Hazony then turns to the intellectual history of Jewish nationalism. He reminds the reader that few major Jewish thinkers at the founding of Zionism in 1897 endorsed the project. Hermann Cohen (1842-1918), Franz Rosenzweig (1886-1929), Martin Buber (1878-1965), Haim Soloveitchik, and the Hasidic rebbes of Lubavitch and Satmar all rejected it. The Jewish people, in their account, was a thing of the spirit, and a state of tanks and bureaucracies would degrade Judaism into a Judaism of explosives, intrigue, and capital. The Holocaust crushed this anti-Zionist consensus. By 1948 the empowerment of the Jewish people seemed not only justified but obligatory. Hazony argues that the older suspicion of Jewish power never died among Jewish intellectuals. It went underground and reemerged after 1967 as post-Zionism.
Hazony treats post-Zionism as the resurfacing of a current that has long lived inside Jewish life. The anti-Zionism of Buber and Yehuda Magnes (1877-1948) returns in new clothing, now dressed in the language of human rights, colonial critique, and cosmopolitan ethics. Hazony reads the work of the new historians, Benny Morris (b. 1948) on the 1948 refugees, Ilan Pappé (b. 1954) on settler colonialism, Boas Evron on the fabricated land connection, and Tom Segev (b. 1945) on the political use of the Holocaust, as a continuation of an older Jewish ambivalence about Jewish power. His treatment of literary figures pursues the same theme. Amos Oz (1939-2018) portrays Jerusalem in My Michael as a city of brooding insanity. A.B. Yehoshua (1936-2022), in “Before the Forest,” sends a young Jew to burn down a “Zionist” forest planted over an Arab village. Moshe Shamir (1921-2004), quoted by Hazony, captures the perverse logic: the Holocaust “is becoming the common homeland of the Jews, their promised land.”
The third section of Hazony’s essay catalogues the institutional translation of post-Zionist thinking under the Rabin-Peres government. Hazony focuses on the Ministry of Education under Shulamit Aloni (1928-2014) and later Amnon Rubinstein (1931-2024). He cites Aloni’s removal of references to God from IDF memorial ceremonies, her dismissal of school trips to Auschwitz as nationalist agitation, and Rubinstein’s call to delete “archaic” references to “Jewish values,” “love of the homeland,” and “loyalty to the Jewish people” from curricular directives. He notes the appointment of Moshe Zimmermann as chairman of the Committee for History Curriculum Reform, the same Zimmermann who had compared Orthodox Jewish children to Hitler Youth and the IDF to the SS.
The catalogue continues across ministries. The National Insurance Institute phases out family benefits tied to military service to avoid disadvantaging Arabs who do not serve. Supreme Court Chief Justice Aharon Barak (b. 1936) articulates the doctrine that the “enlightened public in Israel,” not Jewish or Zionist values, sets the benchmark against which Israeli law gets interpreted. The Jewish Agency under Avraham Burg (b. 1955) develops plans to redirect resources from Jewish immigration toward “pluralistic” Internet content. The Foreign Ministry takes on fundraising for Arab regimes, sends post-nationalist ambassadors who declare “there is no such thing as Jewish land,” and pursues membership in the Arab League as a strategic goal under Shimon Peres (1923-2016).
Hazony argues that an ideological shift becomes serious only when it gets encoded into the routines of state institutions. Doctrine carried by a few professors is a curiosity. The same doctrine encoded in curricula, ethics codes, benefits formulas, judicial doctrines, and ministerial priorities becomes a regime. Hazony shows the post-Zionist outlook moving from seminars to the operational core of the state.
He argues that the Oslo formula, with its “mutual legitimate and political rights” phrase, does not merely permit Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza. It concedes that the Arab claim to the land of Israel matches the Jewish claim in legitimacy. If the Arabs hold a legitimate national right to the land, then Zionist history reads as a long act of dispossession previously justified by the absence of an Arab claim. Hazony reads Peres’s The New Middle East as the explicit theory behind this concession. Peres dreams of an “ultranational” entity that absorbs Jewish and Arab nationalisms into a regional government, army, and economy. Self-awareness will rest on this new reality. The “citizen of the world” will replace the citizen of the Jewish state.
The Soviet Union, he notes, fell not because its armies failed but because belief in the Soviet national idea had drained away. Israel risks the same fate. Its weapons systems function. Its factories produce. Its fighter planes look impressive. The idea that holds the whole arrangement together has lost its hold on those who staff the commanding heights. Hazony then makes a more revealing concession. Labor Zionists built farms and factories and air forces but did not build the idea of the Jewish state in the minds of the people. The Israeli right inherited the political mantle of Jewish nationalism without inheriting any intellectual tradition that could defend it. Israel has no Smith, no Burke, no Hayek translated into Hebrew. The founders translated Marx. The result is a country with strong arms and weak arguments.
Hazony names a deficit on his own side of the argument. The complaint that post-Zionism captured the universities, the media, and the bureaucracy doubles as a complaint that Jewish nationalism did not produce a serious intellectual class to contest that terrain. The essay reads, in part, as a recruiting document for a project Hazony will later pursue through the Shalem Center and his subsequent books, a project to build an intellectual conservatism inside Israel where none has existed.
The essay closes with a brief reflection on Netanyahu as the last of the believing Zionist prime ministers, paired with the warning that no single politician can reverse a cultural process whose center of gravity lies outside electoral politics. Hazony reminds his readers that the Likud and its allies held power for fifteen years before the Rabin-Peres government and that post-Zionism captured the commanding heights during that stretch. Cultural authority migrates apart from voting patterns.
The essay identifies a question that Western politics will spend the next three decades arguing about: can a liberal democracy preserve the cultural particularity that gives democratic citizenship its emotional weight? Hazony saw earlier than most that the cultural authority of universalist liberalism coexists uneasily with the affective claims of national peoplehood, even in a country whose founding charter rests on those claims. His emphasis on institutions over slogans, on curricula and ethics codes and benefits formulas, points the reader toward where political conflict gets settled rather than where it gets performed.
Read three decades later, “The End of Zionism?” repays attention for its diagnostic clarity about how national identity gets transmitted. The essay shows how a culture moves, paragraph by paragraph, across ethics codes, school curricula, and ministerial directives, and how those small textual shifts compound into a transformation of state purpose. Hazony saw that culture flows downstream of institutional language and that institutional language gets shaped by who staffs the commanding heights. He understood, before most Western conservatives did, that the contest over the legitimacy of the nation-state would become a defining argument of the post-Cold War era.

The Jewish State at 100’ (1997)

Hazony published this essay in Azure, the journal of the Shalem Center, which he co-founded in 1997. The essay marks the centennial of Theodor Herzl’s (1860-1904) Der Judenstaat and reads less as commemoration than as cultural autopsy. Hazony writes in the aftermath of Oslo, after the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin (1922-1995), and during the first Netanyahu government. The historical setting clarifies the essay’s tone of urgent diagnosis. Israel’s centennial passed without ceremony. Hazony treats this silence as symptom, and the symptom as the disease.
The piece belongs to a recognizable genre of Zionist self-criticism running from Ahad Ha’am (1856-1927) through Gershom Scholem and Yehoshua Arieli, but Hazony pushes the genre rightward. Earlier critics worried that Zionism had not gone far enough in cultivating a Hebrew renaissance or that it had drifted from socialist ideals. Hazony’s target is the reverse. The Jewish state, in his account, has been built on assumptions inherited from Russian Marxism that mistook physical settlement for spiritual achievement. The crisis of 1997 is the crisis of an experiment that won its material battles and lost its meaning.
Hazony compares the American Bicentennial of 1976 to the muted Israeli observance of Herzl’s centennial. The contrast carries weight not because Israel lacks scale but because the absence of feeling indicates something deeper. Hazony treats commemoration, school curricula, newspaper coverage, and public ceremony as diagnostic instruments. Cultural behavior, in this argument, is not epiphenomenal. It is where political reality discloses itself. A country that cannot remember its founder cannot transmit a national idea to its children.
Hazony recovers Herzl as a theorist of attraction rather than coercion. The Jewish state, on this account, succeeds when it draws Jews toward it by addressing the aspirations that move them, and fails when it tries to compel attachment through state structures. Herzl named three sources of such attraction. The first is the entrepreneurial center, which addresses ambition. The second is the religious center, which addresses memory and continuity. The third is the cultural center, which addresses the desire for participation in the universal. Together these three constitute what Herzl called “home.”
Hazony extends the same critique to the religious nationalist movement that grew out of Merkaz Harav Kook after 1967. The settler movement spoke a theological language drawn from Rav Kook (1865-1935) and his son Tzvi Yehuda, but its practice replicated Ben-Gurion’s. Settlement, farming, military service, and physical presence on the land became the measures of redemption. The vocabulary changed; the underlying premise did not. Hazony argues that the religious nationalists believed, like the Labor Zionists before them, that facts on the ground might produce ideological loyalty. They were wrong for the same reasons.
Most Israeli commentary of the period treated the religious right and the post-Zionist left as opposites. Hazony argues that the religious right is the post-Zionist left’s mirror image, sharing its inheritance from the materialism it claims to reject. The argument is uncomfortable for both sides. It denies the settlers their self-image as the last Zionists. It also denies the secular left its picture of itself as the carrier of a modern, post-tribal politics. Each, in Hazony’s reading, is a partial survival of Ben-Gurionism.
From this symmetry Hazony develops a sociology of institutions. He contrasts what he calls “linear” politics, the politics of an additional house built and an additional Jew settled, with the “exponential” influence of universities, courts, newspapers, novels, and films. The settlers expended enormous energy on linear achievements while their opponents captured the institutions that produce meaning. For each new settlement, the other side produced a novel, a legal theory, a documentary, a textbook revision. The asymmetry compounds over decades. By 1997, the secular liberal establishment controls almost every channel through which Israelis form their picture of the country, while the religious right controls hilltops.
Hazony’s economic critique runs parallel to the cultural one. Israel in 1997 retains the regulatory apparatus of its socialist founding, with capital controls, business licensing, university cartels, and a broadcasting regime designed to manage rather than enable. He argues that this apparatus alienates the kind of ambitious Jew Herzl hoped the state would attract. The complaint is consonant with the broader liberalization happening in Israel under Netanyahu’s first government, but Hazony’s framing is distinctive. He defends economic freedom not as efficient policy but as a precondition for national attachment. A state that suffocates initiative cannot become the home of an ambitious people.
Hazony surveys Israeli literature, film, historiography, jurisprudence, and academic philosophy and finds in each a culture organized around negation. The novelists write about the Arab claim and Zionist guilt. The historians expose the crimes of the founders. The filmmakers attack the army and the religious. The legal scholars import Canadian constitutional models. The philosophers identify Zionism with various pathologies. The result, on Hazony’s account, is a culture incapable of inspiring its own citizens, let alone outsiders.
Hazony rejects the assumption that material strength secures national survival. He cites the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia as cases of states that possessed armies, industries, and bureaucracies and nonetheless dissolved because their citizens stopped believing in them. The comparison provoked objection at the time. Israel, the objectors said, is not the Soviet Union. Hazony’s point is not that Israel will follow the same path. His point is that material strength alone cannot prevent dissolution once the national idea has hollowed out. The argument prefigures debates that have continued through the subsequent quarter-century about the durability of liberal democracies that cannot articulate what they are for.
Hazony calls for cultural vitality while condemning much of the intellectual pluralism that produces it. He celebrates Jewish entrepreneurial energy while distrusting the cosmopolitan openness that has historically accompanied it. He wants strong traditional attachment without the closed communities in which such attachment tends to flourish. The tensions are present in the original essay and have not been dissolved in the subsequent work.

The Jewish Origins of the Western Disobedience Tradition

Hazony argues that the Western doctrine of justified resistance to unjust political authority originates in the Hebrew Bible and entered the West through the Jewish prophetic tradition. Against the historiography that locates the origins of liberty in Greece, Rome, and the secular Enlightenment, Hazony places the decisive moral revolution in ancient Israel. The Hebrew Bible introduces into history the proposition that a standard of justice transcends the state and that men therefore hold obligations higher than obedience to political power.

Hazony writes history, theology, political philosophy, and polemic at once. He reconstructs a genealogy stretching from Abraham and Moses to Martin Luther King Jr. (1929-1968), and treats this genealogy not as detached intellectual history but as an intervention into contemporary debates concerning sovereignty, conscience, legitimacy, and the moral hazards of bureaucratic obedience. Civilizations collapse morally, he writes, when they identify legality with justice and political obedience with virtue. The Nuremberg defense, “I was just obeying orders,” becomes for him not a modern excuse but the return of an ancient pagan conception of politics that the Hebrew Bible first arose to oppose.

Hazony depicts the ancient Near Eastern empires not as authoritarian states in the modern sense but as a “stillborn world,” a total political-religious order where ruler, cosmos, law, and morality fused into a single structure of domination. Religion served as the “intellectual and spiritual mortar” binding the masses into obedience. The ruler did not stand merely supreme. He embodied cosmic order.

In Egypt, justice was “what Pharaoh loves.” The state priesthood monopolized knowledge. Astronomy, mathematics, architecture, engineering, and ritual reinforced the authority of the ruler and the inevitability of his commands. Disobedience thus constituted not mere political rebellion but rebellion against the structure of reality. The punishment awaiting dissenters was both earthly and cosmic. The empire promised an “earthly hell” in this life and annihilation in the next.

The Hebrew Bible introduces into this world a different conception of political life. Abraham’s departure from Mesopotamia is a revolt against the sacralized state, not a religious migration alone. The patriarch rejects the civilization where ruler and cosmos fuse, entering a covenant grounded in moral obligation beyond political power.

Abraham and his descendants are shepherds and the shepherd views civilization “from the outside.” The nomadic existence of the patriarchs creates ideological independence. The shepherd is not absorbed into the institutions, bureaucracies, and cosmologies of imperial society. He retains the capacity to judge the city-state because he stands partly beyond it. This “outside observation” runs through the essay as a governing theme. Freedom requires some degree of distance from centralized power. The biblical shepherd stands in contrast to the urban subject whose consciousness has been shaped by imperial ideology. The Hebrew political tradition emerges not only from theological revelation but from a social architecture resistant to total incorporation.

The prophets function, in Hazony’s telling, as the first “watchdog” institution in political history. Unlike pagan priests, who legitimize rulers, the Hebrew prophets stand outside formal state power while retaining moral authority sufficient to rebuke kings in public. Nathan condemns David over Bathsheba. Elijah denounces Ahab. Jeremiah challenges royal policy. The prophet survives because his legitimacy stands independent of political office. Hazony describes the arrangement in constitutional terms. Prophecy constitutes an institutionalized counter-power within Jewish civilization. The prophet does not serve as an official of the state. He preserves the independence needed to judge it. This structure, Hazony contends, ranks among the foundational achievements of biblical politics because it creates a sphere of moral authority external to government.

The limits imposed on Jewish kings illustrate the anti-pagan logic further. Unlike the rulers of Egypt or Assyria, the Jewish king is denied divinity. Deuteronomy prohibits him from accumulating excessive horses, wives, gold, or silver. He must carry a copy of the Teaching and remain conscious that he is not above his brethren. Moral limits bind sovereignty from the start.

The Hebrew Bible accepts the necessity of political authority while denying its finality. The state is necessary but dangerous. Kingship is legitimate but morally precarious. The Jewish political tradition seeks to balance sovereignty with prophetic resistance. Hazony reads this tension as a foundation of Western liberty.

The biblical narratives reinforce the ethic of resistance through cumulative repetition. Hazony treats the Hebrew Bible as a sustained handbook of justified disobedience. The Hebrew midwives, Shifra and Pu’a, refuse Pharaoh’s genocidal decree. Moses kills an Egyptian taskmaster and confronts imperial authority directly. Balaam refuses royal pressure despite repeated demands from the king of Moab. Esther violates Persian law to save her people. Daniel’s companions refuse idolatrous commands. Biblical heroes resist unjust power in the name of higher obligation again and again.

Balaam’s donkey carries the lesson. The ruler blinded by his own authority cannot perceive reality. Even a donkey can recognize the catastrophe the king cannot see. The episode reads as an allegory of political power. Authority narrows perception. The outsider retains clarity. Centralized political systems produce intellectual blindness because they demand conformity from those within them.

Israel means “will struggle with God.” Hazony reads this not as spiritual symbolism alone but as the elevation of struggle into a national principle. Confrontation, argument, and resistance constitute the Jewish people, not passive submission. Refusal to accept authority uncritically becomes part of Jewish political identity.

Hazony argues that classical Greek civilization never escapes the pagan identification of morality with the state. Socrates (470-399 BCE) submits to execution rather than endorse resistance to law. Greek tragedy questions authority on occasion. Greek political philosophy preserves the supremacy of the polis. Even Antigone offers an incomplete challenge because Greek thought never develops a sustained doctrine of justified disobedience comparable to that of the Hebrew Bible.

Hazony contends that nineteenth-century German scholarship erased the Jewish origins of Western political liberty. Hegelian narratives credited Greece with every valuable Western idea while marginalizing Jerusalem. The Hebrew Bible was dismissed as politically primitive or irrelevant. Hazony treats this tradition as a distortion of Western self-understanding and implies that anti-Semitic assumptions contributed to the erasure.

Hazony argues that early Christianity partly abandons the activist political tradition of Judaism to survive Roman imperial domination. Justice shifted from “this world” to the next. Submission to worldly rulers became a theological virtue. Paul’s injunction in Romans 13 and Peter’s command to obey even “perverse” masters represent, in Hazony’s telling, a “fateful compromise” with imperial power. The transformation altered the political psychology of resistance. Undeserved suffering acquired spiritual meaning. Passive endurance replaced prophetic confrontation. Rome could tolerate Christianity because Christianity redirected justice into the afterlife rather than immediate political action.

Hazony grants that Christianity later revives the Hebrew resistance tradition. Much of the essay traces the gradual reactivation of prophetic politics within Christian civilization. The decisive turn arrives with Ambrose of Milan (340-397). Ambrose resurrects the Nathan-David model by rebuking Emperor Theodosius in public after the massacre at Thessalonica. A religious authority again stands above political power and demands repentance from the ruler.

From there Hazony traces the development of resistance theory through medieval conflicts between Church and empire, Protestant doctrines of conscience, Calvinist resistance theories, Puritan political culture, and the American Revolution. Protestantism stands out because it decentralizes authority and restores the primacy of individual conscience. The believer gains direct responsibility for interpreting scripture and judging political authority.

The essay advances a larger philosophical claim about political order. Civilizations require institutions and traditions capable of judging power from outside power. A state without sovereignty collapses into chaos. A state without prophetic conscience collapses into tyranny. The health of Western civilization rests on preserving the uneasy tension between authority and resistance, law and conscience, nation and prophecy.

The Jewish State: The Struggle for Israel’s Soul’ (2000)

Hazony published this book at a moment when Oslo-era liberalism, judicial universalism, and post-Zionist discourse held the commanding heights of Israeli academia and media. It is an ambitious work of Zionist political thought, combining intellectual history, political theology, civilizational argument, and cultural polemic in a single volume. Hazony does not defend Zionism against its Arab or international critics. He argues that the gravest threat to the Jewish state comes from within Israel, from the intellectual, legal, educational, and cultural elites who no longer believe in the legitimacy of Jewish nationhood as a substantive principle of political life.
Hazony recovers what he takes to be the original meaning of the Jewish state and explains how universalist intellectual currents hollowed that meaning out. The central drama is a contest over the metaphysical and civilizational foundations of sovereignty. Modern Israel, in his telling, becomes the battleground between two rival conceptions of Jewish existence. One rests on nationhood, historical continuity, and political power. The other rests on cosmopolitan ethics, juridical universalism, and suspicion of sovereignty as such.
The book holds a central place in Hazony’s larger trajectory. Long before he emerged as the principal theorist of national conservatism, he had laid out the architecture of his later political philosophy. The themes that define his subsequent writings appear here in embryo: hostility toward abstract universalism, admiration for historically rooted traditions, skepticism toward neutral-state liberalism, insistence on the legitimacy of national particularism, and the conviction that civilizations survive only through institutions that transmit inherited forms of life.
At the center stands Hazony’s reinterpretation of political Zionism as a theory of Jewish civilizational renewal. This above all on his reading of Theodor Herzl (1860-1904), whom Hazony treats as a theorist of power, dignity, and national psychology.
Herzl, in this account, grasped what many assimilated liberal Jews of nineteenth-century Europe refused to acknowledge. Legal emancipation without political sovereignty could never secure Jewish freedom. Formal equality was insufficient because political life is governed not by abstract rights but by power relations between peoples. Minorities that lack sovereign institutions remain vulnerable to social resentment, nationalist reaction, and eventual persecution.
Herzl’s insight extended beyond physical security. The deeper problem facing assimilated Jews was spiritual and civilizational dependency. Jews who lived permanently as minorities within dominant gentile societies adapted themselves psychologically and culturally to the expectations of the majority. Political weakness produced not only insecurity but imitation, self-erasure, and a loss of collective confidence. Only sovereignty could create the conditions for an independent Jewish civilization rooted in Jewish historical experience rather than in accommodation to external norms. Herzl’s ambition, Hazony argues, was to restore “our own character” to the Jewish people.
Hazony rejects the liberal conception of the state as a neutral procedural framework detached from substantive historical identity. No state is neutral. Every political order embodies particular traditions, collective memories, and inherited moral assumptions. The effort to redescribe Israel as a generic liberal democracy stripped of Jewish national content is the substitution of one civilizational framework for another.
Hazony’s critique of liberal universalism anticipates later post-liberal and communitarian political theory. Nations are not contractual arrangements formed by abstract consent. They are historical communities sustained through shared memory, language, sacrifice, and inherited loyalty. Political legitimacy cannot be reduced to procedural fairness. A society that cannot transmit its historical identity loses the cultural foundations for solidarity and political endurance.
The autobiographical introduction functions as both personal narrative and symbolic diagnosis. Hazony recounts his return to Israel after a childhood in the United States in a Ben-Gurionist milieu shaped by Labor Zionism and a belief in Jewish statehood as a redemptive national project. Upon his return as an adult, he found a society militarily mobilized but unable to articulate why the Jewish state should exist at all.
His descriptions of conversations with Israeli soldiers are among the strongest passages in the book. He recounts officers unfamiliar with foundational episodes of Jewish history, soldiers alienated from Jewish identity, and military environments where ancient traditions were observed as ritual without substantive understanding. The problem was not a shortage of courage or patriotism in the narrow sense. Israelis remained willing to fight. The crisis was existential and civilizational. They no longer possessed a coherent account of the purpose their sacrifices served.
The diagnosis broadens into an institutional critique once Hazony turns to education, law, media, and the academy. He argues that the post-Jewish state was institutionalized through educational reform. He gives sustained attention to curricular transformations in Israel’s public schools and reads them as evidence that state institutions had abandoned the Zionist conception of Jewish nationhood.
He raises alarms over reforms tied to the New Historians and educators such as Moshe Zimmermann (b. 1943). Revised middle-school history curricula no longer began with the Kingdom of David or the political history of ancient Israel. Jewish history was reframed as the story of a minority culture responding to larger imperial civilizations such as Hellenism. For Hazony this is a profound ideological transformation. Jewish history is no longer the story of a people striving toward sovereignty and collective continuity. It becomes the experience of a dispersed cultural group within wider world history.
Hazony finds parallel tendencies in archaeology education, where curricular reforms emphasized “human civilization” and “world culture” and distanced themselves from nationalist narratives of Jewish attachment to the land. He reads the shift as part of a wider effort to uproot what educational elites regarded as dangerous or fundamentalist forms of historical consciousness. Such universalist frameworks, in his analysis, are not neutral scholarly approaches. They dissolve Jewish particularity into cosmopolitan discourse.
His treatment of civics education sharpens the critique. Newer civics textbooks presented Israel as “a state of all its citizens” in neutral constitutional language, treating the Jewish character of the state as one interpretation among many rather than as the foundational principle embedded in Zionist statehood. Procedural neutrality conceals substantive ideological transformation. Once the Jewish state is redescribed as a generic liberal democracy detached from Jewish collective identity, Zionism becomes conceptually unstable.
The legal dimension of this transformation finds its embodiment in the jurisprudence of Chief Justice Aharon Barak (b. 1936), whom Hazony portrays as the architect of Israel’s constitutional revolution. His critique of Barak anticipates later Israeli battles over judicial supremacy and constitutional identity.
Hazony focuses on Barak’s doctrine that the Jewish nature of the state should be interpreted “at the highest level of abstraction,” such that Jewish values become indistinguishable from universal democratic principles acceptable within any liberal constitutional order. The move empties Jewish identity of substantive content. Once Jewishness is interpreted only at a level compatible with universal liberalism, the Jewish state ceases to carry distinctively Jewish civilizational meaning.
Hazony analyzes Barak’s invocation of the “enlightened community” as a source of constitutional legitimacy. He reads the phrase as evidence that legal authority had concentrated in the hands of secular intellectual elites detached from the traditions and loyalties of the broader Israeli public. The book here anticipates later populist critiques of technocracy and elite judicial governance. Constitutional universalism, for Hazony, is a route through which culturally dominant elites impose post-national norms on a still national society.
The concern with institutional transformation extends into Hazony’s discussion of the Law of Return, which he describes as the “bill of rights” of the Jewish people. He traces the growing normalization of elite attacks on the law, including arguments by David Grossman (b. 1954) and A. B. Yehoshua (1936-2022) that democratic equality required revising or suspending the law’s privileging of Jewish immigration.
Hazony treats these debates as symbolically decisive because the Law of Return institutionalizes the core Zionist principle that Israel exists as the political home of the Jewish people. Weakening the law might transform Israel from the sovereign expression of Jewish peoplehood into a territorially bounded liberal state detached from global Jewish historical destiny. Hazony also criticizes media rhetoric portraying the law as demographically reckless, including the Haaretz argument caricaturing Israel as a national home for “a billion Chinese.” He reads such rhetoric as elite hostility toward the foundational assumptions of Zionism.
The military sphere occupies a similar place in Hazony’s institutional analysis. He devotes extensive attention to The Spirit of the IDF, the 1994 military ethics code authored by the philosopher Asa Kasher (b. 1940). The document dejudaized the army by grounding military loyalty in abstract commitments to “state, citizens, and democracy” while omitting reference to Zionism, Jewish peoplehood, or attachment to the land of Israel. Revealing for Hazony was the explicit rejection of love of the land as a military value on the grounds that such attachment represented dangerous fetishization.
Armies do not fight for procedures or administrative entities. They fight for historical communities, inherited loyalties, and collective identities. The removal of Jewish and Zionist concepts from the moral language of the military symbolized a broader transformation of Israel from a civilizational nation-state into a procedural liberal polity.
Among the ambitious aspects of the book is Hazony’s effort to trace the intellectual genealogy of post-Zionism back to the founding of the Hebrew University and the influence of German Jewish intellectual traditions. Anti-nationalist forms of Jewish thought tied to figures such as Martin Buber (1878-1965), Judah Magnes (1877-1948), and Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) regarded Jewish sovereignty with suspicion because they believed political power corrupted Judaism’s spiritual mission.
Buber occupies a central place in Hazony’s narrative. He appears as the principal intellectual antagonist to Herzl and Ben-Gurion, the representative of a Jewish universalism uncomfortable with statehood, coercion, and national particularity. Buber’s advocacy of binationalism expresses a political innocence rooted in refusal to acknowledge the tragic realities of sovereignty.
Hazony characterizes the contemporary Israeli crisis as “Martin Buber’s revenge.” Although Buber and the binationalists lost politically during the founding of the state, they triumphed culturally through their influence in universities, media, humanities faculties, and elite intellectual discourse. The Hebrew University becomes the incubator of post-national Jewish thought. Through education and cultural authority, anti-sovereign conceptions of Judaism reshaped the moral self-understanding of Israeli elites.
Against this tradition, Hazony elevates David Ben-Gurion (1886-1973) as the heroic architect of Jewish sovereignty. Ben-Gurion’s greatness lay not in military leadership or statecraft alone but in his understanding that political independence required the deliberate construction of a shared national consciousness. Sovereignty depends on cultural transmission, historical memory, and civilizational confidence. The state therefore had to cultivate what Hazony calls a “Jewish state of mind.”
Long before constitutional conflict became central to Israeli politics, Hazony identified judicial universalism, educational deracination, elite alienation from national identity, and institutional hostility toward inherited traditions as major fault lines. His account anticipated later disputes over constitutional reform, judicial authority, military ethos, demographic identity, and the place of national history in public education.
The book transcends the Israeli context. Beneath its specific arguments about Zionism lies a wider meditation on the fragility of collective identity in liberal modernity. Can democratic societies survive without thick historical narratives? Can national traditions coexist with universal moral aspirations? What happens when intellectual elites lose faith in the legitimacy of the civilizations that produced them? Can political communities preserve continuity once their educational, legal, and cultural institutions cease transmitting a substantive account of national purpose?
Hazony’s answer is clear and uncompromising. A nation that no longer regards its own inheritance as worth defending loses the capacity to sustain sovereignty. >The Jewish State is a warning about the civilizational preconditions of political endurance in the modern world.

Did Herzl Want a ‘Jewish’ State?’ (2000)

Hazony argues for the legitimacy of national particularism in modern political life. A generation of Israeli intellectuals had argued that Theodor Herzl’s (1860-1904) Der Judenstaat had been mistranslated for a century. On this revisionist reading, Herzl sought a “state of the Jews,” meaning a politically neutral liberal regime with a Jewish demographic majority but no constitutional commitment to Jewish national purposes. Hazony rejects this reading on philological, historical, philosophical, and theological grounds. The ambition reaches further than translation. The essay defends the moral and political legitimacy of a state organized around the protection and continuity of a historical people.
Hazony treats the reinterpretation of Herzl as part of an attempt to dissolve the normative ground of Jewish sovereignty. The shift from “Jewish state” to “state of the Jews” recodes Israel from a nation-state with substantive obligations toward the Jewish people into a procedurally neutral polity whose duties extend only to atomized individuals within its borders. The dispute over Herzl’s terminology becomes a dispute over whether democratic states may legitimately possess historical and civilizational purposes beyond the administration of universal rights.
Hazony begins with philology because political revolutions frequently begin with shifts in vocabulary. Several influential Israelis, among them Amnon Rubinstein, Shulamit Aloni (1928-2014), Moshe Zimmermann, and the novelist Amos Oz (1939-2018), have insisted that Der Judenstaat should be rendered “The State of the Jews” rather than “The Jewish State.” Their case rests on the claim that the German prefix Juden- refers descriptively to Jews as a population rather than adjectivally to a Jewish political character. Hazony dismantles the argument through Herzl’s multilingual publication history.
Herzl personally supervised and financed the French and English editions of his pamphlet, titling them L’État Juif and A Jewish State. He later approved a Yiddish edition called Die Yudische Medineh. Hazony shows that Herzl used Juden- and jüdisch interchangeably when referring to Jewish institutions, culture, and identity. Terms such as Jewish community, Jewish spirit, and Jewish congress appear in both forms throughout Herzl’s writings. Herzl did more than tolerate “Jewish state” as one option among others. He coined and popularized the phrase as a political concept across every language he controlled. The Hebrew title Medinat Hayehudim emerged from a translator, Michael Berkowicz, whose work Herzl did not closely supervise. Even Berkowicz used the phrase medina yehudit at points in his translation.
Philology alone cannot settle the matter. Even if Herzl preferred “Jewish state,” a critic might still argue that he envisioned a culturally neutral liberal regime populated by Jews. The essay therefore moves from semantics to political theory.
Herzl’s political thought, on his reading, departs from the social-contract tradition associated with Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778). Rousseau imagined the state as an abstract association of formally equal individuals united through universal consent. Herzl’s state emerges from historical necessity. The Jewish people require political guardianship because centuries of dispersion have left them dependent on the fluctuating tolerance of others. The state exists not as a neutral framework for autonomous individuals but as an instrument for the protection and continuity of a particular people.
Hazony emphasizes that Herzl’s proposed “Society of Jews” was meant to become a sovereign political authority charged with advancing Jewish collective welfare. The legitimacy of this authority arose not from universal abstractions but from what Herzl called “higher necessity.” Sovereignty in Herzl’s vision carries a substantive moral purpose. The state serves as guardian of the Jewish people.
The principle of guardianship shaped Herzl’s politics even before any state existed. Hazony points to Herzl’s testimony before the British Royal Commission on Alien Immigration in 1902. Herzl argued there that Jews should arrive in a Jewish territory “as citizens just because they are Jews.” The statement reveals that Herzl did not imagine citizenship as a universally interchangeable legal category detached from national identity. Citizenship in the Jewish state expresses a prior historical relationship between the state and the Jewish people.
The essay becomes most striking when Hazony links the constitutional theory to Herzl’s understanding of Jewish character. Herzl did not seek merely to relocate assimilated European Jews into safer territory. He sought cultural and moral reconstruction. Hazony’s treatment of Herzl’s essay “The Menora” carries this argument. He reconstructs Herzl’s gradual “return to Judaism” not as a conversion to Orthodoxy but as a recovery of civilizational rootedness. Herzl’s decision to celebrate Hanukkah with his children stands as the symbol of Zionism: the recovery of historical continuity after a period of cultural estrangement.
The Jewish state exists not only to protect Jewish bodies but to restore Jewish character. Herzl feared that diaspora life had pressed Jews to suppress their historical identity to survive within European societies. In a passage Hazony quotes with evident relish, Herzl writes that only the Zionists wished to become “Jewish Jews,” whereas others sought to disappear into surrounding nations. Sovereignty becomes a means for recovering integrity.
Hazony expresses skepticism toward liberal neutrality. He suggests that no enduring state functions as a purely procedural framework. Every political order embodies historical loyalties, inherited traditions, and substantive moral commitments. The difference is that some states acknowledge these commitments openly while others obscure them behind universalist rhetoric. The attempt to redefine Israel as a neutral “state of the Jews” represents not the transcendence of nationalism but the erasure of Jewish national legitimacy. The argument anticipates Hazony’s later trajectory in The Virtue of Nationalism and Conservatism: A Rediscovery. The themes are already visible: distrust of universalist rationalism, defense of historically evolved institutions, emphasis on collective memory, and criticism of procedural liberalism detached from substantive national purpose.

Who Removed Zionism from Israel’s Textbooks?’ (April 17, 2000)

This essay appeared during the final months of the Oslo peace process and the early period of Ehud Barak’s premiership. The piece reframes a curricular controversy as a constitutional question. Hazony argues that Israeli academic elites have rewritten the historical narrative taught in state schools and that the rewriting amounts to a quiet repudiation of the Zionist premise of the Israeli state. The textbooks become the visible artifact of a deeper transformation in elite self-understanding.
Hazony reads schools as state-forming institutions. The State Education Law of 1953 charged Israeli schools with instilling “the values of Jewish culture,” “love of the homeland,” and “loyalty to the Jewish state.” Ben-Gurion named the law one of the two “supreme laws” of the new state, alongside the Law of Return. Curriculum carried this weight, on the older account, because a sovereign Jewish polity required a generation prepared to identify with its founding purpose. Hazony’s claim is that the academics who took control of textbook production starting in the early 1990s rejected that purpose and treated it as embarrassing rather than constitutive.
The essay’s clearest analytical move is the contrast between two historiographic programs. The first is the Jerusalem School associated with Ben-Zion Dinur (1884-1973), which reads Jewish history as the continuous record of a single people moving across exile toward eventual political restoration. The second is the program advanced by Moshe Zimmermann and Israel Bartal, which treats Jewish experience as fragmented across host civilizations and refuses the unifying frame of national continuity. Zimmermann’s phrase “universal history” carries the polemical weight. It positions Jewish particularism as the parochial deviation and treats the integration of Jewish history into broader European and Mediterranean narratives as the corrective.
Hazony’s documentation of curricular change is the essay’s strongest section. He moves through the textbooks in detail. The new ninth-grade text, A World of Changes, cuts Zionist, Israeli, and Holocaust content from roughly sixty percent of the volume to under thirty. Chaim Weizmann (1874-1952) loses his role as Israel’s first president. Menachem Begin (1913-1992) appears only after he reaches the prime ministership, with his underground career against the British removed. The 1939 White Paper disappears. Jewish armed resistance against the British, which had received nineteen pages, receives two sentences. The War of Independence shrinks from twenty pages to two paragraphs. Photographs of Weizmann and Ben-Gurion are gone, while Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Gamal Abdel Nasser, Sigmund Freud, Salvador Dalí, and the Beatles remain.
Hazony shows that revision operates through subtraction rather than addition. The new curriculum does not chiefly correct Zionist falsehoods. It removes Jewish agency, Jewish vulnerability, and Jewish attachment from the central frame. The Six Day War loses Syrian water diversion, the closing of the Straits of Tiran, and Arab declarations about Israel’s destruction. Jerusalem’s reunification appears as occupation rather than return. The archaeology curriculum, designed by a committee under Yoram Tzafrir, replaces Jewish historical themes with “the spirit of man,” “the culture of mankind,” and “the heritage of world civilization.”
The textbook To Be Citizens in Israel, produced under Benyamin Neuberger and advised by Emanuel Gutmann, presents Israel’s Jewish character as one option among six competing constitutional models, including a sixth model holding that Israel should not be a Jewish nation-state at all but a “state of all its citizens.” The book then tells students that “each person defines his own identity for himself.” The civics text turns active duties toward Jewish national life into passive comprehension of contested approaches. The student learns that the Jewish state is a position one might hold rather than an inheritance one receives.
Hazony argues that the universalist program presents itself as the absence of ideology while operating as an ideology of its own. The older Zionist textbooks selected, emphasized, and shaped emotional response. The new textbooks do the same. The difference is that the old curriculum cultivated identification with the Jewish national project, while the new curriculum cultivates moral distance from it. Neither curriculum is neutral. Hazony’s sharpest critical observation is that the post-Zionist program claims a neutrality its own pedagogical practice denies.
Yossi Sarid, education minister at the time of the no-confidence vote over Mahmoud Darwish, served as a convenient political target but not as the operative cause. The curricular revolution Hazony describes began under the Likud government of Yitzhak Shamir, which appointed the Zimmermann committee in 1991. The Education Ministry committees responsible for syllabi and approved textbooks have functioned with substantial autonomy from political oversight across both Labor and Likud governments. Hazony’s account treats curricular transformation as a long bureaucratic project sustained across party turnover, which strengthens his thesis about elite succession, which is the part that has aged best. Hazony observed in 2000 that a generation of Israeli academics had reached intellectual independence from Zionist commitments and had begun identifying with transnational scholarly norms rather than national ones. The same pattern, with local variation, became visible across the Western academy in the following two decades. Disputes over national narrative, colonialism, civic education, and historical memory in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Australia recapitulate the structure Hazony identifies in the Israeli case. The Israeli academy reached the post-national turn early. The essay reads, in retrospect, as a report from the leading edge of a broader transformation.

On the National State, Part 1: Empire and Anarchy’ (2002)

This essay defends the sovereign national state as the constitutional precondition for liberty, representative government, and political moderation.
The piece does several things at once. It is a defense of Zionism written for Israeli readers reeling from the Second Intifada. It is a polemic against post-national Europe. It is a reconstruction of a Western political tradition Hazony locates in the Hebrew Bible, English Protestantism, and the early modern resistance to Habsburg and later French imperial pretensions. It is an essay in political prudence, arguing that even noble principles destroy themselves when pressed beyond the limits of finite political capacity. What gives the essay its force is that Hazony does not appeal primarily to sentiment or cultural attachment. He treats the nation-state as a constitutional equilibrium that emerged from a long historical reckoning with two recurring forms of disorder: empire and anarchy.
Hazony situates his analysis between two camps in the scholarly literature on nationalism, though he engages neither systematically in this essay. The dominant academic view since the 1980s, associated with Benedict Anderson (1936-2015), Ernest Gellner (1925-1995), Eric Hobsbawm (1917-2012), and Elie Kedourie (1926-1992), treats the nation as a modern construction, a product of print capitalism, mass schooling, industrial mobility, or romantic German philosophy. Hazony’s footnotes show familiarity with this literature but his commitments lie with the perennialist counter-tradition: Anthony D. Smith (1939-2016), Adrian Hastings (1929-2001), and Steven Grosby (b. 1957), who locate national consciousness in older religious, ethnic, and linguistic communities and assign the Hebrew Bible a foundational place. Hazony’s English genealogy follows Hastings closely. His broader political theory leans on John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) and Roger Scruton (1944-2020).
The conceptual core of the essay is a tripartite typology: empire, anarchy, and the national state. Hazony defines these not by territorial scale or population but by the structure of political allegiance. Under empire, the individual owes loyalty to an abstract jurisdiction that aspires to universal extent. Imperial legitimacy rests on the claim that the state acts on behalf of mankind as such. Under anarchy, loyalty runs to a familiar person: clan head, feudal lord, militia chief, gang leader. The familiar individual offers protection and demands devotion. Law and violence remain private. The national state occupies the conceptual midpoint. Loyalty runs neither to universal humanity nor to a personal patron but to the nation: a historically continuous community possessing shared memory, intrinsic distinction from other communities, and a collective will.
Five claims structure the argument. The national state depersonalizes both law and warfare, severing them from clan loyalty and private commitment. It limits political ambition, treating the state’s task as the protection of one people rather than the redemption of all peoples. It accepts the legitimacy of other states pursuing their own purposes, allowing for genuine plurality among forms of self-government. It places rulers in competition with other rulers, creating an external check on internal tyranny because talented citizens can leave. And it generates the cultural conditions under which men of ability flourish, since the order of competing states offers refuge and patronage to those who fall out of favor at home.
Even the most binding moral norms, he argues, cease to function at the limits of the range of possible experience. A state committed to apprehending every murderer without regard to cost eventually meets a case that requires full-scale war. A state committed to the principle of self-determination for every people without regard to strategic context eventually proliferates sovereignties until none retains the monopoly of force that makes sovereignty meaningful. The principle negates itself when applied without regard to the conditions of its own realization.
Hazony rejects the Kantian view that principle should be applied without regard to power. He rejects the Schmittian view that the political is reducible to the friend-enemy distinction. He occupies a middle position: principles bind, but their applicability depends on the capacity to realize them. A state that pursues justice beyond its means impairs its capacity to pursue justice at all.
The argument has obvious bearing on the gap between domestic and international politics. Within the established state, the sovereign monopoly of force allows law to operate as if it were absolute. Among states, the absence of any such monopoly means that every principle collides with limits. Hazony refuses both liberal universalism and cynical raison d’etat. He insists that morality binds in international affairs but only within constraints set by finite power and competing sovereignties. Political prudence becomes a condition for preserving moral order over time rather than a betrayal of it.
The application of this argument to Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) is one of the essay’s sharper polemical moments and follows Henry Kissinger (1923-2023) closely. Hazony argues that Wilson transformed the legitimate aspiration for national liberty into a universal moral imperative detached from strategic reality. The dismantling of Austria-Hungary at Versailles produced half a dozen weak states that Hitler (1889-1945) devoured in succession. The principle of self-determination, applied without regard to the geopolitical conditions of its realization, undermined the very order it was meant to secure.
The historical claim is contestable. Margaret MacMillan and other historians of Versailles argue that the collapse of Austria-Hungary preceded the application of Wilsonian principle and was driven by wartime national mobilization in the empire’s successor regions. Wilson’s Fourteen Points endorsed an outcome already underway rather than producing it. The argument from prudence may still hold: the successor states were indeed weak and the postwar settlement did fail catastrophically. But Hazony’s causal story underplays the structural pressures that Wilsonian rhetoric tracked rather than caused.
The deeper philosophical point survives the historical quibble. A principle that requires more power than its bearers possess cannot serve as the basis for a stable political order. The idea has wider application than Hazony pursues. It bears on contemporary debates over humanitarian intervention, climate governance, international criminal law, and the institutional architecture of liberal internationalism. Hazony’s essay anticipates by more than a decade the populist backlash against transnational governance that gathered force after the 2008 financial crisis and the migration pressures of the following decade.
Hazony’s treatment of multinational states draws on Mill’s argument in On Representative Government that representative institutions require “fellow feeling” among citizens. Without shared language, memory, and identity, public opinion cannot form. Representative government degenerates into ethnic bargaining, bureaucratic management, or what Mill called the executions of liberty conducted by armies whose only bond is the flag. Hazony presses Mill’s argument into a critique of the European Union and a defense of the United States as a culturally cohesive national state.
Hazony argues that minority welfare is not a humanitarian supplement added onto nationalism. It is structurally necessary for sovereignty to persist. Once minorities lose confidence in state protection, they look elsewhere: to local strongmen, to foreign powers, to criminal organizations, to militias. Political loyalty reverts downward into anarchic forms. The state begins to fragment internally. Once such fragmentation produces what Hazony calls “graduates,” men trained in the construction of alternative orders, the problem migrates to other states.
The argument cuts against the easy assumption that nationalism and minority protection stand in tension. On Hazony’s account, a state that fails to protect its minorities undermines the very principle by which it claims sovereign authority. The state’s monopoly of force depends on the loyalty even of those whose deepest attachments lie elsewhere. Where that loyalty fails, the state is no longer national in the relevant sense; it has become an imperial or anarchic order under a national flag.
What scale of political community is necessary for liberty to survive? The question presses on contemporary debates over devolution, secession, federation, and supranational governance. Hazony’s answer is bounded solidarity. Liberty requires neither universal human community nor private local attachment but a middle scale at which fellow feeling and impartial law can coexist. Empire dissolves the conditions of fellow feeling. Anarchy dissolves the conditions of impartial law. The national state holds the difficult middle.

On the National State, Part 2: The Guardian of the Jews’ (2003)

This offers a comprehensive defense of Jewish sovereignty grounded in an older European tradition of political theory. Israel exists not as a refuge but as an instrument of agency. Its three tasks, ordered hierarchically, are physical protection of the Jews, cultivation of an independent Jewish intellectual tradition, and the formation of a character suited to sovereign life.
Liberal internationalism treats national particularity as suspect, transitional, or morally arbitrary. Hazony reverses the priority. Nations preserve rival traditions, competing moral visions, and divergent intellectual inheritances. Political plurality therefore depends on national plurality. A world stripped of sovereign nations does not become morally universal. It becomes intellectually uniform.
The first section of the essay develops a stern realist account of political protection. Hazony rejects the sentimental Zionist image of Israel as a passive shelter for endangered Jews. Sovereignty matters because it creates organized power. Drawing on Burke’s 1781 parliamentary speech, Hazony notes that the British and Dutch protect their nationals abroad through armies, fleets, and foreign service. The Jews in exile lacked these instruments. Their vulnerability stemmed not from insufficient moral sympathy among other peoples but from statelessness as such. This distinction between refuge and sovereign agency carries the argument. British power did not turn Britain into a hiding place. It shaped calculations abroad because enemies understood that the British state possessed the will and capacity to intervene. Zionism, by extension, is not the construction of a safe haven but the recovery of political agency.
The Holocaust analysis sharpens this point. Hazony does not primarily accuse Britain and the United States of cruelty. He argues that even humane liberal states pursued their own purposes rather than Jewish rescue. Britain and America fought for liberty, constitutional order, and victory over Germany. Those purposes did not translate into a willingness to divert resources toward saving endangered Jews. Germany, by contrast, made extermination part of its war aim and pursued it with consistency. Hazony’s claim is structural rather than moral. States defend those they regard as their own. No foreign power, however benevolent, can permanently substitute for a sovereign Jewish state whose purpose is Jewish protection. The argument has force because it does not require attributing malice to the Allies. It requires only that one accept that states act in accordance with their declared purposes.
The essay returns repeatedly to the claim that modernity has not transcended national loyalty or political conflict. The treatment of assimilated German Jewry illustrates the point. Hermann Cohen’s 1915 essay “Germanism and Judaism” announced that the German and Jewish spirits had merged in a shared messianism of universal brotherhood. Eighteen years later, the German state began the murder of two-thirds of European Jewry. Hazony uses Cohen as a warning. The cultivated Jewish intellectuals of imperial Germany mistook a temporary easing of hostility for permanent transformation in human affairs. They believed liberal civilization had dissolved older loyalties. History destroyed the illusion with terrible force.
The essay’s pessimism here is structural rather than misanthropic. Hazony denies that humanity progresses steadily toward cosmopolitan fraternity. Nations continue to divide the world into insiders and outsiders. Competition, partial loyalties, and the possibility of catastrophic reversal remain permanent features of political life. He therefore dismisses recurring announcements of the end of history as forms of wishful thinking that political prudence cannot afford. The future, he insists, is for us a closed book.
Hazony argues that survival alone cannot sustain a civilization. Postwar Jewish life often reduced itself to preservation and memory. Such a posture may mobilize one generation shaped by the catastrophe, but it cannot inspire descendants who inherit neither the immediacy of terror nor the urgency of state-building. A people organized around persistence eventually loses the capacity to explain why it wishes to persist.
Historic nations do not reproduce themselves through demography alone. They understand themselves as bearers of an idea and as participants in history. The Jews survived exile not because they pursued survival but because generations believed they carried a calling worth sacrifice. Hazony reverses the standard sociological reading of Jewish endurance. Jewish continuity emerges from loyalty to a civilizational ideal, not from adaptation alone. The argument has obvious affinities with Franz Rosenzweig and, more distantly, with Yehuda Halevi, though Hazony’s framing is more political than theological.
Hazony portrays Judaism as a rival civilizational tradition with its own epistemology, moral psychology, and political theory. Jewish thought, he argues, rejects many of the conceptual divisions characteristic of modern Western philosophy. It refuses sharp separations between is and ought, prudence and duty, politics and theology. It emphasizes collective responsibility, historical continuity, legal reasoning, and covenantal obligation. He locates the Jewish tradition as a participant in the intellectual life of seventeenth-century Europe through Hobbes, Grotius, Selden, Milton, Cunaeus, and Newton, and through Rousseau’s engagement with the Hebrew Bible in The Social Contract and The Government of Poland.
Self-government requires a moral psychology suited to responsibility and sacrifice. Exile encouraged habits of dependence, caution, and political passivity. Sovereignty demands the opposite, namely citizens willing to wield power, defend borders, make judgments, and accept historical burden. The Jewish state therefore aims to transform Jews into a people capable of sustaining political independence over centuries, not only to protect them.

On the National State, Part 3: Character’ (2003)

This essay claims that political independence depends less on constitutional design, economic capacity, or military hardware than on the moral and psychological quality of the men who compose the nation. Procedure and productivity have their place, but they cannot substitute for citizens able to sustain commitments under fear, humiliation, and external pressure. The essay treats sovereignty as an educational and spiritual enterprise. The Jewish state succeeds or fails according to whether it cultivates men of sufficient steadiness to bear the burdens it imposes.
Hazony opens with a complaint about contemporary political discourse. Modern societies prefer the language of rights, justice, and equality and shy from serious discussion of the concrete qualities those ideals demand in practice. The avoidance has a cause. Character implies hierarchy. Courage, steadiness, loyalty, and resilience appear unequally across any population. To praise them invites accusations of aristocratic or exclusionary sympathy. Hazony reads the avoidance as dangerous. A democracy cannot survive on the strength of citizens who affirm abstract principles. It survives because enough men can defend those principles when defending them costs something.
The argument rests on a moral psychology drawn from classical and biblical sources. Hazony divides personality into intellect, spirit, and appetites. Character resides in the spirit, the faculty that detects disorder and rallies the passions that restore stability. Fear and anger are not pathologies to eliminate. They are intermediate states between exhilaration, which represents mastery, and despair, which represents collapse. Fear warns of danger and mobilizes resources for survival. Anger alerts the man to threats against order and supplies the energy to resist. The problem is not the existence of these passions but their disproportion.
Character is the quality that lets a man hold his prior bearing and commitments under duress. He still feels fear. He does not dissolve. His spirit retains tzura, or shape. The metaphor moves character from sentimental virtue to structural property. Some men remain internally coherent under pressure. Others deform.
Hazony develops the model through the Exodus. The Hebrew slaves panic whenever danger appears. They oscillate between exhilaration and despair, longing for liberation one moment and yearning for Egypt the next. Their fear overwhelms their capacity to sustain chosen commitments. Moses experiences fear without surrendering to it. He doubts himself at the burning bush. He fears Pharaoh. His spirit holds its shape. Hazony treats Moses as the archetype of political steadiness.
Long subordination deforms personality. Slavery produces not only political weakness but spiritual instability. Men habituated to chronic vulnerability lose the capacity for independent action and orient themselves toward avoidance rather than purpose. Hazony extends the diagnosis to diaspora life. Centuries of insecurity and dependence cultivated habits of fear, accommodation, and emotional volatility.
Hazony’s ideal Jew is neither cosmopolitan in the liberal sense nor separatist in the defensive sense. He moves through Western civilization without losing his cultural center. Jewish ideas remain his native intellectual language. Because he does not fear gentile civilization, he can admire what is worthy in it without capitulating or recoiling. Cultural confidence is a form of character. Intellectual independence depends on holding civilizational shape under external pressure.
The argument explains why Hazony places such weight on sovereign statehood as a school for character. The state has value not because it secures territory but because it generates the pressures that force a society to cultivate resilient men. Diplomacy, war, taxation, administration, and law enforcement all require men who can endure intense pressure without abandoning obligation. Sovereignty imposes a continuous educational demand on the nation.
Hazony frames the central political problem of independence as educational rather than procedural: how can a nation produce ten thousand men of superb character in every generation? The formulation is classically republican. From Aristotle (384–322 BCE) through Niccolò Machiavelli (1469–1527), republican theorists held that free states depend on civic virtue. Institutions alone cannot sustain independence. States survive only where enough citizens and leaders possess the steadiness to resist corruption, fear, comfort, and dependency.
The discussion of military training clarifies a subtlety in the argument. Basic discipline serves as a prototype for character formation. Recruits learn that endurance is possible beyond what they imagined. Hazony separates physical toughness from full civic character. Battlefield courage alone is insufficient. A general may remain fearless under fire and prove psychologically submissive in diplomacy or in intellectual life. Military training supplies a template, not a complete education. What counts is the capacity to preserve coherence across all domains of public life.
The critique of contemporary Israel follows from the framework. Zionism removed many of the formal humiliations of diaspora life. Israeli Jews no longer need to hide their identity to participate in society. Theodor Herzl’s (1860–1904) dream of restoring Jewish inner wholeness has been achieved in significant measure. Hazony holds that Israel has largely failed in the harder task of cultivating character beyond the military sphere.
The decline of the kibbutz carries symbolic weight in Hazony’s account. He calls the kibbutzim assembly lines for the production of character. Whatever their economic limits, they tried to build institutions oriented toward moral formation. Their collapse left Israel without a comparable framework. Universities became mass bureaucratic institutions ill-suited to individualized moral cultivation. The army remained almost the only sphere where character formation continued in any systematic way.
The overreliance on the military produces an imbalance in Israeli public life. Israelis show extraordinary battlefield resilience, especially under prolonged conflict and terrorism. Military courage does not translate automatically into political, intellectual, or economic steadiness. Hazony’s complaint about political leadership is severe. Leaders avoid speaking honestly about sacrifice, austerity, or prolonged hardship because they fear electoral backlash. Public rhetoric grows therapeutic and evasive. Governments promise rapid improvement rather than demand disciplined endurance.
The diagnosis identifies a wider weakness in modern democratic culture. Democracies struggle to sustain painful long-term policies because leaders and citizens orient themselves toward immediate comfort and emotional reassurance. A political system that cannot confront hardship honestly loses strategic coherence. In Hazony’s vocabulary, it loses character.
The cultural critique runs parallel. Israeli universities imitate foreign academic fashions. Religious institutions isolate themselves from broader intellectual engagement. The polarized tendencies of nineteenth-century Jewish Europe reappear in new forms. Assimilationist cosmopolitanism and defensive separatism return. What vanishes is the confident Jewish cultural mainstream capable of engaging external civilization without self-erasure.

Judaism and the Modern State’ (2005)

This essay works as intellectual history, polemic against secular historiography, and philosophical brief for a particular conception of religion. It attacks a foundational story of modernity: that the liberal state arose through emancipation from religious authority, and that Judaism stood outside the architecture of constitutional government. Hazony argues this account is a self-serving myth that erased the Hebraic sources of Western political thought and recast modern liberty as the product of secular rationalism alone.
The essay moves on two registers. The first is historical. Hazony recovers a suppressed tradition of Jewish and biblical political reasoning at the heart of early modern constitutional thought. The second is philosophical. He defends a model of religion compatible with free inquiry, pluralism, and constitutional argument. The two registers depend on each other. Hazony does not simply claim that Jewish texts influenced Hobbes and Locke. He claims that rabbinic habits of interpretation supplied the epistemic temperament that makes free political argument possible.
Hazony opens by attacking the standard academic account of modern political development. In that account, the architects of the modern state purged religion from public life after the religious wars and the abuses of medieval Christendom. Hobbes and Locke appear as secularizers who replaced revelation with reason. Judaism and the Hebrew Bible enter only as background, perhaps as ancient curiosities. Hazony captures the tone of this story in a single phrase. Modernity tells religious tradition, “We built this city without your help.”
The essay’s first achievement is to deny that this story is a neutral description. Hazony reads it as a civilizational myth lodged within modern academic institutions. He traces the myth through canonical histories of political thought, above all George H. Sabine’s (1880-1961) A History of Political Theory and Sheldon Wolin’s (1922-2015) Politics and Vision. Despite the saturation of Western political vocabulary by biblical language, both works almost entirely omit the Hebrew Bible from the genealogy of political ideas. Concepts of social justice, national liberation, civil disobedience, and human dignity appear as Greek or Enlightenment inheritances rather than as developments shaped by the Hebrew prophets and the rabbinic tradition.
Hazony’s treatment of Wolin is the sharpest passage in this opening section. Wolin reduces a millennium of Jewish political thought to three sentences and a charge of tribal ambition: that the messianic expectation was at bottom a desire for Jewish rule over the world. Hazony counters less by citing alternative passages than by showing what kind of compression is required to reduce centuries of reflection to ethnic triumphalism. The broader claim is that modern intellectual history treats Judaism as a primitive ethnic stage rather than as a contributor to universal political reason.
The philosophical sources of this exclusion emerge in Hazony’s account of Kant (1724-1804) and Hegel (1770-1831). Kant describes Judaism as a merely statutory order of political laws and denies that it amounts to a religion at all. Hegel describes Jewish consciousness as a state of alienation and abjectness preceding the spiritual reconciliation of Christianity. From these two thinkers, Hazony argues, German academic culture inherited a developmental schema in which Greece produced philosophy, Christianity produced spirit, and Judaism became either derivative or obsolete. Once that schema took hold, the exclusion of Jewish political thought from university curricula became self-reinforcing.
Hazony recovers political Hebraism. Against the secularization narrative, he argues that Protestant thinkers facing the universal claims of Rome turned not away from scripture but more deeply into it, and that they turned in particular to the Hebrew Bible and rabbinic sources. The search for models of sovereignty, republican government, constitutional order, and national independence drove them into Hebraic legal and political traditions.
Cornelius Bertram’s De Politia Judaeorum (1574), Petrus Cunaeus’s The Hebrew Republic (1617), and above all the corpus of John Selden (1584-1654) treated Jewish law, biblical history, and rabbinic interpretation as living political resources. Selden’s work on natural law, parliamentary authority, maritime sovereignty, and constitutional order draws on Talmudic and rabbinic sources at a scale modern readers find startling. Hazony catalogues Selden’s citations: Maimonides, Ibn Ezra, Kimche, Joseph Karo, Nahmanides, and many others. Selden’s The Law of Nature and of the Gentiles According to the Learning of the Jews (1640) runs to 840 pages on natural law and the Talmudic laws of Noah. His On the Assemblies and Legal Authorities of the Ancient Hebrews (1650-1655) extends to 1,130 pages on the Sanhedrin as a model parliament.
Hobbes and Locke routinely appear as founders of secular rationalism. Hazony presents them as thinkers immersed in scriptural and Hebraic reasoning. Hobbes devotes more than three hundred pages of Leviathan to biblical interpretation. The First Treatise of Locke’s Two Treatises of Government is a theological and scriptural argument from start to finish. Hazony does not claim that these men were theocrats. He claims that modern constitutionalism arose through engagement with biblical and rabbinic sources rather than against them.
Hazony observes that universities teach only the supposedly secular portions of foundational texts and quietly drop the rest. Students read the first half of Leviathan and ignore the second half on scripture. They read the Second Treatise and bypass the First. Paperback editions print only the secular halves. Hebrew translations used in Israeli universities, Hazony notes, frequently omit the sections engaging Jewish sources altogether. This is more than selective emphasis. It is retrospective secularization of the canon through editorial subtraction. The texts come down to students already cleansed of the material that complicates the secular self-image.
Many central works of political Hebraism remain untranslated. They sit in Latin, with citations in Hebrew and Aramaic, accessible only to specialists. The result is a closed loop. Because the texts are inaccessible, the secular narrative goes unchallenged. Because the narrative dominates, no institutional incentive exists to translate the texts. Exclusion has both an ideological and a philological face.
Hazony distinguishes two conceptions of religion that yield two political possibilities. The first, central to much of historical Christianity, divides body from soul and the City of Man from the City of God. Within that frame, revelation arrives as a perfect incursion of absolute truth into a fallen world. The model is one of miraculous knowledge. Scripture transmits an unmediated divine content that breaks through the corruption of human reason.
Hazony argues that this conception creates a problem for constitutional politics. If revelation grants access to absolute truth, disagreement appears not as legitimate inquiry but as resistance to perfection. Public debate cannot proceed on equal terms once one party believes itself in possession of certainty. The institutional consequences follow. Inquisitions and indices do not arise only from political ambition. They arise from an epistemology of certainty that delegitimizes ordinary deliberation. Pluralistic deliberation cannot survive a participant who believes he holds infallible knowledge sufficient to override every competing argument. Once political reasoning is subordinated to claims of miraculous certainty, constitutional argument has nowhere to stand.
Against this model Hazony places the rabbinic tradition. The Talmudic principle that the Torah has seventy faces rules out singular interpretive certainty. Competing interpretations are not signs of failure. They are the permanent condition of human encounter with revelation. Appeals to heavenly authority are barred from legal adjudication. The law is not in heaven. Political decision proceeds through argument, majority opinion, and prudential judgment among fallible interpreters.
Hazony reframes rabbinic Judaism as a constitutional tradition. Interpretive plurality becomes the structural analogue of political pluralism. The Talmudic refusal to let revelation terminate debate produces the conditions under which public reasoning might continue without collapsing into relativism on one side or authoritarian certainty on the other.
The practical consequences appear in the Talmudic legal categories Hazony cites: tzarchei tzibur (needs of the public), darchei shalom (ways of peace), dina demalchuta (law of the land), kevod habriot (human dignity), migdar milta (something necessary for the public good). These categories let present political realities shape legal interpretation. Public necessity, civic peace, and pragmatic governance are not external pressures on the tradition. They are written into its interpretive grammar.
Hazony does not advocate theocracy. He argues that certain religious traditions carry internal resources for negotiating between inherited wisdom and changing political circumstances. Rabbinic jurisprudence, as he presents it, institutionalizes humility, argument, and prudential reasoning rather than the absolute claim.
The essay closes with a critique of the category of the secular. Hazony argues that secularization is not a neutral withdrawal from religion but a concept that depends on Christian metaphysical assumptions. The distinction between a spiritual realm and a secular realm presupposes the dualism that separates divine truth from ordinary political life. Reject the dualism and the secular ceases to exist as an autonomous protected sphere.
Hazony warns that religious communities remain susceptible to the intoxication of certainty. Treating scripture as a direct transmission of absolute truth can produce the same political damage as treating Marxist doctrine in that manner. The defense of rabbinic humility and interpretive pluralism functions as a warning against all forms of ideological absolutism, not as Jewish self-congratulation.
The essay is an argument about the fragility of civilizations that forget the sources of their own constitutional inheritance. Hazony presses the reader toward an uncomfortable possibility: that liberal societies continue to depend on interpretive habits and moral assumptions drawn from traditions they no longer understand and have begun to disown.

Does the Bible Have a Political Teaching?’ (2006)

Hazony says the principal narrative of the Hebrew Bible, running from Genesis through Kings, presents a coherent political teaching that rejects two extremes. The first is the imperial state of the ancient Near East, embodied by Egypt, Assyria, and Babylon. The second is anarchy, embodied by Israel during the period of the Judges. Between these stands the biblical ideal: a limited national state ruled by a king “whose heart is not lifted above his brothers.” Such a state restrains its territorial ambitions, the size of its army, and its fiscal demands on its people. The essay concludes that the collapse of the Israelite kingdom is attributed by the biblical authors to the abandonment of this teaching by Israel’s own kings.
The argument restores political seriousness to a text that modern scholarship has often treated as theological poetry, sacred history, or anthology of cultic regulation. It offers a reading of the canon that takes its narrative structure as deliberate rather than accidental. It supplies a framework where biblical Israel becomes an interlocutor for modern constitutional thought rather than a prelude to it.

Jerusalem and Carthage’ (2006)

Hazony attempts to redraw the intellectual map through which the West has long read the Hebrew Bible. His central claim is direct. The “Jerusalem” invoked from Tertullian (c. 155–c. 220) through Kierkegaard (1813–1855) is not Jerusalem. It is Carthage.
The essay is intellectual history, theological polemic, epistemological reconstruction, and political philosophy. Hazony argues that a particular Christian tradition associated with Tertullian created a conception of faith defined by doctrinal closure, hostility to open inquiry, and the celebration of belief precisely insofar as that belief appears irrational. Later writers then projected this conception backward onto the Hebrew Bible, producing the durable but mistaken dichotomy between biblical faith and Greek reason. Hazony’s counter-thesis is that the Hebrew Scriptures present a different intellectual orientation altogether, one grounded in inquiry, historical experience, practical reasoning, political judgment, and an unfinished search for truth.
The argument turns on Tertullian, though Hazony treats him less as a theologian than as a symbolic representative of an epistemological posture. Tertullian’s famous question, “What has Athens to do with Jerusalem?”, serves Hazony as the founding statement of a worldview that opposes revelation and philosophy categorically. His “rule of faith” terminates inquiry through the establishment of a definitive catechism. Hazony emphasizes that Tertullian does not merely subordinate reason to revelation. He attacks the independent pursuit of truth as such. Once the believer accepts the authoritative paragraph of doctrine handed down by the Church, further inquiry endangers his soul because it threatens his faith. Philosophy stands condemned as the art of building up and pulling down arguments. Christians must avoid knowledge that might destabilize belief.
The culmination of this posture appears in Tertullian’s notorious declaration regarding Christ’s death and resurrection: “It is by all means to be believed, because it is absurd.” Hazony reads this statement not as rhetorical excess but as the distilled essence of Carthaginian faith. Truth finds validation through its contradiction of ordinary human standards of reason and experience. Kierkegaard’s account of the absurd as the object of faith, and C.S. Lewis’s (1898–1963) characterization of Christ’s claims as asinine fatuity absent divinity, extend this line into the modern period and demonstrate its durability.
The Hebrew Scriptures nowhere glorify irrationality, celebrate absurdity, or present piety as submission to propositions recognized as repugnant to understanding. The God of the Hebrew Bible does not demand assent to epistemological impossibility. Biblical religion belongs to a different intellectual world.
Hazony observes that the Hebrew Bible resists reduction to catechism. Unlike Tertullian’s rule of faith, the Bible presents no definitive and exhaustive list of propositions whose acceptance terminates inquiry. The canon, Hazony contends, was assembled in a manner that frustrates doctrinal closure. The observation cuts deeper than a remark about textual diversity. The form of the Hebrew Bible reflects a realistic and tragic epistemology. Truth is hard to obtain. Man encounters it only partially and through struggle. The plurality of voices within the canon embodies the nature of the search. Hazony cites the divergent political theologies that coexist within the canon. Daniel’s politics differ sharply from Esther’s. Isaiah’s universal vision differs from Micah’s pluralism, where each nation walks with its own god while Israel walks with Him. Joel’s vision of judgment on the battlefield, where the nations beat their plowshares into swords, differs from Isaiah’s peaceable eschatology, where the same instruments turn to ploughs. The Bible, Hazony writes, is an artful compendium rather than a catechism.
From this emerges Hazony’s strongest conceptual formulation, that biblical religion forces man to traverse what he calls an epistemic jungle. Truth resides in the world but lies obscured by conflicting traditions, false prophets, corrupted institutions, inherited illusions, and human frailty. The biblical man cannot escape this thicket through submission to a single authoritative formula. He must hack through competing claims in search of what endures. Hazony describes the world of the prophets as one where tradition, prophecy, and scriptural interpretation have grown unstable and contested. The metaphor reveals why the Hebrew Bible cannot accommodate Tertullianic religion. Carthage seeks epistemological closure. Jerusalem dwells in interpretive struggle. The variegated nature of the biblical canon is not editorial accident. It is the literary embodiment of biblical epistemology.
Hazony’s treatment of truth deserves attention. Biblical emet does not correspond neatly to Greek metaphysical notions of truth as abstract correspondence. Biblical truth carries the connotations of reliability, steadfastness, and trustworthiness. What is true is what stands in reality, what proves enduring within historical experience. This conception generates what Hazony calls Hebrew empiricism. Biblical claims find their authentication not through absurdity or logical impossibility but through reliability in practice. The prophets repeatedly insist that God’s word will stand while falsehood collapses. Deuteronomy proposes an empirical criterion for prophecy. If the prediction fails to occur, the prophet has not spoken in His name.
The claim is radical. It introduces a partially falsifiable dimension into biblical religion. Hazony’s prophets do not demand belief insulated from historical reality. Their legitimacy remains vulnerable to experience and outcome. The truth of God’s word stays inseparable from its practical success and historical endurance. Hazony’s biblical world is therefore anti-utopian. A failed prediction discredits a prophet. Outcomes shape authority.
Hazony argues that the Hebrew Bible portrays men as capable of moral and political insight apart from direct revelation. The Hebrew midwives Shifra and Pua defy Pharaoh’s genocidal command without prophetic instruction. Pharaoh’s daughter saves Moses through independent moral judgment, in contravention of her father’s decree. Moses kills the Egyptian taskmaster before hearing God’s voice at the burning bush. The text does not condemn these figures for acting autonomously. It celebrates them because they reason and judge correctly before revelation intervenes. The Bible repeatedly presents such men and women as exemplars. Jeremiah urges the people to stand on the highways and discern which road is good. Proverbs depicts wisdom crying aloud in the streets. Biblical wisdom comes through observation, experience, and reflection on ordinary life.
The examples Hazony selects are strikingly empirical. Drunkenness draws condemnation because it destroys judgment and produces addiction. Adultery draws condemnation because it produces jealousy, vengeance, and social ruin. Idolatry draws condemnation because it attributes divine power to objects visibly incapable of helping themselves. The arguments work from lived reality rather than from abstract metaphysical deduction. The distinction between biblical wisdom and philosophy therefore begins to blur. Hazony argues that the Hebrew Bible possesses more affinity with philosophical inquiry than Tertullianic theology allows. Biblical religion encourages the search for truth rather than abolishing it.
The theme reaches its sharpest expression in Hazony’s treatment of prophecy and divine encounter. In the Hebrew Bible, revelation often depends on human initiative. God waits for man to seek. Moses turns aside toward the burning bush before God calls his name. Isaiah volunteers after hearing the divine question, “Who shall I send?” Jeremiah hears the question repeatedly: “What do you see?” God promises Jeremiah that if he calls out, hidden things will come revealed to him. The pattern matters to Hazony’s argument. The biblical God is not a deity demanding passive acceptance of a finished catechism. He longs for questioning, initiative, searching, and response. Revelation here is dialogical rather than unilateral.
The dialogical structure culminates in the Bible’s tradition of disputation with God. Abraham argues against the destruction of Sodom. Moses challenges His wrath against Israel on two occasions. Job contests divine justice. Jacob wrestles with the angel and receives the name Israel because he has striven with God and with men and prevailed. The narratives form the capstone of Hazony’s biblical anthropology. The biblical man is no passive recipient of commands. He is an active moral agent expected to struggle courageously even before God Himself. Piety consists not in intellectual submission but in the willingness to seek, question, judge, and contend. The political consequence runs deep. Hazony’s biblical vision is anti-authoritarian at the root. The Hebrew Bible does not idealize passive obedience. It valorizes strenuous moral agency. Men must stand by truth as they understand it, even under conditions of uncertainty and danger. Job’s declaration that he will maintain his own ways before Him becomes emblematic of biblical integrity.
Hazony rejects the assumption that law represents submission to arbitrary authority or the suppression of reason. Law is instead an instrument of intergenerational reasoning. Men cannot refound society from first principles each morning. The accumulated wisdom of previous generations therefore proves indispensable. Sound reasoning requires not only generating new arguments but understanding the inherited judgments embedded within law, custom, and historical memory. The theme connects the essay to Hazony’s later defense of nationalism and traditionalist conservatism. His biblical epistemology resembles common-law reasoning more than Cartesian rationalism. Truth emerges historically through inherited practices tested over time rather than through deductive systems constructed abstractly. Hazony’s Hebrew Bible thus reads as a profoundly anti-rationalist text without slipping into irrationalism.
The essay preserves a tension between epistemic humility and confidence in historical judgment. Hazony refuses both rationalist certainty and postmodern skepticism. Truth exists. Men can approach it. They do so imperfectly, historically, and through struggle. The search for wisdom never ends because finite creatures remain vulnerable to illusion, corruption, and error. The metaphorical geography carries the argument’s weight. Jerusalem and Carthage represent rival civilizations of knowledge. Carthage seeks certainty through doctrinal closure and submission to authority. Jerusalem embraces inquiry, historical experience, disputation, prudence, and interpretive struggle.
The Hebrew Bible, on Hazony’s reading, portrays truth as struggle rather than as possession. Man seeks it through memory, law, argument, experience, courage, and interpretation. Even revelation does not end the search. The biblical hero is neither the passive believer nor the detached philosopher. He is the man willing to wrestle with reality, with history, with his fellow man, and with God Himself in pursuit of what stands true. The name Israel encodes the condition: a people defined by striving, not by submission.

The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture’ (2012)

Hazony claims that the Hebrew Scriptures have been misread for centuries because Western intellectual culture inherited a false split between reason and revelation. Once classified as revelation, the Bible was barred from rational inquiry and philosophical discourse. Greek texts became “philosophy.” Hebrew texts became “religion.” Hazony aims to reverse this civilizational sorting and recover the Hebrew Bible as a coherent work of moral, political, epistemological, and metaphysical reasoning.
The scale of his ambition sets the book apart from conventional biblical scholarship. He offers more than a literary reading of scripture, and more than a defense of religion against secular criticism. He works to reposition the Hebrew Bible within the canon of works that form the intellectual foundations of the West. The book intervenes in biblical studies, intellectual history, political theory, epistemology, and the philosophy of culture. It also polemicizes against the structure of the modern university and against the Enlightenment narrative that elevated Greek rationalism while sidelining Hebrew thought as irrational or pre-philosophical.
Hazony’s argument begins with a critique of the familiar opposition between reason and revelation. The Hebrew Bible came centuries before this split emerged within Christian theology and Enlightenment philosophy. The line between rational philosophy and divinely revealed truth does not come from the biblical world. Later traditions imposed it retrospectively on Hebrew texts to define Christianity against pagan philosophy, and later still Enlightenment thinkers used it to discredit biblical religion altogether.
This critique grounds the rest of the book. Once the Bible got classified as revelation, generations of scholars stopped reading it as a source of serious reflection on ethics, politics, metaphysics, and human nature. Greek philosophy carried the associations of rational inquiry, universal principles, and intellectual sophistication. Biblical literature became tied to miracle, obedience, irrationality, and tribal myth. Hazony returns again and again to an asymmetry: divine speech in Greek philosophical texts gets read symbolically or metaphorically, while divine speech in biblical texts gets read as evidence of irrationality. His extended comparison between Jeremiah and Parmenides drives the point home.
Pre-Socratic philosophers often portrayed their ideas as deriving from divine revelation or communion with gods. Parmenides receives metaphysical truth from a goddess. Socrates hears a divine voice. Yet these figures sit secure in the philosophical canon. Biblical prophets get excluded from philosophy because they speak in the name of God. Hazony treats the distinction as historically arbitrary and intellectually inconsistent. He does not deny revelation. He challenges the assumption that revelation and rational inquiry exclude each other.
The argument leads him to a broader proposal: read the Hebrew Bible as philosophy. Read it as a work that advances general claims about human life through narrative, prophetic speech, poetry, and historical reflection rather than through abstract deductive systems. The Bible does not seek to produce a Platonic metaphysics or Aristotelian taxonomy. Its reasoning is historical, narrative, and empirical.
The emphasis on narrative reasoning counts among the book’s strongest contributions. Hazony argues that biblical stories function as “instructional narratives.” They are not mere chronicles of sacred history but constructed arguments about recurring patterns of human behavior. The Bible teaches through examples, typologies, and historical episodes rather than through formal propositions.
His strongest case here turns on the recurring biblical theme of liberated peoples seeking visible idols. Aaron’s golden calf and Gideon’s golden ephod are not isolated acts of disobedience. They generalize an observation about political psychology. Human beings often fear the burdens of freedom and seek tangible, stable authorities who can relieve them of uncertainty and responsibility. Biblical narrative plays a role analogous to the thought experiments of political philosophy. Instead of constructing hypothetical social contracts or states of nature, the Hebrew Bible dramatizes recurring tendencies within human communities.
The approach lets Hazony reinterpret biblical history as a sustained reflection on political order and human nature. The narratives of Genesis through Kings become a political philosophy of nationhood, leadership, covenant, and anti-imperial resistance. Israel is not merely a religious community. The Bible portrays it as a political society working through perennial questions of authority, law, monarchy, factionalism, and centralized power.
Hazony contrasts the decentralized tribal-national order of Israel with the universal empires of Egypt, Assyria, and Babylon. The imperial state, in his account, attempts to impose uniformity on human diversity through coercive centralization. The biblical alternative is a limited national polity rooted in covenant, shared historical memory, and distributed authority.
The Hebrew Bible subjects the king to the same laws that govern ordinary Israelites. The king is not divine. He is neither absolute sovereign nor metaphysical embodiment of the state. Biblical political order rests on a precarious balance among different forms of leadership and social authority. Hazony’s discussion of the “house of Joseph” and the “house of Judah” makes the point concrete. Joseph stands for administrative competence, material organization, and statecraft. Judah stands for moral legitimacy, covenantal continuity, and political accountability. The health of the Israelite polity rests not on the triumph of one principle over the other, but on holding equilibrium between them.
Themes that come to define his political writing appear in embryonic form: skepticism toward universal empire, preference for national particularity, distrust of centralized administrative systems, emphasis on inherited tradition, suspicion of abstract rationalism, and preference for historically evolved institutions over universal ideological programs.
The Hebrew Bible repeatedly privileges the virtues of the shepherd over those of the settled agrarian empire.
The farmer stands for political centralization, administrative stability, hierarchy, and submission to the state. Egypt and Babylon become paradigmatic farmer civilizations. The shepherd stands for mobility, independence, initiative, adaptability, and resistance to domination. Abraham, Moses, and David are all shepherd figures. Their moral excellence lies not in passive obedience but in the willingness to challenge prevailing authority and seek better outcomes for human beings.
The distinction works at three levels at once: anthropology, political theory, and civilizational critique. Hazony identifies a moral orientation tied to social independence and covenantal responsibility. The shepherd ethic values initiative over bureaucratic conformity and moral courage over administrative stability. The contrast quietly shapes the book’s political imagination.
His treatment of epistemology carries equal weight. A central philosophical claim: the Hebrew Bible embodies a form of empiricism distinct from Greek rationalism. Greek philosophy, in its Platonic forms, seeks timeless truths through abstraction, deduction, and logical systematization. Biblical thought seeks wisdom through historical experience, observation, and practical consequences.
“Biblical empiricism” clarifies that Hazony proposes an alternative theory of knowledge. The biblical authors understood reason as a practical faculty for discovering what promotes human flourishing through lived experience and historical testing. History becomes the laboratory where moral and political truths get verified.
This helps explain why biblical literature takes narrative form. Stories are not ornamental containers for doctrine. They are the primary medium through which human beings learn political and ethical truths. Abraham’s failures, Moses’ frustrations, David’s sins, Solomon’s compromises, and Israel’s national catastrophes serve collectively as empirical evidence about human nature and political order.
Hazony’s interpretation of the Hebrew concept of emet (truth) deepens the framework further. Biblical truth differs from the Greek correspondence theory long dominant within Western philosophy. In Greek metaphysics, truth applies mainly to statements that accurately match reality. In the Hebrew Bible, truth is a quality of things.
A road, a covenant, a man, or a seed is “true” if it proves reliable, enduring, and faithful to its nature across changing circumstances. Truth has less to do with abstract propositional accuracy and more to do with trustworthiness, durability, and covenantal reliability. The shift carries large implications for Hazony’s broader project. It moves metaphysics from static abstraction into historical continuity and practical fidelity.
Hazony’s conception of truth critiques modern rationalism, technocracy, and ideological universalism. If truth means reliability demonstrated over time, then inherited traditions, historical experience, and social continuity carry epistemic authority unavailable within purely deductive systems. The influence of Burkean conservatism and common-law reasoning shows here. Wisdom emerges not from constructing perfect systems from scratch but from preserving and refining practices that have proved reliable across generations.
The emphasis on historical verification also explains his suspicion of revolutionary politics and universal ideological projects. Political systems detached from inherited historical experience are epistemologically fragile because they have not yet proved themselves under real human conditions. Biblical thought, in his reading, is anti-utopian.
Whether or not one accepts his conclusions, the book reopens questions much of the modern academy had prematurely closed. Why should Plato and Parmenides count as philosophers while Isaiah and Jeremiah count merely as prophets? Why do Greek invocations of divine inspiration get read charitably while biblical invocations get read dismissively? Why has the Hebrew Bible, despite its enormous influence on Western civilization, remained largely excluded from philosophy departments and histories of political thought?

Newtonian Explanatory Reduction and Hume’s System of the Sciences’ (2014)

This is a revisionist contribution to Hume scholarship that seeks to overturn a dominant assumption about David Hume’s (1711-1776) philosophical project. Rather than treating Hume as a skeptic who dismantled the pretensions of metaphysics and systematic philosophy, Hazony argues that Hume understood himself to construct a comprehensive empirical system modeled on Newtonian science.

Imagined Causes: Hume’s Conception of Objects’ (2014)

Hazony reviews Stefanie Rocknak’s book with the generosity philosophers reserve for books that shift their field. The review runs only a few pages, but it carries the weight of a programmatic statement. He treats Rocknak’s volume as the most important book on David Hume (1711-1776) published in over a decade, placing it alongside Don Garrett’s Cognition and Commitment in Hume’s Philosophy and David Owen’s Hume’s Reason as a third pillar in the ongoing reconstruction of Hume’s cognitive psychology.
Scholars have struggled to give a unified account of how Hume’s Treatise treats the construction of objects, time, identity, and the self. Hazony argues that Rocknak offers a single answer to all four problems. The same imaginative operation that explains the persistence of physical things also explains the continuity of the self, the structure of temporal experience, and the formation of abstract ideas. Rocknak tracks it through four passages of the Treatise where Hume describes, in slightly different language, the same cognitive process.

‘God and Politics in Esther’ (2015)

Hazony reads Esther as a work of political philosophy, exile theology, and national realism rather than a liturgical artifact or folkloric account of Jewish survival.
His principal claim holds that Esther is the Hebrew Bible’s definitive meditation on politics under exile. Earlier biblical narratives revolve around sovereignty, prophecy, covenantal law, and territorial nationhood. Esther departs from this pattern. It depicts a Jewish people dispersed within a foreign imperial system, stripped of sovereign institutions, and compelled to secure survival through political intelligence, strategic influence, coalition-building, and calculated initiative rather than miraculous deliverance. The striking absence of God’s name from the text, long regarded as Esther’s theological puzzle, becomes for Hazony the organizing principle of the narrative. The book addresses a world where prophecy has ceased, miracles have receded, and divine providence operates indirectly through the courage and political action of men.
This thesis allows Hazony to reinterpret Esther as a sustained inquiry into the workings of power. The Persian Empire is a constructed political architecture. Hazony presents Persia as a vast imperial order at first marked by unstable pluralism, elite competition, and a chaotic multiplicity of advisors, courtiers, and rival factions. The system is corrupt, arbitrary, and often grotesque, yet it retains a measure of internal friction generated by competing interests within the court.
Haman’s elevation transforms this structure. By placing Haman “above all other princes,” Ahashverosh attempts to replace political plurality with centralized ideological enforcement. Hazony reads this as the transition from unstable imperial politics to something approaching totalitarianism. Haman’s rise suppresses competing perspectives in favor of a single absolutized worldview enforced through terror. The danger lies not in Haman’s personal hatred of Jews alone but in the elimination of institutional complexity.
Here Hazony introduces a central conceptual innovation: his political reading of idolatry as the absolutization of partial truth into total truth. Men grasp only fragments of reality, “one-seventieth” of the whole, yet idolatrous politics emerges when rulers mistake their limited perspective for universal certainty. Haman thus becomes the archetype not only of anti-Semitism but of ideological monism. He embodies the political temptation to eliminate ambiguity, disagreement, and rival centers of authority in pursuit of total control.
This reading lends the Persian court a modern resonance. Hazony links Hamanic politics to systems that seek to abolish institutional friction and intermediate powers in favor of centralized ideological uniformity. The book functions not only as biblical commentary but as a meditation on modern political pathologies, including totalitarianism, technocratic universalism, and ideological states that claim exhaustive knowledge of historical or moral truth.
Hazony’s analysis of Ahashverosh extends this political psychology. The king appears as a ruler driven by “appetite for rule.” Drawing on classical accounts of spirit, honor, domination, and humiliation, Hazony argues that political life follows emotional and psychological forces more than detached rational calculation. The six-month feast becomes not ornamental excess but a theatrical performance of imperial control designed to produce emotional submission and admiration among the king’s subjects.
The Vashti episode delivers the first major revelation of the regime’s true character. Ahashverosh’s humiliation at Vashti’s refusal exposes the fragility beneath imperial spectacle. His rage carries more than personal anger. It marks the crisis of a ruler whose emotional dependence on domination has met public challenge. Memuchan’s response converts a domestic embarrassment into an empire-wide political principle. The matter ceases to be marital conflict and becomes the preservation of hierarchical authority throughout the empire. The resulting decree, demanding that “every man should rule in his own house,” exposes the regime’s deeper logic: power persists by distributing subordinate domination downward through the social order.
At the center of the narrative stand Mordechai and Esther, whom Hazony refuses to sentimentalize as passive victims or uncomplicated moral exemplars. They emerge instead as sophisticated political actors operating within the perilous conditions of imperial exile. Hazony’s treatment of Mordechai is important because it overturns simple assumptions about Jewish passivity under foreign rule.
Mordechai appears compliant at first. He permits Esther to enter the royal court, instructs her to conceal her Jewish identity, and seems to accept Persian rule. Hazony argues that this surface submission conceals a far more strategic orientation. Mordechai immerses himself in the political world of the capital, “sitting in the king’s gate” and positioning himself within networks of information, influence, and elite rivalry. His exposure of the assassination plot against Ahashverosh follows not from naive loyalty to tyranny but from a calculated accumulation of political capital.
Here Hazony develops his theory of “political favor.” Exile communities lacking sovereign institutions can survive only by acquiring influence near the centers of power. Passive obedience accomplishes little because rulers can always replace submissive servants. What rulers value are men capable of advancing regime interests without direct supervision. Mordechai’s intervention thus demonstrates his usefulness as a political asset. He becomes someone the king can rely on even in moments of danger.
Hazony places this strategy within a larger biblical pattern by comparing Mordechai to Joseph and Daniel. Like Joseph in Egypt and Daniel in Babylon and Persia, Mordechai rises through mastery of imperial politics rather than open rebellion. Yet Hazony introduces a key distinction central to his political philosophy: the “Joseph-Moses” dichotomy.
Joseph represents the art of political favor perfected. He flourishes within Pharaoh’s system, acquires immense authority, and uses imperial power to protect his people during famine. Hazony argues that Joseph remains trapped within the “house of bondage.” He becomes indispensable to Pharaoh while never transcending dependence on imperial structures. He gains influence but not freedom.
Mordechai and Esther advance beyond the Joseph model by combining insider influence with eventual confrontation and disobedience. They first master the operations of political favor and only later turn that accumulated power against the system once Jewish survival demands it. Hazony synthesizes the Joseph archetype with the “road of Moses,” who confronts Pharaoh and leads a movement toward independent political agency.
Hazony rejects both quietistic assimilation and romantic revolutionary posturing. His ideal political actor neither withdraws from institutions nor performs futile gestures of purity. Mordechai and Esther embody a strategic realism. They understand timing, institutional vulnerability, and the necessity of building leverage before confrontation becomes possible.
Haman is not merely a bigot harboring irrational prejudice against Jews. He represents what Hazony calls the “Amalekite paradigm,” a recurring political type marked by predatory violence against the weak. Drawing on biblical depictions of Amalek attacking “the faltering behind,” Hazony argues that Amalekite politics seeks to crush communal spirit by targeting vulnerable populations and symbolic points of weakness.
The Amalekite-Pharaonic ruler rejects the “fear of God,” which for Hazony signifies recognition of transcendent moral limits on political power. Such rulers embrace the conviction that “crime pays,” that power alone determines legitimacy. This framework allows Hazony to read anti-Semitism as part of a broader political anthropology rather than ethnic hatred alone. Anti-Semitism emerges as one expression of predatory domination unconstrained by moral limits external to the state or ruler.
Hazony’s realism insists on the necessity of power, strategy, and deterrence, he argues that legitimate politics requires acknowledgment of transcendent limits beyond human will. The “fear of God” operates as the restraint that prevents political appetite from degenerating into pure predation.
This tension becomes pronounced in Hazony’s treatment of the Jews’ War near the close of the narrative. The slaughter of seventy-five thousand enemies has long troubled interpreters who wish to reconcile Esther with modern moral sensibilities. Hazony confronts the question without apology. He reads the violence not as revenge or bloodlust but as a calculated destruction of anti-Semitic political capacity designed to establish long-term deterrence.
Invoking Machiavellian logic, Hazony argues that restrained or symbolic retaliation might encourage future aggression by preserving enemy hopes of eventual revenge. Under conditions of existential vulnerability, overwhelming force becomes a political necessity. The Jews’ victory therefore marks not only physical survival but the restoration of political subjecthood. The Jews cease to be passive objects awaiting extermination and become agents capable of imposing consequences on their enemies.
Hazony refuses liberal sentimentalism about power, vulnerability, and deterrence. Jewish survival in hostile political environments has often depended on credible demonstrations of strength. Hazony insists that communities unable to defend themselves eventually become victims of those who can.

Newton and Hume’ (2016)

Hazony and Eric Schliesser’s chapter in The Oxford Handbook of Hume reframes a familiar story. David Hume has long been read either as the apostle who carried Isaac Newton (1642-1727) into the science of man or as the skeptic whose corrosive arguments threatened the new natural philosophy from outside. Hazony and Schliesser show that Hume inherits Newton’s method while undermining Newton’s metaphysics. The Treatise of Human Nature models its explanatory architecture on the Principia and turns that architecture against Newton’s most ambitious claims about space, time, geometry, universality, and force.

Three Replies: On Revelation, Natural Law and Jewish Autonomy in Theology’ (2016)

Hazony responds to four reviewers of The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture and uses the occasion to clarify the philosophical commitments running through his earlier book, and the document offers a compressed map of the positions that later shape his political and theological writings.
The essay proceeds in three sections, each centered on a question. The first asks how to read the Hebrew Bible if the analytic distinction between revelation and reason is alien to its authors. The second asks whether the Mosaic law qualifies as natural law and what such a claim might mean. The third asks what theological autonomy requires of Jewish thinkers writing in a Christian-saturated academic culture. The three questions belong together. Each one pushes against a habit of abstraction that, for Hazony, distorts what the biblical writers thought they were doing.
Christina Brinks asked why Hazony bothers to argue that the Bible can be read as a work of reason, when the cleaner move is to discard the reason-revelation distinction altogether. Hazony agrees with her in principle. His reply turns on a sociological observation: the distinction is too deeply embedded in Christian theology, and in Western thought after it, to be left untreated. He cites Aquinas (1225-1274), Calvin (1509-1564), and Alvin Plantinga (b. 1932) as figures who insist on the difference between knowledge given by revelation and knowledge generated by human reason. Plantinga’s formulation receives the most attention. On Plantinga’s account, the principal author of Scripture is God, and a passage’s meaning may exceed what Isaiah or Jeremiah had in mind. Hazony reads this as a hermeneutic that empties the prophets of their intellectual agency. Once the human author’s intent stops constraining interpretation, the prophet becomes a vessel, and his philosophy disappears.
This is a strong claim, and Hazony pushes it hard. He treats Isaiah and Jeremiah as thinkers with positions of their own, comparable to Plato or Parmenides. The aim is to recover what these men were trying to teach about politics, ethics, metaphysics, and God. That recovery cannot proceed if the interpreter assumes the human author was a placeholder for later doctrine.
Hazony then turns to Richard Swinburne (b. 1934), whose account of revelation he treats as representative of the standard view. Swinburne’s account has three parts: God communicates knowledge directly to a prophet; later hearers must accept the message on the prophet’s authority; and revealed knowledge differs in kind from knowledge available through ordinary experience. Hazony rejects all three.
The strongest counterexample is Deuteronomy 18. Moses tells the people that a prophet whose predictions fail has spoken on his own initiative, not for God. The test is empirical. The same point appears in 1 Kings 22 and Jeremiah 28. Hazony reads these passages as evidence that biblical prophecy is closer to science than to fideism. The prophet examines the moral and political consequences of human conduct and tries to anticipate what will follow.
Hazony proposes that revelation is not an exotic mode of cognition. It is the experience of insight at the limit of one’s own intellectual control. Poets and philosophers know the experience. A thinker wrestling with a problem may receive an answer that arrives from outside the calculating self. The ancients credited the Muses or the gods. Hazony argues that the prophets are doing something similar: they describe these moments as God’s word because God’s word is what such moments produce when the insight tracks reality.
Hazony handles the punitive provisions with care. The law’s preference for capital punishment and lashes belongs to a period when imprisonment was not economically feasible. Rabbinic tradition long ago suspended most of these punishments. He treats the law as flexible at the level of application and constant in its purposes.
Samuel Lebens accused Hazony of writing an anti-Christian book. Hazony’s reply is patient at the level of tone and unsparing at the level of substance.
He frames the issue through Joseph Soloveitchik (1903-1993). Soloveitchik argued in “Confrontation” that Jewish theology preserves its integrity only by refusing to translate its categories into Christian terms for the sake of friendly exchange. Hazony agrees. He cites the cases of Hermann Cohen (1842-1918) and Martin Buber (1878-1965) as warnings: both men adjusted Jewish thought to a Christian and post-Christian German environment, and neither secured the acceptance he sought. The accommodation, in Hazony’s reading, produced a Judaism that mirrored its surroundings rather than offering an alternative to them.
The substantive dispute with Lebens concerns the binding of Isaac. Lebens claimed that a Christological reading of the Akeida is “prominent” in rabbinic tradition, and that Hazony failed to appreciate this dimension of the text. Hazony pushes back on both halves of the claim. The Talmud and Midrash describe God looking upon “the ashes of Isaac” on the altar, but they present these ashes as eternal: still on the Temple Mount in the time of David, still there after the Babylonian destruction. They cannot be the physical remains of a body that Abraham burned and God then restored. They are closer to a permanent trace of what almost happened. Hazony reads the image as a sign of trauma and of what the patriarchs suffered for God’s sake. He concedes that medieval poems from the Crusade period do treat Isaac as killed and resurrected. He treats these as marginal, not as evidence of an underlying Jewish theology of substitutionary atonement.
Hazony enlists Shalom Spiegel (1899-1984) here. Spiegel’s The Last Trial argues that the Christian doctrine of atonement through the sacrifice of a son is a return to the pagan practices the Akeida set out to discredit.

The Bible and Leo Strauss’ (2016)

Hazony responds in Perspectives on Political Science 45 (Summer 2016) to symposium papers by Jeffrey Bernstein, Jules Gleicher, and David Schaefer on Hazony’s earlier book, The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture. The piece operates simultaneously as philosophical rejoinder, intellectual history, and curricular polemic. Its target is the historiographical settlement that places the origin of political philosophy in Athens and treats Jerusalem as a theological appendix or pre-philosophical foil. Its chief antagonist is Leo Strauss, whose authority within the academic study of political philosophy continues to support the exclusion Hazony seeks to overturn.
The argument moves on three planes. The first concerns the proper definition of philosophy. The second concerns the textual character of the Hebrew Bible. The third concerns the metaphysical conditions under which a work might qualify as philosophical. Hazony grants Strauss his framing of the question and then disputes Strauss on each plane.
Strauss’s position rests on a historiography where philosophy enters the world through the discovery of nature. Pre-philosophical societies, on this account, equate the good with the ancestral. The first philosophers distinguish between what holds by convention and what holds by nature. They appeal from inherited authority to a standard that obtains universally and necessarily. The Hebrew Bible, Strauss claims, never makes this transition. Biblical Hebrew lacks a word for nature. The Bible commands obedience to a covenantal law rather than an inquiry into intrinsic order. Its God is, in Strauss’s phrase, “absolutely free” and unpredictable, and thus has no place in the order of “necessary and therefore eternal” things that philosophy presupposes.
From these premises Strauss draws a curricular conclusion. The Bible may serve as background reading, but it does not belong in the history of political philosophy. The standard text Strauss coedited with Joseph Cropsey, History of Political Philosophy, opens with Plato (in the second edition) or with Thucydides (in the third). The Hebrew prophets do not appear.
Hazony argues that Strauss’s exclusion reproduces, in attenuated form, the de-Judaized historiography of Western thought constructed by the German Enlightenment, an inheritance from Luther’s polemic against the Hebrew Bible’s relevance to Christianity. Strauss, a proud Jew working against the anti-Jewish currents of German academia, restored Maimonides and medieval Jewish thought to philosophical respectability. Yet on the question of the Bible he conserved the judgment that animated the tradition he resisted. The position deserves reconsideration not because Strauss was insincere but because the inherited assumptions on which his exclusion rests have grown harder to defend.
If philosophy begins with the rejection of inherited convention in the name of a higher standard, then the Hebrew Bible contains figures who do that. Hazony develops a typological reading of the Biblical History from Genesis through Kings, dividing its leading characters into shepherds (Abel, Abraham, Jacob, Moses, David) and farmers (Cain, Noah, Isaac, Joseph, Saul). The categories are not occupational descriptors but moral and political types. The farmer represents piety, stability, and submission to inherited authority. The shepherd represents independence, departure, and the willingness to challenge ancestral conviction.
Abraham leaves his father’s house and rejects Babylonian idolatry. Moses repudiates Pharaoh’s civilization and refuses to inherit Egyptian power. Jacob struggles with both men and God, and the name Israel commemorates that struggle. Most pointedly, Abraham challenges divine judgment at Sodom: “Will the judge of all the earth not do justice?” The interrogation of God on grounds of justice is decisive for Hazony’s argument. Abraham appeals beyond authority, even divine authority, to an independent standard of right. The Biblical hero, on this reading, exhibits a structural resemblance to the philosopher as Strauss describes him.
The typology has a second register. Hazony does not romanticize the shepherd. Civilization requires the farmer, who preserves and transmits what the shepherd discovers. Israel on its land is an agrarian polity. The Torah aims to inculcate the shepherd’s spirit within a society organized around the farmer’s virtues. Abraham digs the wells; Isaac digs them again under the same names. The Biblical teaching seeks a synthesis between inquiry and order. It rejects the proposition that intellectual independence and a society of piety must be at permanent war.
Strauss’s philological argument from the absence of a Hebrew term for nature does not carry the weight he places on it. Concepts often precede the specialized terminology that later organizes them. Biblical Hebrew also has no word equivalent to religion, yet the Bible addresses what subsequent thought calls religious questions. Hazony notes that the word yetzer, a cognate of the verb yatzar (“to form”), refers to the form or tendency of a thing, and might serve where Strauss looks for a missing term.
That idiom is the recurring contrast between what is right “in God’s eyes” and what is right “in the eyes of men.” Hazony assembles the relevant passages from Judges, Jeremiah, Proverbs, and the Song of Hannah in 1 Samuel. The phrase functions as the Biblical analogue to the Greek distinction between nature and convention. Human societies mistake local custom for justice. The view from above, named through the metaphor of divine sight, signifies an objective standard against which any society might be measured. This standard is not arbitrary, since Scripture portrays the one God as having ordered all creation, including human social arrangements, according to laws conducive to the flourishing of each kind of thing. Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel address God’s law to the nations, not Israel alone. Hazony argues, with some scholarly support from Helmut Koester, that the Hebrew Bible may be the oldest extant source for what later thinkers call natural law. The Latin terminology lex naturalis enters Western discourse through Philo of Alexandria, whose project translates Mosaic law for a Greek audience.
The second prong of Hazony’s argument concerns the textual structure of the Hebrew Bible. Strauss reads Scripture as a unified communication demanding obedient love. Hazony replies that the central Biblical text is unprecedented in the ancient Near East because it embeds a legal code within a long narrative that repeatedly broaches questions of justice, authority, compromise, and interpretation. Why does the Mosaic teaching arrive in this form rather than as a freestanding code with a preamble, like the Code of Hammurabi or the laws of Eshnunna?
The answer Hazony proposes is that Moses and the prophetic-scholarly tradition behind the Torah did not consider obedience sufficient. The codes of Babylonia and Egypt commanded performance; the Torah commands performance and inquiry together. The narrative around the daughters of Zelophehad in Numbers shows orphaned women arguing successfully that the inheritance laws as given produce injustice. God accepts the argument and the law is amended. Aaron’s exchange with Moses in Leviticus 10 shows the high priest refusing to perform a sacrificial meal on the day his sons die, and Moses concedes that Aaron’s reasoning is right in God’s eyes. In both cases the plain meaning of a divine command yields to a reasoned appeal grounded in justice rather than ancestry or authority.
Hazony treats these passages as the textual seed of the later rabbinic concept of torah she-ba’al peh, the oral teaching, through which human reasoning clarifies the written law across generations. The written law remains the framework. The oral tradition makes it answerable to the standard the narrative invites readers to seek.
Hazony reads Exodus as a progressive disclosure of God’s nature rather than a single declaration of unbounded freedom. The famous ehyeh asher ehyeh is the second of four ascending responses Moses receives. The fourth, given in Exodus 34, describes God as merciful, gracious, longsuffering, faithful, and just, visiting iniquity on the third and fourth generation but storing the results of righteousness for thousands. This is the disclosure Moses carries back from Sinai after the sin of the golden calf. It supplies the ground on which the covenant becomes intelligible. If God were unbounded will, no promise might be trusted, and Strauss’s appeal to covenant as a check on divine arbitrariness collapses, since an arbitrary God might break a promise as easily as keep it. The covenant binds because God’s character binds him.

The Virtue of Nationalism’ (2018)

This book ranks among the ten most significant works of political theory from the post-Cold War conservative revival. Hazony published it in 2018, amid Brexit, populist insurgencies, growing skepticism toward globalization, and elite disillusionment with democratic nationalism. The book defends patriotic attachment and reconstructs a framework for political order. Hazony presents nationalism as a morally legitimate and historically productive alternative to liberal universalism and supranational governance. He challenges a central assumption of post-1945 Western political culture: that nationalism counts as inherently regressive, dangerous, and morally compromised.
The book reads as a sustained philosophical argument against the contemporary “imperial” project of liberal internationalism. Its ambition runs civilizational rather than electoral. Hazony seeks to overturn the dominant postwar narrative according to which the catastrophes of the twentieth century, especially fascism and the Holocaust, demonstrated the moral bankruptcy of nationalism and established the necessity of supranational political integration. Against this consensus, Hazony argues that nationalism historically served as a doctrine of anti-imperial self-government, while universalist political projects have repeatedly generated coercion, homogenization, and domination.
Hazony insists that modern “globalism” represents no historical novelty but a contemporary form of imperial universalism. Institutions such as the European Union, international courts, transnational governance regimes, humanitarian interventionism, and the post-Cold War “rules-based international order” succeed older imperial projects that sought to subordinate independent nations to supranational authority. The language of “global governance,” “international community,” “universal jurisdiction,” and “pooled sovereignty” functions, in his account, as euphemism for the re-emergence of imperial ambitions.
Hazony argues that the modern system of sovereign nation-states emerged from the political theology of the Protestant Reformation and, deeper still, from the political teachings of the Hebrew Bible. This argument gives the book a strikingly theological and civilizational character. The Hebrew Bible serves here not merely as a religious document but as a foundational political text articulating an anti-imperial vision of world order.
According to Hazony, the ancient Near East fell under the dominion of universal empires such as Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, and Persia, all of which justified conquest in the name of peace, prosperity, and civilizational unity. Against these imperial systems, biblical Israel introduced an alternative conception of political order centered on the independent nation. Mosaic law, in Hazony’s reading, established a bounded national community governed by leaders drawn “from among your brothers,” constrained by inherited law rather than arbitrary imperial authority. The Hebrew prophets envisioned not universal empire but a pluralistic world of independent nations pursuing self-government within limited borders.
Hazony makes a central claim that biblical nationhood remains cultural and covenantal rather than biological or racial. He rejects racial nationalism. Membership in a nation depends upon shared history, language, religion, and loyalty rather than blood descent. The incorporation of Ruth the Moabite into Israel and the “mixed multitude” joining the Israelites after the Exodus stand as central examples in his argument. This distinction carries weight because Hazony seeks to detach nationalism from the racial ideologies of twentieth-century fascism and root it instead in a pre-modern biblical conception of covenantal peoplehood.
The book’s historical narrative culminates in Hazony’s account of what he calls the “Protestant construction” of the West following the Reformation and the Peace of Westphalia. This section forms an intellectual center of the work. Hazony argues that the Westphalian order rested upon two interlocking principles derived from the Hebrew Bible. The first he calls the “moral minimum” required for legitimate government: governments held obligations to protect life, family, property, justice, and public morality. Legitimate rule depended upon substantive moral obligations rather than procedural neutrality alone. The second principle established the right of national self-determination. Cohesive nations possessed the right to govern themselves according to their own laws, traditions, and inherited institutions without foreign domination.
For Hazony, the creative tension between these two principles drove Western civilization. Universal moral standards constrained political power while national particularism allowed different societies to experiment with distinct constitutional, legal, economic, and religious arrangements. The resulting “national laboratories” fostered competition and innovation across Europe in science, philosophy, economics, law, and political institutions. England, the Netherlands, France, and other emerging nation-states became rival centers of civilizational experimentation rather than provinces within a universal empire.
Hazony’s discussion of the Protestant order also reveals his deeper hostility toward homogenizing universalism. He emphasizes that liberty emerged historically not from abstract universal rights detached from historical communities but from particular inherited national traditions. English common law, Dutch republicanism, and Protestant constitutionalism did not express universally self-evident rational principles. They grew from historically specific national inheritances.
This critique leads into Hazony’s sustained attack on Enlightenment liberalism, especially the Lockean tradition. He presents John Locke (1632-1704) as the architect of what he calls the “liberal construction” of the West. Locke’s political theory, according to Hazony, abstracts away the social and historical conditions of political life. Human beings reduce to isolated individuals pursuing life, liberty, and property through consensual transactions. Obligations arising from inherited loyalties, family ties, religious inheritances, tribal affiliations, and national traditions disappear from view.
Hazony regards this abstraction not merely as philosophically inadequate but as politically corrosive. Human beings do not enter the world as autonomous contractors. They are born into networks of inherited obligation and loyalty that shape identity long before conscious consent becomes possible. Families, tribes, and nations precede the individual’s rational choice. The Lockean framework therefore produces what Hazony regards as a utopian and psychologically implausible conception of politics.
Hazony’s critique of the “neutral state” and of what contemporary theorists often call “constitutional patriotism” rejects the idea that modern societies can sustain cohesion through loyalty to abstract principles or constitutional documents detached from pre-political cultural inheritance. According to Hazony, reverence for constitutions depends upon prior tribal and national formation. Citizens do not venerate founding documents because abstract reason commands it. They do so because they have been socialized within a particular historical nation that treats those documents as sacred inheritances.
The United States serves as a central example. Hazony contends that America does not cohere merely through adherence to universal propositions about equality and liberty. It emerged historically from an English-speaking Protestant people shaped by common law traditions, biblical morality, inherited customs, and shared historical memory. The “American creed” alone cannot explain national cohesion. This argument places Hazony in direct opposition to postwar civic nationalism and liberal creedalism.
Hazony attempts to replace social contract theory with a descriptive account of how political communities emerge historically. In place of abstract consent among autonomous individuals, he proposes a hierarchical model of human collectivities. The family serves as the fundamental unit of political order. Families aggregate into clans bound by mutual loyalty. Clans form tribes, and tribes consolidate into nations possessing shared language, religion, memory, and histories of common defense. A free state, in Hazony’s account, emerges when tribal groupings voluntarily unite under a shared government to preserve collective independence. Political order grows organically from nested structures of loyalty rather than from hypothetical contracts among isolated individuals.
This account underlies Hazony’s concept of “collective self-determination,” among the philosophically important elements of the book. Human beings, he argues, experience the triumphs and sufferings of their nation as extensions of themselves. The self extends outward into family, tribe, and nation rather than remaining radically individual. Freedom therefore cannot be understood purely in individual legal terms. A man cannot enjoy full freedom if the collective to which he belongs falls subject to subordination or conquest. Collective freedom becomes an existential as well as a political reality.
In many respects, this constitutes Hazony’s deepest break with liberal individualism. Liberalism treats political order as existing primarily to protect autonomous individuals from coercion. Hazony instead insists that human beings seek participation in enduring collective inheritances larger than themselves. National self-government fulfills psychological and civilizational needs that universal liberal frameworks cannot adequately satisfy.

The Current Crisis in Israel’s Constitution’ (2018)

The piece advances a theory of constitutional legitimacy grounded in national particularity, a sociology of Israeli juridical transformation, and a regional prescription for the post-imperial Middle East.
Hazony opens with a reconstruction of the phrase “Jewish State” across Zionist, British, and United Nations documents. The aim: to establish Israel’s character as a Jewish polity as a constitutive founding principle. The reconstruction succeeds at the level of textual fidelity. Theodor Herzl (1860-1904) coined the phrase. The Peel Commission report of 1937 used it. The United Nations partition resolution of 1947 employed it. Israel’s Declaration of Independence invoked Herzl by name. The Law of Return enacted Herzl’s premise that Jews everywhere held a claim to refuge in the territory.
The argument has a gap. Hazony moves from textual continuity to constitutive principle as though the second follows from the first. A phrase may persist across documents while the political theory animating it shifts beneath the words. The “Jewish State” Herzl envisioned in 1896, the “Jewish State” proposed under partition in 1937, the “Jewish State” David Ben-Gurion (1886-1973) proclaimed in 1948, and the “Jewish State” Aharon Barak discussed in the 1990s might share a phrase while differing in substance. The historical record demonstrates lexical continuity. The constitutive case requires more.
Hazony enlists Mill’s argument in Chapter XVI of Considerations on Representative Government for the proposition that representative government depends on substantial cultural homogeneity. Mill argued that strong sentiments of nationality among the people make representative government workable. Mill also placed significant qualifications on the claim. He distinguished higher and lower civilizations. He defended the absorption of Welsh and Bretons into larger English and French polities. He treated nationality as a precondition for liberal institutions rather than an end in its own right. Hazony enlists Mill as a champion of national distinctness while passing over Mill’s assimilationist preferences. A scholar working in Mill’s tradition might reach conclusions about Israeli Arab citizens at variance with those Hazony favors. The deeper question Mill raises but Hazony does not address concerns thickness: how thick must cultural cohesion be for democracy to function, and what costs attend the project of producing such cohesion in populations that contain substantial minorities?
The contrast between Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu (1689-1755) and Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) furnishes the conceptual spine of the essay. On one side stands the empirical, historical, traditionalist account of legitimacy. On the other stands the rationalist, universalist account. Hazony places David Hume (1711-1776), Edmund Burke, G.W.F. Hegel (1770-1831), Benjamin Constant (1767-1830), Adam Ferguson (1723-1816), and Mill in the first column. Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) joins Rousseau in the second.
Burke and Hegel sit uneasily with Hume’s skeptical empiricism. Constant’s defense of modern commercial liberty differs sharply from Burke’s defense of inherited hierarchy. Hegel’s theory of the state has structural features the others would have rejected, including the speculative metaphysics that Hume and Constant had no use for. The lineage Hazony assembles serves rhetorical purposes more than historical ones. It places liberal nationalists, conservative traditionalists, and idealist philosophers into a single line of descent that does not survive close examination.
Alexander Yakobson and Amnon Rubinstein have argued in Israel and the Family of Nations that Israel’s combination of Jewish character and democratic citizenship has parallels in European nation-states that maintain established churches, preferred-immigration arrangements for diaspora populations, and other particularist features without abandoning liberal-democratic legitimacy. Yael Tamir’s (b. 1954) Liberal Nationalism offers a philosophical defense of the compatibility Hazony seeks to vindicate, but on grounds Hazony does not consider. Hazony’s regional argument extends the Zionist model to Kurds, Druze, Alawites, Assyrian Christians, Sunni Arabs, and Shia Arabs. Each people, on his account, deserves a state with a Law of Return analogue. The proposal has internal consistency. It also raises questions the essay treats too quickly. What defines a people for these purposes? Hazony lists categories that mix religious confession (Druze, Alawite, Christian, Sunni, Shia), linguistic-ethnic identity (Kurd, Arab), and combinations of the two. Are Iraqi Sunni Arabs and Syrian Sunni Arabs one people or two? Are Lebanese Maronites separate from Assyrian Christians? Hazony’s proposal presupposes resolutions to questions of identity that the populations involved have not resolved among themselves.
The model also obscures how states come into being. Israel emerged through a combination of organized immigration over decades, institutional construction by the Yishuv, military success in 1948, and substantial Palestinian displacement. The Zionist achievement rested on demographic, military, and diplomatic conditions that may not transfer. Hazony’s regional vision does not address the preconditions that the Herzlian project required. The comparison between Israel and Syria-Iraq slights confounding variables. Syria and Iraq inherited different colonial structures, different rentier economies dependent on oil, different Cold War alignments, and different relationships with revolutionary Arab nationalism. The contrast Hazony draws attributes their failures to multinational composition while holding other variables constant. A serious comparative analysis must address oil rents, the Ba’athist ideological project, French and British administrative inheritances, and the role of Pan-Arabism as a competing transnational identity.
The closing claim, that Jewish political tradition demands equality before the law for non-Jewish citizens, marks the most philosophically interesting move in the essay. Hazony argues that the internal moral resources of a particular tradition can generate obligations to outsiders. The biblical and rabbinic injunctions concerning the ger and the non-Jewish resident provide textual support. The argument deserves more development than the essay gives it. The trouble is institutional rather than textual. Jewish law contains resources for equality before civil law. Jewish law also contains other resources, including categories that distinguish among classes of non-Jews, and provisions that grant particular standing to the Jewish people in the Land of Israel. Which strand of the tradition becomes operative in a given political moment depends on the carriers of authority within that tradition. The Chief Rabbinate, the religious courts, the religious-Zionist establishment, the haredi communities, and the secular state each draw on different parts of the inheritance. Hazony’s confidence that the equality-oriented strand prevails rests on judgments about religious authority and political coalition he does not defend at length.
The sociology Hazony offers, an account of how Israeli juridical elites absorbed postwar Western universalism, reads more as assertion than analysis. The actors stand identified by office and stated position. The processes by which the absorption occurred, the institutional channels through which the new doctrines entered Israeli legal culture, and the conditions that made the absorption successful go largely unexamined. A fuller account needs to address Israeli legal education in the 1970s and 1980s, the influence of American constitutional theory on Israeli scholars who took degrees abroad, the role of the New Israel Fund and similar organizations in supporting public-interest litigation, and the responses of competing intellectual circles within Israel.

The Question of God’s Perfection: Jewish and Christian Essays on the God of the Bible and Talmud’ (2018)

This essay challenges the metaphysical grammar through which Jewish, Christian, and philosophical theology has spoken about God for almost two millennia. Hazony asks his reader to consider whether the apparatus of omnipotence, omniscience, immutability, impassibility, simplicity, and necessary existence belongs to the Hebrew Bible at all, or whether it migrated into rabbinic and patristic thought from the metaphysics of Xenophanes (c. 570–c. 478 BCE), Parmenides (c. 515–c. 460 BCE), Plato (c. 428–c. 348 BCE), and Aristotle (384–322 BCE).
The volume frames the question as a debate. Its four parts present challenges to divine perfection, defenses of divine perfection, treatments of divine morality, and reflections on particular attributes. Eleonore Stump (b. 1947) defends Thomistic simplicity and immutability while arguing that the God of classical theism can be personally present and responsive. Brian Leftow (b. 1956) reconciles divine perfection with friendship and relationality. Lenn E. Goodman (b. 1944) contends that the Hebrew Bible carries strong implications of divine perfection on its own terms. This architecture prevents Hazony’s argument from being misread as a simple rejection of transcendence or a reduction of God to a magnified man. The contest is methodological: how may divine reality be legitimately conceptualized?
Hazony opens by pressing the biblical evidence. God regrets having made man before the flood (Gen 6:6). God regrets having made Saul king (1 Sam 15:11). God responds to the arguments of Moses, alters plans in response to human conduct, expresses anger, jealousy, compassion, and disappointment, and reacts to human innovations the text presents as unforeseen, among them Phinehas, the midwives of Egypt, and Abel as the first shepherd. Hazony’s central move is to deny that these depictions are decorative anthropomorphisms concealing a metaphysically simple essence beneath the text. They are constitutive of biblical theology. The covenantal drama depends on a God who enters history and whose relation to His people unfolds in time and in response to what His people do. The God of the Hebrew Bible strives, reacts, negotiates, remembers, relents, punishes, forgives, and grieves.

Conservative Democracy’ (2019)

Hazony attempts to delegitimize the intellectual foundations of postwar liberal democracy and recover an older Anglo-American constitutional tradition rooted in biblical religion, inherited national loyalty, and historical empiricism. Hazony argues that what contemporary elites call “liberal democracy” is neither historically continuous with the Anglo-American political order nor capable of sustaining the institutions on which that order depended. Liberalism is a substantive ideology that dissolves religion, family, nationhood, and inherited obligation while presenting itself as the sole morally legitimate form of politics.
The essay marks a broader post-liberal turn in Western political thought. Across the United States and Europe, confidence in liberal internationalism, technocratic governance, and universalist political theory has weakened under social fragmentation, declining religious participation, collapsing institutional trust, demographic anxiety, and failed nation-building projects abroad. Hazony gives this political mood an intellectual architecture. His project is restorative rather than revolutionary. He insists that conservative democracy stands closer to the traditional Anglo-American constitutional order than modern liberalism does.
At the center of Hazony’s argument sits an epistemological claim. Liberalism, he holds, is rationalist at its core. It derives political order from abstract universal premises about reason, equality, and consent. Hazony describes liberalism as an “axiom system” modeled on mathematics. Like a geometric proof, liberal theory begins with supposedly self-evident propositions and deduces a complete political order from them. Men are by nature free and equal. Reason is universally available. Political obligation arises only from consent. These premises generate the liberal state.
Against this rationalist approach Hazony sets what he calls “historical empiricism.” Political institutions, on this view, are not deduced from universal truths but discovered through centuries of trial and error. Traditions survive because they have demonstrated functional durability across generations. Institutional authority therefore emerges from accumulated historical experience rather than abstract deduction.
This distinction forms the conceptual backbone of the essay. Hazony’s argument echoes older conservative critiques associated with Edmund Burke, Michael Oakeshott, and Friedrich Hayek. Yet his account is more theological and nationalist than theirs. His claim is not simply that traditions serve as useful social cement. It is that biblical religion and inherited national culture are indispensable preconditions for political freedom.
Liberalism often presents itself as a procedural framework that protects individual liberty while remaining neutral on substantive moral questions. Hazony rejects this entirely. Liberalism, he argues, carries its own substantive anthropology and moral vision. It understands man primarily as an autonomous chooser whose obligations gain legitimacy only through consent. Inherited authority, religious obligation, and national loyalty lose independent standing.
Hazony’s deeper claim is that liberalism delegitimizes all institutions whose authority cannot be reduced to individual choice. The family weakens because inherited obligation yields to personal fulfillment. Religion weakens because public reason displaces revelation and communal authority. National cohesion weakens because universalism corrodes particular loyalty. Liberalism therefore survives by consuming moral and institutional capital generated by pre-liberal traditions that it simultaneously erodes.
This parasitic logic anchors Hazony’s civilizational diagnosis. Liberal societies appear stable because they continue to draw on social trust, moral discipline, family cohesion, and civic loyalty inherited from older biblical and national traditions. Liberal theory cannot reproduce these conditions. Hazony’s argument here resembles Alasdair MacIntyre’s claim in After Virtue that modern liberal culture retains fragments of older moral traditions after abandoning the metaphysical structures that once gave them coherence. It parallels the concerns of Christopher Lasch and Robert Nisbet about the dissolution of intermediary institutions under modern individualism.
Hazony argues that the shift from the older American vocabulary of “republican government” to the newer language of “liberal democracy” reflects a transformation in political consciousness rather than mere semantic evolution. The older American republic could openly acknowledge its dependence on biblical religion, Protestant moral culture, and inherited national traditions. The rise of “liberal democracy” as the dominant political term severed constitutional forms from the cultural and religious foundations that historically sustained them.
This linguistic shift functions as a form of epistemic closure. Once democracy becomes conceptually fused with liberal universalism, any defense of biblical religion, national cohesion, or inherited public morality can be characterized as anti-democratic by definition. Hazony’s point is not merely historical. It is institutional and conceptual. Political language defines the boundaries of legitimate political imagination. Once liberalism becomes synonymous with democracy, alternatives grow difficult to conceptualize within elite discourse.
Hazony suggests that contemporary elites are trapped within what he calls a liberal “axiom system.” Because liberalism treats its principles as universally rational, failures appear not as evidence against the theory but as implementation problems. This explains Hazony’s emphasis on failed liberal nation-building projects in Iraq and elsewhere. Liberal constitutional models collapse when exported because they ignore the historical and cultural conditions necessary for institutional stability. Liberals read these failures as technical errors. Conservatives read them as evidence that universalist political theory misunderstands how societies hold together.
Hazony therefore treats liberal internationalism as a form of ideological empire. The attempt to spread liberal democracy globally resembles what he describes as Napoleonic universalism. Liberal elites mistake historically contingent Anglo-American constitutional arrangements for universally valid truths and impose them internationally. The result is often political collapse, institutional vacuum, and social fragmentation rather than stable constitutional order.
Hazony distinguishes nationalism from race-based identity. Nations, on his account, are historically inherited communities held together by mutual loyalty, shared law, language, religion, and collective memory. He rejects racial nationalism and invokes the biblical story of Ruth to describe a form of civic-cultural incorporation grounded in shared loyalty and inherited tradition.
Hazony defends tradition on practical grounds, not sentimental ones. He treats intergenerational continuity as a necessary condition for political order. Traditions transmit tacit knowledge accumulated through centuries of social experience. Once these traditions weaken, societies lose the institutional memory necessary for stable self-government.
Liberal neutrality might be unstable or incomplete, but public endorsement of a particular religious and national tradition also raises questions about exclusion, dissent, and unequal citizenship. Hazony gestures toward civic nationalism and toleration.

Locke’s Rationalism and the Future of Political Theory’ (2019)

Hazony presents a compact but ambitious challenge to the epistemological foundations of modern liberal political thought. His essay indicts Enlightenment rationalism as a governing framework for political life. Hazony argues that modern political theory committed a serious intellectual error when it embraced Cartesian deduction rather than Newtonian induction. In his account, the modern West still organizes its institutions, jurisprudence, and foreign policy around abstract premises detached from observable human behavior and historical experience. He claims the result has been permanent destabilization at home and ideological overreach abroad.
Hazony writes at once as philosopher, sociologist, historian, and critic of contemporary elite governance. His ambition is civilizational. He wants to replace a liberal politics grounded in universal reason and individual autonomy with one grounded in historical inheritance, collective loyalty, and empirically constrained judgment.
Hazony organizes his argument around a comparison between Enlightenment political theory and Cartesian physics. He argues that René Descartes (1596-1650) tried to derive universal truths about the physical world from self-evident premises through deductive reasoning. The project once held enormous prestige. It collapsed under the pressure of Newtonian empiricism. Physics abandoned the dream of infallible deduction and embraced induction from observable phenomena. Political theory experienced no comparable correction. Locke, Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778), and Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) kept constructing political systems from abstract premises about human nature, consent, equality, and freedom.
Hazony invokes Isaac Newton (1642-1727) to recommend a political theory built from recurring patterns in history, the way Newtonian science builds from observable phenomena. Political theory should not start with hypothetical states of nature or imagined autonomous individuals. It should start with the durable forms of human association across time.
Hazony identifies one such pattern as the foundational force of political life: mutual loyalty within cohesive groups. Men consistently bind themselves into families, tribes, clans, nations, and religious communities. Hazony describes this loyalty using the metaphor of gravity. Collective attachment pulls individuals together the way gravitational force pulls matter into stars and galaxies. The image presents social cohesion not as an ideological choice but as a natural force embedded in human existence.
Locke begins with the individual as the primary unit of analysis. Hazony begins with the collective. Locke treats political obligation as derivative of consent. Hazony treats loyalty and inherited attachment as prior to consent. Locke imagines individuals entering political society through voluntary agreement. Hazony argues that men are born into networks of obligation and historical inheritance that shape identity before rational choice becomes possible.
Hazony relocates legitimacy from procedural neutrality toward civilizational continuity. Political order earns judgment by its capacity to preserve internal cohesion, cultural inheritance, and intergenerational stability, not chiefly by its protection of abstract rights.
This shift explains Hazony’s hostility to the Lockean conception of universal rights. He identifies three core Lockean axioms as empirically false: the existence of universal reason equally accessible to all individuals, the condition of “perfect freedom and perfect equality,” and the idea that political obligation arises solely from consent. His language here is aggressive. He does not call these assumptions incomplete or idealized. He calls them fictions and fantasies.
Political ideals must remain bounded by empirical human limitations. Liberal rationalism becomes dangerous because it treats institutions and identities as infinitely malleable. Hazony insists that competent political theory must begin with an understanding of what men are rather than what abstract morality imagines they should become.
The force of this critique clarifies once Hazony connects Enlightenment rationalism to contemporary institutional life. He links Lockean political philosophy to the costly Western wars of recent decades aimed at exporting Enlightenment political models. The Balkans, the Middle East, South Asia, and Africa appear in the essay not as isolated policy failures but as symptoms of a deeper epistemological disorder. Liberal elites, Hazony argues, could not imagine that non-Western societies might resist being reconstructed according to abstract universal principles. Rationalist political theory generated a form of liberal imperialism grounded in false assumptions about the universality of Enlightenment anthropology.
Hazony accuses American judges and legal elites of trying to uproot centuries-old religious and national traditions through deductions from abstract autonomy principles. His reference to the “right to define one’s own concept of existence” from Planned Parenthood v. Casey is telling. It identifies expressive individualism as the juridical culmination of Lockean anthropology.
Here lies an important insight. Hazony recognizes that modern constitutional jurisprudence rests upon an expansive conception of personal autonomy detached from inherited communal norms. He reads this development not as a natural extension of constitutional democracy but as the institutional triumph of Enlightenment rationalism within the judiciary.
The concept of “perpetual revolution” emerges from this analysis. No society can ever fully embody Lockean ideals because men remain embedded within inherited loyalties, traditions, and collective identities. Liberal rationalism therefore generates endless institutional pressure to dissolve existing forms of social cohesion in pursuit of unattainable abstractions.
Hazony stands within a long anti-rationalist tradition extending from Edmund Burke to Michael Oakeshott. He intensifies the critique by portraying liberalism not merely as socially corrosive but as structurally unable to terminate its own revolutionary logic. If legitimacy depends entirely upon autonomous consent and universal equality, inherited institutions always appear morally suspect because they embody historical contingency rather than rational design.
The critique intersects with broader post-liberal anxieties about institutional legitimacy, elite authority, and civilizational fragmentation. Modern liberal societies, Hazony implies, depend upon inherited moral and national traditions they cannot reproduce. Liberalism survives only by consuming reservoirs of trust, loyalty, and cultural inheritance generated by pre-liberal institutions such as religion, family, and nation.
This emphasis explains the weight Hazony places on intergenerational transmission. Political order, in his account, depends not chiefly upon procedural fairness but upon the successful preservation of cultural inheritance across time. The health of a political community is measured by continuity and cohesion rather than by neutrality or procedural abstraction.

‘Conservative Rationalism Has Failed’ Part One Part Two (2019)

Hazony attempts to reconstruct the epistemic ground of political order after what he treats as the exhaustion of Enlightenment rationalism. The essay works at once as political theory, sociology of institutions, and civilizational diagnosis. Read carefully, it makes a single integrated claim: political knowledge derives from historical experience rather than detached reason, and any conservatism that accepts the rationalist starting point has already conceded the war it pretends to fight.
The argument begins with a sharp accusation. Conservative intellectuals who defend inherited custom through the universalist logic of the Enlightenment have surrendered at the level of first principles. Once politics turns on universally accessible reason rather than inherited religion, nation, and common law, no stable moral order survives. Rationalism becomes a solvent. The authority of tradition can no longer justify obedience because every inherited claim must answer to free critique. Each generation acquires the right and the duty to reconstruct the social order from scratch.
Hazony aims at fellow conservatives. Straussians, natural law theorists, libertarians, and Lockean constitutionalists draw his fire because they conserve the wrong things. They defend conservative conclusions while accepting rationalist premises about universal reason, neutral procedure, and abstract individual rights. Hazony argues this guarantees defeat. Any political order grounded in reason alone remains permanently open to further rational revision, and revision arrives faster than restoration.
Hazony rejects the picture of political knowledge as deduction from self-evident axioms. Societies do not derive working civilizations from Cartesian first principles. They acquire wisdom through long stretches of trial and error, institutional adaptation, and collective memory. Traditions hold what generations have learned. Customs that endure pass through filtering across many circumstances. A tradition is therefore closer to data than to prejudice.
Critics treat Hazony as a relativist who substitutes ancestral preference for argument. He answers that traditions are testable in something like the way scientific generalizations are testable. Endurance under varying conditions counts as evidence. Catastrophe under stress counts against. Not everything inherited deserves protection. Inheritance carries information that abstract reason cannot replicate, because the alternative to inheritance is a poorer set of guesses dressed up as first principles.
John Selden (1584-1654) anchors the case. Selden observed in 1640 that free reasoning produces no consensus because no procedure adjudicates among rival rational systems. Hazony reads Selden as describing what we still see. Reason untethered from tradition does not converge on liberal moderation. It proliferates competing ideologies and discards each in turn. Marxism, libertarianism, racial nationalism, technocratic managerialism, and expressive individualism all spring from the same emancipatory impulse once inherited authority dissolves. The Enlightenment promise that open inquiry stabilizes political life inverts itself. Free inquiry destabilizes because no internal principle stops the process. Once inherited norms lose standing, no institution remains immune to permanent reconstruction.
The historical narrative centers on a transformation in American self-understanding after the Second World War. Hazony contrasts Franklin Roosevelt’s (1882-1945) 1939 State of the Union, which described America as a “God-fearing democracy” with religion as the source of democratic life, against the postwar emergence of “liberal democracy” as the dominant frame. Roosevelt treated religion not as private preference but as the ground of free institutions. Within a generation, courts and elite opinion came to treat religion as a threat from which the state must protect citizens.
The pivot point in Hazony’s account is Justice Hugo Black’s (1886-1971) opinion in Everson v. Board of Education (1947). Hazony reads Black as a chronicler of a shift in elite self-conception. Black retells the American founding as an escape from the cruelty of established religion rather than as a Protestant covenantal achievement. America becomes a project of procedural neutrality rather than a biblical civilization shaped by Reformation theology and common law. The Fourteenth Amendment, on the books since 1868, suddenly required a wall of separation that no one had previously read into it. The letter of the law had not changed. The story Americans told about themselves had changed.
The Anglo-American order, in his telling, never grew from Lockean rationalism. It grew from biblical political thought, English common law, Protestant covenantalism, and slow institutional adaptation. His reading of the Hebrew Bible is therefore political as much as religious. He sees it as a model of limited government rooted in covenantal obligation, national particularity, decentralized authority, and shared moral inheritance. Israel becomes a constitutional template, not only a sacred text. Removing biblical instruction from the schools represents on this view a severance from the texts that taught generations the political grammar of self-government.
Public schools and elite universities, Hazony argues, set the moral horizon of the next generation of elites. What schools honor becomes legitimate in public life a generation later. What schools dishonor falls from legitimacy. Hazony’s claim concerns prestige, not indoctrination. Institutions teach what counts as serious by what they treat as serious. The texts a curriculum dignifies acquire dignity. The texts it omits lose standing because no one reads them.
States always honor something. Every institutional order privileges certain moral commitments and marginalizes others. Liberalism does not abolish substantive morality. It conceals its substantive commitments behind the language of procedure. When states stop honoring religious observance, marriage, military service, and inherited national tradition, they start honoring the autonomous individual freed from inherited obligation. The neutral state becomes an engine for the production of a new moral order built on expressive individualism, therapeutic self-realization, and personal autonomy. Liberal institutions present themselves as arbiters among competing goods and function as carriers of an orthodoxy that denies it has one.
Hazony’s positive case turns on constraint. Modern liberal societies prize freedom and neglect self-limitation. Every durable human achievement rests on discipline. Marriage requires fidelity. Military service requires submission to danger. Raising children requires steady self-denial. Religious practice requires ritual. Artistic and intellectual mastery require long submission to training. Hazony therefore treats self-constraint, not autonomy, as the ground of civilization. Free societies survive only when citizens carry the internalized discipline that allows them to govern themselves without external coercion. As self-restraint weakens, bureaucratic administration grows to fill the gap.
Traditional societies sustained voluntary discipline through honor. Citizens accepted burdensome duties because fulfilling them produced status. Marriage, military service, religious observance, care for aging parents, and civic duty carried public regard. Liberal egalitarianism dissolves honor because honor implies hierarchy. To honor some lives more than others is to say that some choices are more admirable. Liberal neutrality therefore flattens moral distinctions among ways of life. The result erodes the prestige that once produced voluntary discipline. A society that refuses to publicly honor self-restraint must eventually compel it. Soft despotism replaces internal authority. Tocqueville (1805-1859) saw the structure. Philip Rieff (1922-2006) and Christopher Lasch (1932-1994) traced its therapeutic and consumer forms. Hazony stitches the concerns into a single account of civilizational demoralization.
Hazony links private discipline to public order. Liberty depends less on constitutional procedure than on inherited habits of self-government. A people that cannot regulate itself eventually chooses between fragmentation and authoritarian management. Freedom survives only where citizens accept difficult duties sustained through honor, religion, family, and inherited expectation.

Realism in Political Theory’ (2020)

Hazony provides a a comprehensive critique of Enlightenment liberalism and proposes an empiricist alternative grounded in inherited tradition, mutual loyalty, and the historical experience of nations. The essay serves both as a philosophical argument and as a civilizational diagnosis. Hazony contends that the modern liberal order enters a period of disintegration because it rests upon a defective conception of reason, political obligation, and human social existence. Against the rationalist tradition associated with Hobbes (1588-1679), Locke (1632-1704), Rousseau (1712-1778), and Kant (1724-1804), he constructs a realist paradigm rooted in historical experience, biblical anthropology, and the inherited structures of family, tribe, and nation.
Hazony opens with a historical narrative about the decline of liberal confidence. During the decades after the Second World War, many intellectuals in Europe and North America came to believe that Enlightenment liberalism represented the final and universal form of political order. Liberal democracy appeared to have defeated fascism and communism. The spread of markets, rights discourse, constitutionalism, and international institutions encouraged the belief that ideological conflict approached exhaustion. Hazony argues that this confidence collapses during the twenty-first century. Brexit, the rise of nationalist governments, the election of Donald Trump (b. 1946), and the spread of anti-liberal populism demonstrate that liberal hegemony lacks permanence. He also points to the rise of what he calls “new Marxism” within universities, media institutions, bureaucracies, and corporations. He treats this ideological transformation not as an accidental deviation from liberalism but as evidence of liberalism’s internal instability. Liberalism proves incapable of defending itself against radical egalitarian doctrines because liberalism dissolves the traditional institutions necessary for social cohesion and political continuity.
Hazony advances five premises of realist political theory. Men are born into families, tribes, and nations bound by ties of mutual loyalty. Individuals and groups compete for resources and honor until external threats restore solidarity. Institutions such as religion, law, language, and government arise historically to strengthen particular groups. Political obligation emerges from membership within these loyalty groups. And political principles derive from experience, open to revision through further experience.
These premises establish a different image of political order from the liberal social contract tradition. Hazony rejects the notion of the atomic individual who exists prior to social attachment. Men enter the world already embedded within structures of hierarchy and obligation. Hierarchy organizes Hazony’s system. The individual belongs first to the family. Families combine into clans or congregations. Clans form tribes. Tribes form nations. Political order therefore develops organically through nested layers of mutual loyalty. The nation-state does not arise through contract but through the expansion and coordination of preexisting structures of allegiance. Hazony treats these hierarchies as natural rather than artificial. Men possess obligations before they exercise choice. The argument places Hazony in direct conflict with the liberal conception of freedom as autonomy from inherited obligation. For Hazony, the liberal image of the sovereign individual falsifies the structure of human social existence.
Mutual loyalty serves as the emotional and psychological foundation of the framework. Hazony argues that the self naturally extends beyond the isolated individual. A man experiences his parents, his wife, his children, and his fellow nationals as part of himself. Loyalty therefore permits him to transcend what Hazony calls “the prison of my self.” This notion of the extended self reveals the biblical and anthropological dimensions of Hazony’s realism. Political communities persist not because individuals calculate utility but because men experience collective attachments as constitutive of identity. Injury to family or nation becomes injury to oneself. Obligation emerges from gratitude, loyalty, memory, and inheritance rather than abstract consent. Hazony does not deny the existence of consent. Marriage, adoption, immigration, and conversion permit consensual incorporation into loyalty groups. Yet consent remains secondary. The underlying structures of family and nation precede individual choice. Mutual loyalty sustains political order across generations.
The essay also advances an agonistic conception of politics. Men and political groups compete continuously for honor, strength, and recognition. Competition does not disappear within peaceful societies. Families compete internally. Tribes compete with neighboring tribes. Nations compete with rival nations. Yet external threats restore solidarity by recalling members to mutual loyalty. Hazony’s emphasis on honor distinguishes his realism from purely economic or material accounts of politics. Men seek prestige, dignity, collective status, and symbolic recognition. Nationalism persists not only because states provide security but because nations satisfy psychological and moral desires for belonging and honor.
Institutions emerge historically within this competitive environment. Religion, language, law, and forms of government develop through historical experimentation. Hazony therefore rejects universal political blueprints. Different societies inherit different traditions suited to different historical circumstances. Political principles emerge through trial and error across centuries. The emphasis on historical experimentation places Hazony within the broader tradition of Burkean empiricism. Traditions function as repositories of accumulated knowledge. They preserve solutions to political and social problems that no individual intellect can reconstruct from first principles. Political wisdom therefore resides in inherited customs, habits, institutions, and practices rather than in abstract philosophical systems.
Hazony argues that rationalists who reject inherited traditions do not escape tribal loyalty. They merely transfer allegiance from one tribe to another. The rationalist belongs to the tribe of Enlightenment universalism just as the observant Jew belongs to the Jewish people. Spinoza (1632-1677) and Moses Hess (1812-1875) appear in Hazony’s account as exemplary converts between these two tribes. This point is among the essay’s penetrating insights. Hazony seeks to expose rationalism as a concealed tradition that pretends to stand above tradition. Enlightenment philosophers present themselves as emancipated from inherited authority, yet they inherit their own intellectual rituals, orthodoxies, heroes, and moral assumptions. Rationalism therefore functions as a rival tribe rather than a neutral standpoint outside history.
Hazony’s treatment of political obligation follows from this anthropology of loyalty. Obligation arises through gratitude and inherited attachment. Children owe duties to parents because parents sacrificed for them. Citizens owe duties to nations because nations provide inherited customs, security, language, and forms of life. These obligations do not arise through explicit consent. Hazony uses the biblical commandment to honor one’s father and mother as a model for political obligation more broadly. Loyalty to family extends outward into loyalty to tribe and nation. The individual inherits responsibilities toward the communities that sustain him. Adopted members of nations acquire obligations through incorporation into these traditions as well. Yet Hazony insists that obligations possess limits. Loyalty does not justify criminality or moral corruption. A parent cannot demand evil acts from a child, and a nation cannot demand criminal behavior from its citizens. The presumption of loyalty remains central to political life. Stable societies depend upon inherited obligations that precede autonomous choice.
The essay returns at its close to empiricism and historical testing. Political traditions survive because centuries of experience reveal which institutions contribute to flourishing and which lead to collapse. No universal rational formula guarantees political success. Men discover sound political principles through historical continuity, experimentation, and adaptation.

Part Two

Posted in Amy Wax, Benjamin Netanyahu, Carl Schmitt, Epistemics, Leo Strauss, Nathan Cofnas, Nick Fuentes, Orit Arfa, Steve Sailer, Tucker Carlson, Yoram Hazony | Comments Off on Covenant Against Empire: The Project of Yoram Hazony

Why Philosophy Polices Harder Than Law

Philosophy enforces tighter coalitional discipline than legal academia because the structural conditions on a philosopher are tighter than those on a law professor. Start with size. A top philosophy department has fifteen to twenty-five faculty. A top law school has sixty to a hundred and twenty. Small groups police easier. Everyone knows everyone. Disagreement gets personal fast.
Now exit options. A philosopher who loses standing in his field has nowhere to go. He cannot practice philosophy outside the academy. Industry does not hire metaphysicians. Government does not hire epistemologists. Tenure track jobs outside philosophy will not take him either. His credential serves one market. A law professor has options. He can practice law, advise firms, consult for industry, write briefs, take a judgeship, run a think tank, write paid op-eds, do expert witness work. His credential serves several markets. Coalitions hold less power over a man who has somewhere else to go.
The prestige economy concentrates the asymmetry further. Philosophy runs on a small set of gatekeeping nodes: the Philosophical Gourmet Report, a handful of journals (Philosophical Review, Mind, Nous, Journal of Philosophy), and letters from a few dozen senior figures at top departments. Brian Leiter (b. 1963) built the Gourmet Report, and for two decades his blog shaped which programs got applicants and which graduates got interviews. Legal academia has no equivalent. US News ranks law schools, but no single editor or blogger holds anything close to Leiter’s former position in philosophy. Legal academia runs on a more distributed prestige network: SSRN downloads, citations in opinions, lateral hiring across schools, recognition from judges and practitioners.
External constituencies cut the other way. Law has them and philosophy does not. A law professor’s audience includes judges, legislators, regulators, practitioners, journalists. Eugene Volokh (b. 1968) writes a blog that gets cited in court filings. Akhil Amar (b. 1958) gets called to testify before Congress. Cass Sunstein (b. 1954) cycles in and out of government. These outside audiences validate a law professor apart from his colleagues. A philosopher has no such audience. His readers are other philosophers. Coalitional approval is the main currency he can earn.
Funding structure tilts the same way. Law schools are revenue centers. They charge premium tuition. They draw alumni money. They run executive education. A dean reports to a provost but operates with autonomy. Philosophy departments are cost centers funded from general university budgets. A philosophy chair has less leverage with administration. He depends on the goodwill of deans who answer to other constituencies.
The cases bear this out. Rebecca Tuvel published an article in Hypatia in 2017 comparing transracial and transgender identity. Over five hundred philosophers signed an open letter demanding retraction. The journal’s associate editors apologized. Tuvel kept her position at Rhodes, but the field had shown what coordination it could muster against a junior member. Nathan Cofnas held a Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship at Cambridge philosophy. He wrote on hereditarianism. Cambridge philosophy faculty pressured Emmanuel College, and the college terminated his fellowship. Kathleen Stock (b. 1972) resigned from Sussex philosophy after sustained pressure over her writing on sex and gender. Peter Ludlow (b. 1957) lost his position at Northwestern philosophy. Colin McGinn (b. 1950) lost his at Miami philosophy. The list runs long.
Compare legal academia. Amy Wax (b. 1953) wrote things that drew sustained attacks from colleagues, students, alumni. Penn sanctioned her. She kept her chair. Volokh holds heterodox positions on speech and discrimination law and has not lost his footing at UCLA. Ilya Somin (b. 1973) writes against immigration restriction from a libertarian perspective at George Mason. Jonathan Turley (b. 1961) at GW writes from positions most of his colleagues oppose. Glenn Reynolds (b. 1960) at Tennessee does the same. Josh Blackman (b. 1984) at South Texas pushes conservative constitutional positions and gets cited in major opinions. None of them faced what Cofnas faced.
People drive the asymmetry. In philosophy, gatekeepers include senior figures at top programs whose letters decide hiring (NYU, Rutgers, Princeton, Michigan, Pittsburgh, MIT have outsized influence). Editors of top journals control what counts as a publication that helps tenure. Open letter organizers can mobilize hundreds of signatures within days because the field is small and densely connected. The American Philosophical Association sets professional norms. In legal academia, nothing this concentrated exists. Judges hire clerks from a wide range of schools. Practitioners read law reviews from many tiers. Citation patterns reward ideological variety because a brief writer wants whatever helps him win.
Two more reasons round this out. Philosophy treats argument as the field’s product, so a philosopher who argues for the wrong conclusion gets read as having shown bad character, not just bad reasoning. Legal academia treats argument as instrumental to client representation, even when no client exists. A law professor making a controversial argument can frame himself as steelmanning a position someone might need to make in court. The argumentative ethic of law school dilutes the moral weight of any single conclusion. The argumentative ethic of philosophy concentrates that weight.
Last, demographic composition. Philosophy has worked itself ideologically homogeneous over decades. The field’s left-right ratio runs tighter than law’s. Law schools have Federalist Society chapters, conservative legal scholars at Notre Dame and George Mason and Chicago, Catholic legal theorists at Catholic University and BYU. Philosophy has Notre Dame for analytic theism, Bowling Green for ethics, Baylor and a few others. Outposts of dissent in legal academia outnumber and outsize their philosophical counterparts.
Put it all together and the picture comes clear. A philosopher faces a small dense network with one prestige economy, no exit options, no outside validators, and a professional culture that reads disagreement as moral failure. A law professor faces a larger looser network with several prestige economies, multiple exit options, several outside validators, and a professional culture that treats disagreement as the work itself. Coalitions police harder where they have more to police with and less competition for the loyalty of their members. Philosophy has both. Law has neither.

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‘DEI in Science and Medicine: Missing Metrics and Measures’

The War on Science: Thirty-Nine Renowned Scientists and Scholars Speak Out About Current Threats to Free Speech, Open Inquiry, and the Scientific Process‘ (July 29, 2025)

The chapter “DEI in Science and Medicine: Missing Metrics and Measures” appears in the anthology edited by Lawrence Krauss (b. 1954). It serves as the book’s medical case study. The argument is procedural rather than philosophical. Wax and Cohen ask why diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in medicine have not had to satisfy the evidentiary standards that govern every other clinical or institutional intervention. That question gives the chapter its force.
Medicine retains, more than most modern professions, a procedural culture of evidence. New drugs run through randomized trials. Surgical techniques face replication. Screening protocols undergo cost-benefit review. Public health interventions get monitored for unintended consequences. Cohen, an oncology researcher at Penn, anchors the chapter in this ethos. He describes the FDA framework in detail and emphasizes endpoints, falsifiability, side effects, and post-market surveillance. He then asks why DEI initiatives in admissions, hiring, curriculum design, residency training, grant funding, and treatment protocols have rolled out across the profession over roughly fifteen years without comparable measurement. The chapter’s central rhetorical move is to take medicine’s own most prestigious vocabulary and turn it on a project that did not arrive through that vocabulary’s normal channels.
Their critique has four strands.
The first is missing endpoints. They argue that DEI initiatives lack defined deliverables. Traditional medical interventions specify what counts as success in advance: tumor shrinkage, survival at five years, reduced readmission, lower infection rate. DEI programs rarely define improvement with similar precision, which makes evaluation circular and self-confirming.
The second is unmonitored side effects. Drug trials track adverse events because intervention has costs. Wax and Cohen argue that DEI programs in medicine should track unintended consequences with the same discipline. Possible costs they identify include displacement of basic science training, attrition of high-performing applicants, erosion of clinical standards, and chilling effects on faculty speech. Whether these costs are real or exaggerated is the empirical question. That the question goes mostly unasked is their procedural complaint.
The third is replication failure. Here the chapter has its strongest empirical foothold. The McKinsey reports linking workforce diversity to firm financial performance have failed independent replication, and Jeremiah Green and John Hand’s 2021 reanalysis found no robust correlation in the underlying data. The Greenwood et al. study claiming Black newborns survive at higher rates under Black physicians has been challenged on birthweight covariates and selection. Studies of implicit-bias training show small, fading, and sometimes reversed effects. These are findings published in respectable journals, and they undercut a portion of the empirical scaffolding on which institutional DEI policy in medicine has been built.
The fourth is the absence of cost-benefit framing. Wax and Cohen argue that medicine accepts tradeoffs. Chemotherapy poisons healthy cells along with cancerous ones. Surgery damages tissue to remove disease. Screening produces false positives. The profession evaluates whether benefits exceed harms and whether intervention beats no intervention. They argue that DEI is presented as cost-free moral progress, with skepticism about costs treated as a form of bias.
The chapter’s strongest contribution is conceptual rather than empirical. It does not present new datasets. It asks whether a technocratic profession can keep coherent standards if some interventions get shielded from falsification because they have moral sanctification. That is a serious question, and one the profession has mostly avoided.
The weaknesses are several and worth setting out plainly.
The authors sometimes slide from “insufficient evidence” to implied skepticism about value. Those are different claims. The argument that DEI interventions deserve rigorous evaluation does not entail that they are ineffective, and a careful procedural critic should keep the two propositions apart. The chapter often does not.
The chapter underestimates the difficulty of operationalizing some medical and institutional outcomes. Some goals of DEI advocates are measurable in straightforward ways: physician retention, rural staffing, maternal mortality across populations, diagnostic accuracy across racial groups, malpractice disparities, clinical trial participation rates. Others are sociological and harder to quantify: trust, communication, recruitment pipelines, institutional legitimacy. The chapter sometimes treats softer variables as ideological vapor. Medicine has always rested on social trust as well as pharmacology, and dismissing the harder-to-measure dimensions as merely symbolic concedes too much in advance.
The chapter frames DEI almost entirely as an external ideological invasion rather than as a partial response to documented institutional failures. Disparities in pain treatment, maternal mortality, and diagnostic accuracy across racial groups have a peer-reviewed evidentiary base that long predates the current movement. The movement gained traction in part because the profession had its own evidence problem to address. Treating DEI as pure intrusion bypasses that history and weakens the chapter’s claim to procedural neutrality.
The call for symmetric evidentiary standards is asymmetric in application. Wax and Cohen demand RCT-grade evidence for new DEI interventions while treating traditional filters as presumptively valid. The MCAT predicts first-year medical school grades reasonably well and patient outcomes years later poorly. USMLE step scores correlate with board passage and weakly with clinical performance. Most credentialing in medicine has never cleared the evidentiary bar the chapter sets for DEI. The narrower argument the chapter might make is that medicine has a pervasive evidence problem and that DEI extended rather than introduced it. The chapter prefers the broader argument that DEI is uniquely unaccountable, and the comparative evidence does not support the broader version.
The chapter pre-codes its verdict. Phrases such as “punishable heresy,” “grand medical experiment,” “reckless,” and “fatally defective” do not read as a researcher posing an open question. They read as a prosecutor closing. That undercuts the procedural neutrality the chapter claims to honor and signals to the careful reader that the demand for cold measurement comes wrapped in heated commitment.
The chapter treats DEI as a single object. The term covers admissions weighting, anti-bias training, curriculum changes around race-conscious diagnosis, pipeline programs for underrepresented students, supplier policies, language guides, and structural staffing reviews. These differ in measurability, evidence base, plausibility, and cost. A serious procedural critique might disaggregate. Lumping them under one acronym and demanding they collectively pass an FDA-style trial is a category error the chapter never confronts.
The collaboration between Wax and her husband Roger Cohen is rhetorically shrewd. Cohen brings clinical credentials and a researcher’s vocabulary. Wax brings institutional skepticism and a willingness to absorb professional cost. Each covers for what the other cannot supply alone. The chapter reads differently in the imagination of either author working without the other, and the difference favors the joint version.
The chapter fits the broader argument of The War on Science that postmodern and activist frameworks have moved from the humanities into the hard sciences and medicine. Many essays in such anthologies traffic in generalities about academic capture. This one names admissions criteria, faculty meetings, curriculum committees, and grant review. The specificity gives it traction.
The strongest reading is narrow and procedural. Many DEI claims in medicine entered the institutional bloodstream without evidentiary discipline. The headline studies have weakened on examination. The profession has not developed measurement frameworks that match the moral weight it attaches to the project. These claims are defensible and important.
The weaker reading, toward which the chapter often slides, is global and political. The global complaint is that medicine has been captured by a foreign ideology. The narrow complaint is that medicine got sloppy with a project of its own. The narrow version is largely correct. The global version runs ahead of the evidence and reads as a culture-war emblem rather than a procedural audit.
The chapter’s largest blind spot is its silence on what a defensible medical DEI program might look like. It tells the profession what to measure and what to suspect. It does not tell the profession what tradeoffs to accept, what disparities to address, or how to respond to documented inequalities that the movement was a response to. A purely critical chapter has the virtues of clarity and the limits of clarity. Readers looking for a constructive medical answer to the problems DEI advocates name will not find one here, and the absence is part of why the chapter sits more comfortably in a polemical anthology than in a clinical journal.
The chapter is the rare case of an internal audit dressed in the profession’s own clothes. That is harder for medical institutions to dismiss than a humanities-based critique, and the relative silence with which the chapter has been received within medicine is telling. Silence preserves the moral framing the chapter contests. Counterargument would require fighting on the evidentiary ground Wax and Cohen chose. The ground is uneven enough that the institutions have mostly chosen not to fight on it. Whether that posture holds over the next decade is the open question the chapter sets up and does not answer.

‘Fifteen Years of DEI in Medicine, No Proof It Works | Roger Cohen, Amy Wax, & Lawrence Krauss’ (Aug. 7, 2025)

This puts Wax in a fifth room. Lawrence Krauss (b. 1954) hosts. Roger Cohen, Wax’s husband and an oncologist at Penn, joins the conversation. The frame is the new Krauss-edited volume The War on Science, and the chapter Wax and Cohen wrote together makes the methodological case against DEI in medicine. The room’s commitment is empirical rigor. Wax operates inside that frame because she trained in it before law school.
The biographical material at 8:08 to 12:14 is useful for the analytical record. Yale undergraduate in biochemistry. Harvard Medical School. Neurology residency. A year of law school during the residency. The Justice Department, then UVA, then Penn. She tells Krauss she was “more suited to being a lawyer than a doctor” and names the temperamental gap candidly. The argumentative nature she claims at 11:44 is consistent with her later career. The science training is consistent with her demand for empirical evidence in social claims. The two together explain why the Krauss room fits her.
Cohen names the master concept of the conversation at 21:13: “the ongoing tyranny of the accreditators.” Wax extends the phrase at 22:27 into an institutional analysis. “In order to receive federal funds, schools of all varieties, universities, graduate schools, secondary schools even have to be approved by these accrediting organizations. That job is farmed out uh by governments that are supporting educational institutions and they have been captured. They have been cap they are a monopoly for one thing and they are monopoly but it has been captured by the far-left.” The accreditation system is the institutional spine that makes coalition capture stable. Pinsof’s alliance theory at infrastructure level. The federal government delegated accreditation to private bodies. The bodies were captured. The institutions cannot opt out without losing federal funds. The capture is therefore self-perpetuating, and individual institutional leaders have limited room to resist regardless of their private views. Wax’s analysis is structural rather than conspiratorial. The capture pattern is a stable institutional equilibrium.
The chapter argues that the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations now scores hospitals on health equity criteria the same way it scores them on cleanliness and mortality. Cohen reads this as bureaucratic capture. Wax reads it as something stronger. The accreditor gets to define what counts as a good hospital. Once health equity sits inside that definition, hospitals comply or close. The institutional pattern repeats across medical school admissions through the AAMC, graduate education, and federal research funding through the NIH.
The convenient beliefs analysis sits at the heart of the chapter. Three foundational DEI studies do the citation work that the field rests on. The Oakland barbershop study at 38:45. The Florida newborn study at 41:56. The McKinsey diversity-profitability study at 47:13. All three have been formally critiqued. The Florida study has been formally debunked in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences once researchers controlled for low birth weight. The McKinsey study cannot be replicated. None of this changes the citation traffic. Turner on convenient beliefs at scale. The studies do coalition work independent of their empirical status. The 800+ citations of the Oakland study and the 300+ citations of the Florida newborn study accumulate because the citing literature needs the conclusions, not because the conclusions survive scrutiny.
The Greenwood study margin note at 43:24 is the cleanest single artifact in the conversation. Cohen reads what the lead author wrote about white babies doing better with white doctors: “I’d rather not focus on this if we’re telling the story from the perspective of saving black infants. This undermines the narrative.” The narrative governs the data. Findings that confirm the narrative make it into the published paper. Findings that complicate the narrative get marked for removal. The author states the rule explicitly in margin notes that later become public. Turner on convenient beliefs documented in real time. The convenient belief drives the data selection. The data selection produces the convenient belief. The loop closes inside the same paper.
Wax contributes the snowballing observation at 46:03. “The snowballing effect here is really something to behold. And you know if you cite a study that cites a study that cites a study it just becomes received wisdom that cannot be questioned.” The empirical question disappears once the citation chain is long enough. Most readers cite the citing literature, not the original. The original’s flaws cease to operate inside the field’s working memory. The convenient belief becomes infrastructure.
Krauss adds his Pauli reference at 41:13. Wolfgang Pauli (1900-1958) on bad physics: “not even wrong.” The phrase fits the Oakland study. Hypothetical willingness to undergo preventive care, measured at one point in time, extrapolated to lifetime health benefits, never validated against actual health outcomes. The study is unfalsifiable by design. It cannot be refuted because it never made a refutable prediction. The DEI literature contains many such studies and few of the kind drug development requires.
Wax’s hide-the-ball passage at 1:04:30 names the meta-level move. Standardized tests in medicine are now pass/fail rather than numerical. Outcome data on diversity admits is not collected or not released. The empirical basis for assessing the program has been dismantled by the program’s own administrators. Turner on tacit knowledge at the institutional level. The norms that would let outsiders test the claims have been removed. The claims become unfalsifiable by construction. The ideology survives because the data that might disconfirm it has been put beyond reach.
The HPV passage at 53:55 illustrates the methodological corruption Cohen documents and Wax frames. HPV-related head and neck cancer disproportionately affects White middle-class men. A grant studying the disease in the affected population gets refused renewal because the population is not diverse enough. The DEI mandate inverts the basic logic of epidemiology. You study the disease in the population that has the disease. The mandate replaces that logic with demographic proportionality. Sickle cell anemia is the parallel case. You do not demand proportional White representation in sickle cell trials because the disease primarily affects Black patients. The selective application of the DEI rule to White-affected diseases reveals the rule for what it is.
Wax’s most direct biological claim comes at 1:03:13. “We still have very significant disparities by race, by group in academic achievement. Uh and they are pdurable. They’re replicated. They’re persistent. Um despite enormous efforts and expenditures, they have not really changed and not really gone away. uh but you know come hell or high water we have to have a certain percentage of particular minorities in medicine even though I’m sorry to say uh that is not supported by the data um groups are not ready for prime time in proportion to their numbers uh and so we’re going to sacrifice quality in medicine.” The race realism position from the Loury conversation reappears in the Krauss room with the same content and a more clinical register. The hostile-environment frame gets traded for the empirical-mismatch frame. The same underlying claim does the work in both rooms.
The Sally Satel (b. 1956) line at 1:06:31 carries the methodological case at its compact best. “The best way to be an anti-racist doctor is to be a good doctor.” The line resists the substitution the DEI regime makes. Anti-racism and competence are different things. The DEI regime confuses them and rewards anti-racist performance over medical competence. Patients pay the cost. The line names the substitution and refuses it.
Three observations beyond the chapter.
First, each room receives a different register. The underlying claims hold steady across rooms. The Krauss room reveals the science-trained Wax that the other rooms can only gesture at, because only the Krauss room can use her biochemistry-Yale, neurology-Harvard, drug-trial-vocabulary fluency.
Second, the tyranny-of-the-accreditors framework is the chapter’s most portable contribution. The framework explains why institutional capture persists despite leadership changes, donor pressure, and public criticism. Federal funding depends on accreditation. Accreditation depends on accreditors. Accreditors are captured. The dependency chain locks the system. Trump-administration efforts to threaten federal funds work only if they can break the accreditation dependency. So far they have not. The framework makes the strategic point clear. Changing the accreditation infrastructure is the higher-leverage move than changing university presidents.
Third, the Cohen-Wax pairing is structurally interesting. The heterodox legal academic and the heterodox medical academic write a chapter together. Both are senior. Both have institutional protection, Wax through tenure and Cohen through clinical reputation. The chapter, written together, lands differently than either author alone could. Cohen alone might read as a doctor’s complaint. Wax alone might read as a law professor opining on medicine. Together they cover the methodological and the institutional analyses with credentials that resist easy dismissal. The coalition formation against DEI in medicine now includes married couples publishing together, which is a different pattern than the lone-conservative-professor pattern Wax sometimes presents as. The Wax-Cohen team produces scholarship the institutions cannot ignore on its credentials, even if they choose to ignore its content.
The closing paragraph of the chapter, which Krauss reads at 1:09:23, is the methodological summation. “There are some simple specific steps that could be taken. The weak studies underpinning many sweeping diversity initiatives need to be sunsetted. Starting with the Oakland adults and Florida newborn studies. Neither article is worthy of respect even under the basic standards of social science. In science, mediocre and flawed papers get replaced by better papers. Older treatment paradigms in medicine are regularly abandoned in favor of better treatments.” The standard for retiring DEI studies is the standard medicine already applies to its own treatments. Wax’s argument across all five rooms is in the end this argument. Apply to social claims the standards your own field already applies to its scientific claims, and the social claims fail the test.

‘Who Threatens Free Expression within the American University and Democracy? | Amy Wax’ (Aug. 23, 2025)

With Cofnas, Wax built theory through dialogue. With Gray, she litigated her case and extended the diagnosis. Here she has the floor uninterrupted and presents the systematic version of her framework. The Three F’s structure of Falsehood, Fragility, and Feminization gives the apparatus a clarity the interview formats did not produce. Each F names a distinct route by which woke ideology produces censorship: Falsehood through the empirical denial of group difference, Fragility through the subjectivization of harm, Feminization through the importation of nursery values into the grown-up institution. Three routes feeding one apparatus.
The Falsehood section runs 3:01 to 7:23. The argument is the equality thesis again. Group outcomes must converge, so persistent differences must trace to discrimination, so any empirical claim of difference must be suppressed. Wax names this as the engine of the censorship rather than mere preference for it. At 6:36 she states that the empirical case for group differences “ought to be obvious to any honest person,” which is the rhetorical move most likely to read as overconfidence to readers who have not engaged the underlying psychometric literature. The stronger version of her claim sits a few sentences earlier at 6:11, when she says the equality thesis requires suppressing facts contrary to it. That is a structural argument and it stands.
The Madison-Lincoln passage at 9:33 to 12:08 forms the philosophical core. Madison on faction in the Federalist Papers. Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) on the Confederacy as fellow citizens rather than enemies. Wax uses both to argue that loyal opposition is a hard cultural achievement, not a default of human politics. At 11:08 she pushes the argument further than the Gray interview: “the rest of the world will never have nice things” because “they didn’t get the memo about how to treat a loyal opposition.” Regime change in Iran, Syria, or Egypt will not produce democracy because the inheritors of power will crush their opponents. The Madisonian particularist argument has historical purchase. It also reads as more sweeping than the historical record can fully bear, since loyal opposition as a stable institutional achievement is rare even in the Anglo-American tradition and required a civil war to consolidate.
The Fragility section at 12:48 to 18:17 carries the most carefully worked treatment Wax has given the traumatology theme. She traces the harm principle to John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) and notes how progressives inverted it by subjectivizing harm. The heckler’s veto framing returns, this time more crisply at 14:53. The honest moment comes at 17:35 when she acknowledges that some traumatology claims have empirical merit. She cites Jonathan Haidt’s screen-time work as a case where harm to adolescents is documented and the conservative impulse should support the traumatology framing. The line between bogus and legitimate harm claims is, in her own words, a challenge. That admission is missing from the Gray version and improves the argument.
The Feminization section at 18:37 to 22:18 gives the empirical anchor that the Gray version lacked. The Corey Clark research at 20:10 is the citation. Clark, formerly at Penn and now at New College of Florida, has produced studies showing that men and women in academia assign different average priorities to truth-seeking versus victim-protection. Women academics, on average, more often favor suppression of speech they deem dangerous. This finding rests on serious empirical work. The leap from the finding to Wax’s larger claim, that women have imported nursery values into the grown-up institution and to negative effect, is still a leap. The data covers stated priorities. The institutional-ruin claim covers outcomes. Bridging the gap requires an argument Wax does not fully give. The citation is more careful than her earlier presentations of the thesis.
The Trump critique at 22:33 to 36:50 is the most original political content in the talk. Wax votes Republican and considers voting Democrat unthinkable. She breaks with movement conservatism on the anti-semitism focus. Her four points are clean. First, anti-semitism is too vague as a legal concept. Second, going after it requires compromising free expression. Third, it engages the traumatology framework, where Jewish students’ upset feelings become the basis for university action. That framework has been used against her and will be used against more conservatives. The line at 28:37 carries the strategic weight: the structure of the arguments used to punish pro-Palestinian protesters is the same structure used to punish her, and conservatives mortgage their own free-speech protections every time they cheer the prosecution. Fourth, race should be the focus given Students for Fair Admissions and continued affirmative action defiance. Her 29:17 test is sharp: “is it good for conservatives?” The frame echoes the dinner-table test her parents used about Jews.
The Hart-Cellar repeal proposal at 35:14 is the most aggressive policy claim in the talk. Wax names the 1964 immigration act and calls for its full repeal and replacement. She frames the 1924-1964 window at 35:41 as American “glory days” of near-zero immigration. This places her in restrictionist territory shared with Brimelow and the VDARE crowd she defended to Gray. The 1924 Johnson-Reed Act she implicitly endorses had explicit national-origin quotas favoring Northern European immigration. Wax does not say this. The position implies it.
The Apollo 13 riff at 36:27 is the speech’s most provocative rhetorical moment. White men with buzzcuts and pocket protectors put a man on the moon without diversity. The standard response, that diverse teams might have done better, Wax mocks: “if they’d had diversity, they would have put 10.” The riff might not survive a careful interviewer. It survives here because the audience is friendly. The argument compresses a serious empirical question about team composition and innovation into a single anecdote and a sneer. The serious version of the argument, that early NASA succeeded under conditions current diversity-management practice now forbids, is defensible. The riff version is not.
The closing on Jewish cultural power at 37:32 is the riskiest move in the speech. Wax says Jews “punch above their weight” and sometimes “abuse the power they have over the culture.” She frames this as a critique she made on the Loury podcast and stands by. The framing places her in tension with mainstream Jewish institutional opinion and uses language that more obviously anti-semitic frames also use. Wax distances herself from the conspiracy-theoretic version at 25:32 by calling that “kind of obsessiveness… anti-semitism on the right.” She names a left version too. Her own position sits between the two: the empirical claim of disproportionate cultural influence with a normative critique of how it is sometimes exercised. The structural pattern echoes Turner on heterodox figures: the dissenter must perform the dissent without quite owning the most damning version.
A few framing observations.
The Three F’s framework gives the most analytically useful contribution from the three pieces taken together. Falsehood is the empirical layer. Fragility is the procedural layer. Feminization is the cultural layer. Each produces censorship through a different route, and the three reinforce each other. The framework gives the woke apparatus more analytical depth than the simple coalition-extraction account from Pinsof might on its own.
The Trump critique is the move that distinguishes Wax from movement conservatives who treat the anti-semitism executive orders as a win. Her structural argument is correct. Cheering the prosecution of speech you dislike trains the institutional capacity that will then be used against speech you favor. The argument tracks the classic free-speech-fundamentalist position from the ACLU’s old guard and from Glenn Greenwald-type critics on the left. Wax brings it into a conservative venue and asks her own coalition to apply its principles consistently. This is the kind of intra-coalition critique that costs allies and rarely shifts policy. She makes it anyway.
The Jewish cultural power passage and the Apollo 13 riff are the two moments where Wax’s polemical confidence outruns her supporting argument. The Cofnas conversation criticized Hanania for treating downstream symptoms as causes. The Gray interview compressed the female-influx story into a single cause. Here the Hart-Cellar repeal proposal and the Jewish cultural power closing both compress contested historical and empirical questions into one-line verdicts. The same pattern Wax names in others appears in her own work when the subject is congenial. This does not invalidate the argument. It identifies the place where the argument is weakest and where critics will press hardest.
The closing line about Jewish power in the universities, media, and finance is also the line where Wax sounds most like the figures she might not want to be grouped with. The structural critique she could make, that any group with disproportionate cultural influence will be tempted to mistake its own preferences for the cultural default, is defensible and applicable to many groups. The Jewish framing tracks a longer historical genealogy and carries freight she does not address. The choice to make the argument in those terms rather than the more general structural ones is a choice. Whether it advances her cause or burns capital her other arguments need is the strategic question her allies might ask.

‘Encounter Book Gala 2025: Amy L. Wax Receives the Jeane Kirkpatrick Prize’ (Oct. 23, 2025)

The Encounter Books gala on October 23, 2025 gives Wax a different speech act than the Restoration Podcast interview. The interview was diagnostic. The acceptance speech is ritual. Randall Collins (b. 1941) on interaction ritual chains predicts what happens here. The Jeane Kirkpatrick (1926-2006) Prize, the gala, the standing ovations, the Hamilton (1755-1804) and Burke and Lincoln (1809-1865) quotes charge the coalition’s emotional energy. Wax converts her professional injuries into shared moral capital for the people in the room.
Ilya Shapiro (b. 1977) does the framing. He builds the cancellation narrative cleanly: the 2017 op-ed, the bourgeois virtues line, the immigrants-from-similar-cultures conference comment, the manufactured charges, the Penn faculty senate process. His sharpest detail at 4:33: “the last time that Penn had acted to get rid of a tenur professor, it was because he had killed his wife.” The comparison does institutional work. The DEI regime polices speech more aggressively than Penn historically policed uxoricide.
Shapiro reads a student evaluation at 5:13: “I think the law school should provide a better classroom space for those taking this or any wax course given the public scrutiny placed on her and those who would dare enroll in her class. It felt as though we were on display for others to observe, akin to some zoo exhibition.” Turner’s tacit knowledge frame fits. The official policy permits academic freedom. The tacit policy puts Wax in a fishbowl. The students who enroll learn the tacit lesson alongside the explicit one.
Wax opens with the faculty senate’s invented charge at 9:57: “inequitably targeted disrespect.” Pinsof’s alliance theory handles this. The phrase does not need to make logical sense. It needs to do coalition work. “Inequitably targeted” signals the protected groups. “Disrespect” expands punishable conduct beyond fact-claims into affect. Turner on convenient beliefs covers the rest. The phrase emerges because the coalition needs a charge that fits the situation, and the faculty senate produces what the moment requires.
The bow tie surgeon at 11:37 is sharp social ethnography. The colleague who finally asks how she is doing. The implied background of Pen Med pretending she does not exist. Becker on hero systems works in the negative here. The colleagues defend their position by treating Wax as a non-person. Acknowledging her becomes coalition treason.
Wax’s central question at 12:33: “How can we be right and fortified in our conviction of being right and still maintain the spirit that is not too sure of it is right?” She quotes Learned Hand (1872-1961) on the spirit of liberty. The question is the conservative tradition’s standing problem. Burke handled it through tradition and prejudice in his inherited-custom sense. Oakeshott handled it through skepticism toward rationalism. Wax tries to handle it through tolerance, which is a thinner answer.
The James Madison (1751-1836) reference to faction at 13:26 is standard founder ritual. The Lincoln “bonds of affection” passage at 16:21 does the same work. These are not arguments. They are coalition incantations. The conservative legal coalition draws its emotional energy from this canon. The references confirm membership and signal seriousness to the room.
The Heckler’s veto and harm principle passage at 18:22 is the speech’s strongest analytical moment. Wax names what the progressive coalition does and refuses to name. At 18:54: “the heckler’s veto has acquired new power through the clever extension of the harm principle. Mill’s idea that the regulation of speech is only justified to prevent injury to others. But by invoking a listener’s mental and psychological distress from the content of speech, the enemies of free expression have weaponized the harm principle and extended it to shut down objectionable ideas.” John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) carries the weight. The progressive coalition retains his harm principle while quietly reading “harm” to include affective distress at speech content. The coalition does not announce the redefinition. The redefinition does the work tacitly. Once Wax names it, she has done something her opponents resist: she makes the tacit explicit.
The “why do you stay” passage at 20:46 turns to the Burke and Jewish covenant material. Wax reads Burke on “those who are dead, those who are living, and those who are yet to be born.” The Jewish bris that her parents understood as binding past to future. Becker on hero systems again. The intergenerational covenant gives Wax her immortality project. Penn’s discipline is a small price inside the project. The covenant frame turns the suspension into a vocation that has meaning rather than a personal injury that has costs.
Two observations on this move. First, the Burkean covenant works for Wax because she stands inside a tradition with content. Her Jewish identity, her conservative constitutional thought, her Penn classroom carry inherited substance. The progressive coalition has rejected the covenant frame, which leaves it without intergenerational grounding. The coalition depends on novelty and present moral urgency. That dependence shows up in the brittle “inequitably targeted disrespect” charge, which has no precedent and cannot reach beyond the moment. Second, the covenant frame does Pinsof work too. Wax signals firm coalition membership in the conservative legal world. The Burke and bris pairing tells the gala audience exactly what coalition she belongs to. The coalition responds with applause, donations, and the Kirkpatrick Prize.
The closing letters do interesting work. The father from southern Georgia at 24:10 who thanks her for affecting his son. The former student from Cincinnati at 24:53 whose pastor father has shunned him. The student letter contains a phrase worth attention: “I learned that culture shapes destinies far more than welfare checks ever could. I learned that there is no magic dirt.” “No magic dirt” is the immigration-skeptic position smuggled into a feel-good closing. Wax knows what she is doing. She closes with a Hamilton quote from Federalist No. 1 about ambition lurking behind specious zeal for the rights of the people. The room hears the application without her making it.
A few framework observations beyond the speech. The acceptance speech and the podcast interview are different products of the same coalition position. The interview gave a Restoration Podcast audience a structural account suitable for thinking conservatives. The speech gives an Encounter Books audience a covenant account suitable for donors. The two performances fit. Wax adjusts the moral register without changing the underlying claims. Coalition members operate in different speech registers depending on the ritual context.
The “inequitably targeted disrespect” charge might be the most useful single artifact in the speech for analytical work. The phrase is invented, vague, and unfalsifiable. It functions as the coalition’s all-purpose tool for processing internal dissenters. Compare to the older categories academic discipline used: research misconduct, plagiarism, sexual harassment. Those have content. “Inequitably targeted disrespect” has none. It exists to convict the convicted. Turner’s account of how academic norms become bureaucratic tools fits. The norm starts with content. The bureaucracy hollows the content out. The resulting phrase is pure coalition utility.
The Charlie Kirk (1993-2025) mention at 15:34 is worth noting. Wax cites Ezra Klein (b. 1984) on Kirk’s death. Kirk’s killing in September 2025 was recent at the time of the gala. Wax uses the moment to fold political violence into her tolerance argument. The gesture is striking from the right because Klein sits outside her coalition. She reads the line because Klein got something right and she credits a progressive on a point she believes. The gesture models the tolerance she advocates.
One last thought. Wax in her 70s frames the persistence question: “Why do you stay in the academy? Why persist?” The candid answer might acknowledge that retirement would forfeit the case. The disciplinary action is in motion. Penn wants her gone. Leaving on Penn’s terms concedes the institution’s framing. The covenant answer is true. The strategic answer sits underneath it. The interview was more candid about costs and stakes. The gala speech sublimates them into vocation.

‘Bourgeois Values (ft. Amy Wax)’ (Dec. 16, 2025)

The American Reformer interview on December 16, 2025 puts Wax in a third room. American Reformer is a Protestant conservative outlet. Timon Cline hosts. The audience knows the AngloProtestant tradition as inheritance rather than as analytical category. Wax adjusts the register again. She becomes more explicit on race as causal driver, more candid on senior faculty cowardice, more direct on first-world preservation as project. The shift across her three appearances tracks the coalition each room represents.
Wax opens with the standard recap of her case: Penn, suspended at half pay, the “extra mural statements” that Dean Ted Ruger turned into “behavioral violations.” At 3:14 she lists what got her in trouble: “to defend bourgeois values and the 1950s to say that not all cultures are equal and preparing people to function in sophisticated societies to point out that there are gaps and disparities in academic achievements between blacks and whites and other races and other indices of success that men and women are not the same.” The list functions as her signature. The same sentences might land her in the same trouble at any elite law school.
The “inequitably targeted disrespect” formulation reappears at 5:03 with sharper translation: “if you say bad things about white people or western civ or Trump voters. That’s okay, right? That’s fine. uh but not the uh coddled uh cossitted special minorities.” The asymmetry is Pinsof’s alliance signaling at the institutional level. The faculty senate’s protected categories are coalition-defined. Reverse the directionality and the rule disappears.
The 2015 cutoff at 6:39 is the most precise dating she has offered: “Today I was in my office trying to go through all my materials, do kind of a clean out and I excavated these piles of papers and uh I don’t know materials, books, articles uh from before 2015. I’m going to I’m going to say 2015. Uh and I was just struck at how different they were.” Turner on tacit knowledge fits cleanly. Pre-2015 academia operated under tacit norms permitting debate on race, affirmative action, same-sex marriage, the test gap. The norms shifted between roughly 2014 and 2017. She names Obergefell v. Hodges at 7:50 as a marker. Once the Court closed the question, the coalition closed the discourse. The same pattern shows up across topics: a definitive ruling, cultural settlement, then taboo enforcement.
Cline asks the structural question at 17:19: true believers or opportunists. Wax’s answer at 24:01 is the cleanest formulation she has given on coalition identity: “to be a good person, to be an elite, to be part of this sector, this uh stratum, this community, you must be a Democrat. You must be on the left, right? I mean, Republicans are viewed as these kind of knuckle dragging, repulsive, bizarre, almost evil people.” Pinsof’s alliance theory in plain English. Coalition membership and moral standing are the same thing inside the elite stratum. Sincerity and opportunism do not separate. The sincere belief is “I am a good person, therefore I am a Democrat,” and the opportunism is treating dissenters as defectors.
Her 2001 hiring story at 25:10 is useful biographical material. The female faculty at Penn opposed her appointment because “I was not part of the sisterhood.” She came in anyway because the male faculty of an older classically liberal generation backed her. That generation, she notes at 26:19, is “practically gone.” Becker on hero systems handles the generational shift. The classically liberal male professoriate had a hero system that valued open inquiry as part of Western inheritance. The replacement generation has a hero system that values group representation. The two cannot coexist on the same faculty for long.
The personal theory of woke at 19:35 is the boldest passage in the interview: “what this all boils down to race because we have in this country had, you know, this black population that with the enactment of civil rights laws in the 60s, the demise of Jim Crow in the 50s, they were supposed to catch up and become equal to everyone else. That has not happened.” Turner on convenient beliefs covers what comes next. The expected outcome did not arrive. The coalition needs an explanation. Structural racism and systemic racism are the convenient beliefs that absorb the gap. The alternative explanations are taboo. The coalition therefore intensifies the convenient belief over time as the gap persists. This is a cleaner causal account than “wokeness as ideology” because it grounds the ideology in a recurring frustration that demands explanation.
Moynihan’s 1965 report fits here as the path-not-taken. He offered an explanation that pointed inward at family structure. The coalition rejected the explanation as victim-blaming. Wax’s law students sixty years later have never heard of the report. The coalition selected the convenient belief and built the curriculum around it.
The Hitler’s revenge passage at 31:52 is striking: “70 years later, Hitler is finally succeeding in destroying Western society and Western Europe… Because people are so crazed about the possibility that X is going to lead straight to, you know, the camps, to genocide, to eradication of minorities. They’re they’re so paranoid about that that they won’t even defend their own countries and their own values and their own societies.” Becker on hero systems applies. The post-1945 hero system in the West treats anti-fascism as the master moral commitment. Any defense of national continuity, immigration restriction, or cultural preservation triggers the master commitment. Wax’s frame inverts the rhetoric: the master commitment becomes the destroyer because it forbids the maintenance work any society requires.
The Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) reference at 29:17 connects to Turner. Wax names progressive epistemology directly: “if we just all get educated and we we understand the real issues and the facts, we will all come to a consensus. we will all be on the same page as we will all agree.” Madison’s faction theory rejects the premise. Wilson’s progressive lineage rests on it. The progressive coalition cannot tolerate persistent disagreement because persistent disagreement contradicts their epistemology. The dissenter must be either uneducated or evil. The dissenter must be removed. The Penn faculty senate runs on Wilsonian premises and the proceeding against Wax follows logically.
The Roger Scruton (1944-2020) reference at 44:48 invokes oikophilia, the love of home, as the conservative sentiment. The transcript garbles it as “oakilia… Brutan.” Scruton’s frame fits Wax’s project. She is defending a particular home against people who claim the home is just real estate.
The tech bros passage at 43:35 offers the structural reading of where intellectual life now lives: “all of these tech bros and kind of Silicon Valley types… they certainly you know can’t they don’t have a home in the university anymore. The university is openly hostile to them. So a lot of this intellectual activity, most of it is taking place online or outside the university. The university has become this dead gray zone.” The exodus is Pinsof in motion. The intellectual coalition that once aligned with academic institutions has reformed outside them. The university kept its credentialing power but lost its monopoly on intellectual life. The split has consequences. Status credentialing happens in one place. Real intellectual work happens in another. The gap between them widens.
Wax names a tension at 44:30 worth marking. The new intellectual right combines empirical openness with traditionalist commitments. “You’re trying to maintain a kind of stable sector that both honors tradition uh and continuity and you know uniformity even but at the same time is willing to talk openly and empirically about reality.” The combination is unstable, as she notes. The empirical openness threatens any inherited tradition because empirical findings might overturn traditional commitments. The traditionalism threatens empirical openness because some findings might be too disruptive to inherited arrangements. Whether the new right can hold the combination is an open question.
The Daniel Di Martino reference at 51:38 frames third-worldism through public spaces. Litter, disorder, menacing figures, vandalism, graffiti, the sense that public space is for individual gratification rather than shared maintenance. The Zurich and Munich comparison at 52:49 is the standard “why don’t we have nice things” argument. Wax pushes the answer at 53:55: “Everybody wants nice things. But what they don’t realize is how much work and how much sacrifice and how much vigilance it takes to have nice things.” The hero system claim again. Nice things require sustained collective discipline. The coalition that runs the country has rejected the disciplines that nice things require while continuing to expect the things.
The senior faculty cowardice passage at 37:08 is the angriest passage in the interview. Wax reports that senior academics privately sympathize and publicly stay silent. “I think it’s a combination of you know cowardice and selfishness profound selfishness because they give no thought to the students who are coming after them.” Turner on academic norms applies. The classical norms presupposed an obligation to students and to inquiry. The current norms presuppose no such obligation. The senior faculty have inherited the prestige and the salary while abandoning the obligations that produced both. Wax’s anger is not principally at the woke administrators. Her anger is at her tenured peers who keep the rewards and dodge the duties.
Three observations beyond hers.
The race-as-master-variable account at 19:35 is the boldest of the three appearances. The American Reformer audience is the audience most willing to hear it. The Encounter Books audience might have heard it in covenant terms. The Restoration Podcast audience might have heard it in structural terms. The American Reformer audience hears it directly. Audience composition shapes which causal accounts speakers can offer in plain language. The taboo gradient maps the coalition gradient.
Second, the lawsuit at 54:48 is the new development. Wax is suing Penn. She is acting as her own co-counsel. The pattern fits the Glacier View precedent her father lived through. The institution disciplines the insider. The insider takes the institution to public legal accountability. The institution loses the privacy of its internal proceedings. Whether courts can produce remedies for academic discipline is a different question. The lawsuit does coalition work even if it produces no legal remedy. It refuses to let Penn close the proceeding behind tenure committee doors.
The line that survives the interview comes at 40:00. “Love of truth is the faintest of human passions.” Wax attributes it to A.E. Housman (1859-1936) via John Derbyshire (b. 1945). The line is a counter to any optimism about reform. Human institutions do not produce love of truth. They cultivate it against the standing inclinations of the people who staff them. The cultivating culture, she says, was AngloAmerican Protestant. That culture has weakened. The institutions that lived on it cannot produce its replacement. The question Wax leaves unanswered is whether the love of truth survives the culture that grew it.

‘The Bias against Conservatism in Higher Education | Amy Wax’ (Mar. 8, 2026)

The Brain in a Vat conversation gives Wax a less skeptical interlocutor than Loury and produces a different performance. The host pushes her on principle, not on overreach. The result is a tighter, more programmatic Wax. She runs the case for academic freedom as an absolute, makes a narrow exception for incitement-adjacent speech, and uses the symmetry argument as her main weapon: if you can’t punish antisemitic protest, you can’t punish her.
She opens with the Penn account. The procedural framing does most of the work. Her dean Ted Ruger gets the central villain role: “a very spineless, weak, uh, member of the nomenklatura” (4:08-4:10). She pegs his definitional move as the giveaway: “Seeing anything critical about a group to which any student belongs is discrimination” (4:50-4:55). She then runs the kangaroo-court line: a faculty senate dredging fabricated complaints from fifteen years ago, suspending her for a year at half pay, stripping her chair, banning her from her office. Hillsdale picks her up. Penn pays her to do nothing.
The symmetry move comes next, and it carries the legal claim in her lawsuit. After October 7th, faculty and students at Penn made statements about Zionists and Jews that the university refused to discipline, citing academic freedom. Wax: “If you say, you know, negative things about sacred protected minorities like blacks, you get punished. If you say negative things about Jews, you don’t get punished” (8:03-8:14). She frames this as a Title VI violation. The argument has rhetorical force whether or not it has legal force. It locks the university into a dilemma: discipline the antisemitism cases and lose the academic-freedom defense, or admit the double standard.
Her free-speech absolutism goes further than the standard right position. She rejects the Trump administration’s antisemitism initiatives: “I am not a fan of Trump’s focus on… I have not been a fan of their initiatives against anti-semitism” (10:33-10:47). She refuses the trauma frame even when deployed on her side of the line: “this notion of psychological harm from having to hear ideas that are upsetting to you or that you don’t like, we cannot indulge that argument” (13:25-13:46). The position is consistent. She wants the rule that protects her to protect the people she finds repulsive, because she sees that the rule punishing them ends up punishing her.
The narrow exception she allows is genocide advocacy at private universities. She thinks Liz Magill (b. 1966) might still have her job had Penn announced a slightly stricter rule than the First Amendment requires. Wax states this with hesitation: “I’m a little uncomfortable with that as a principle… If I were in charge, I would probably say, you know, we have to tolerate it as repulsive as it is because the counter for speech is more speech” (39:38-40:06). She gives the host the principle and then walks back from it.
Her best argument comes on diversity. The standard line says identity diversity produces intellectual diversity. Wax inverts it: “the emphasis on identity diversity has produced and enforced an orthodoxy in the universities because, when combined with this sort of emphasis on, you know, psychological trauma and harm, it means that you can’t say anything that anybody in any group will object to” (22:07-22:25). The move earns her the seat. She names the perverse result and connects it to the trauma frame she rejected earlier. Identity representation plus protected feelings equals enforced orthodoxy.
The gendered analysis is where she goes furthest and where the argument frays. Helen Andrews (b. 1986) argues that academic feminization explains wokeness through traits Andrews codes as feminine: rumor, indirection, conformity enforcement through social punishment. Nathan Cofnas (b. 1988) replies that all-male Harvard in the 1750s ran the same speech codes and rituals of expulsion, so the gender story misidentifies the cause. Wax wants to keep both. She concedes Cofnas: men instigate, men lead. She keeps Andrews: women enforce, women conform. Then she adds her own piece: “illiberalism and, uh, you know, intolerance of wide open debate and sparring that goes along with the free speech culture, that is a little bit more appealing to women just per se” (48:46-49:00). The claim sits exposed because the Cofnas point does the work she keeps trying to bypass. If 1750s Harvard ran the same enforcement architecture without women, the architecture is not gendered. She pays Cofnas the compliment of taking his essay seriously and then keeps the conclusion he refuted.
She closes the gender section with the line that will travel: “men are the authors of civilization, which they truly are, um, and they are the authors of, you know, WEIRD western civilization, and at the heart of that civilization is, you know, reason, rationalism, getting at the truth, getting at reality, accuracy, um, scientific progress… that is primarily a male project” (50:09-50:42). The claim drops without argument and stands as an article of faith inside her broader case.
The race-IQ exchange is where she goes hardest and where Stephen Pinker (b. 1954) gets dragged for hedging. Pinker says don’t go there. Wax says we have to. Her reasoning runs through equity: “we’ve built this whole woke paradigm, this DEI paradigm, at the center of which is equity. And what does equity mean? It means that every position in society has to be occupied proportionally by the people who live in society” (1:02:04-1:02:22). If the equity premise drives policy and the IQ data gets suppressed, the policy runs on a falsehood and produces the suspicion that any disparity in outcomes signals discrimination. The diagnosis matches the one Murray gives in Facing Reality. The unanswered question is the one Loury raised in the 2021 conversation: what does an honest accounting of the gap produce politically that is better than the suppression?
Wax’s answer is acceptance modeled on her own posture toward gender gaps in physics: “Do I lose any sleep over the fact that 50% of the Harvard physics department will never be women?… No, I don’t think about it” (1:05:14-1:05:28). The analogy carries her case for her, but it elides the asymmetry she has spent the whole interview making elsewhere. Sex differences in interest and ability sit inside an institutional regime that is no longer trying to engineer proportional representation by sex. Race differences sit inside a regime that runs on the equity premise. The analogy works only if you have already won the political fight.
The interview shows Wax at her sharpest on procedure and her weakest on metaphysics. The Penn account is precise. The free-speech analysis is consistent. The diversity-orthodoxy point is well made. The gender claims and the closing acceptance argument depend on premises she does not defend.

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Amy Wax & Nathan Cofnas: The Parallels & Differences

Both began as careful technical scholars and ended as public polemicists treated as discredited within their original institutional homes. The shape of the trajectory is the shared fact. The substantive content of the turn, the timing, and the institutional response differ.
Both started inside disciplinary norms. The 2004 Wax stereotype threat piece looks like the work she could have continued for thirty years. Cofnas’s early work in philosophy of biology was tight, methodologically conservative, focused on narrow questions about evolutionary epistemology and the ethics of belief. Both could have sustained ordinary academic careers. Neither did.
Both moved into race and group differences as the gravitational center. Wax through cultural and family-structure framing. Cofnas through explicit hereditarianism. Both treated their respective claims as empirical matters being suppressed by coalition discipline rather than contested by reasonable people. Both came to see the suppression as the corruption to be addressed. Once you frame the situation that way, restraint becomes complicity, and the public op-ed or Substack post becomes a moral act.
Both lost institutional standing. Penn stripped Wax of her named chair in 2023. Emmanuel College sacked Cofnas in January 2024. Both invoked academic freedom in defense. Both built parallel public profiles that compensated for the institutional losses. The career math worked because the alternative coalition pays in attention, ally networks, and existential meaning. Both stepped into a market for figures willing to say what the mainstream would not.
Both produced procedural-defense pieces after the institutional sanctions. Wax’s February and March 2018 WSJ pieces. Cofnas’s various Substack posts after the Cambridge dismissal. The pattern repeats. Make the substantive claim. Take the institutional hit. Reframe the institutional hit as proof of the substantive claim. The reframing requires that the institution not release the data, refute the argument, or otherwise engage the merits. Both institutions obliged.
Where they diverge.
Career stage. Wax was a tenured chaired professor at peak career status when she made the turn. The institutional cushion was thick. She could survive Penn’s sanctions and continue receiving a salary. Cofnas was on a fixed-term junior fellowship. He had less institutional capital to spend and lost most of it in one stroke. The turn cost him more relative to his starting position.
Substantive frame. Wax’s primary register was cultural and behavioral. She named family structure, work habits, and parenting as causes of group differences. She left biology implicitly available but did not lead with it. Cofnas led with hereditarianism as the explicit position. He treats the biological hypothesis as the intellectually defensible default. The difference shapes how each is received. Cultural arguments allow more room for disagreement. Hereditarian arguments collapse the room.
Intellectual lineage. Wax draws on the legal-economic tradition, Sowell, Murray, Gary Becker (1930-2014). Cofnas draws on philosophy of science and hereditarian psychology, Lynn, Jensen, and Charles Murray. Murray runs through both lineages, which is part of how the right-wing coalition coheres across legal academia and philosophy. The lineages overlap at the Murray node and diverge from there.
Style and venue. Wax operates in television and 2017 op-ed registers. Performance. Cofnas operates in long-form Substack and academic-philosophical registers. Argument. Wax leans more rhetorical. Cofnas leans more analytic. The styles fit the audiences.
Generation and digital speed. Wax came up in pre-internet legal academia and made her name there. Her turn took thirteen years from the 2004 piece to the 2017 2017 op-ed. Cofnas was native to the Substack and podcast economy. His turn ran faster, compressed across a few years. The infrastructure shapes the trajectory.
Identity and self-positioning. Cofnas has foregrounded his Jewish identity as part of his project, writing explicitly on what he calls the Jewish question and arguing that Jews have disproportionate influence in the suppression of hereditarian arguments. Wax does not foreground her Jewishness in this way. The Cofnas move is risky and connects him to a discourse that has historically run through more dangerous territory. Wax has not gone there.
Legal outcomes. Cofnas got a partial legal vindication in March 2026. The Peterborough County Court recognized hereditarianism as a protected philosophical belief under the Equality Act 2010 while upholding the college’s severance. The ruling produced a precedent of institutional value to the broader coalition. Wax has had no comparable legal moment. Penn’s processes have run through internal academic governance, which favors institutional discretion.
Cofnas has lost more standing within mainstream philosophy than Wax has lost within mainstream legal academia, because philosophy enforces tighter coalitional discipline than legal academia does. Within the alternative coalition, both function as canonical figures whose institutional sanctions confirm the coalition’s diagnosis.
The coalition pull is real. The frustration with mainstream silence on empirical questions is real. The personality profile selects for low risk-aversion, willingness to alienate colleagues, and confidence that one’s contested claims are simply true. Both Wax and Cofnas fit the profile. Many quieter scholars share their views and decline to make the turn. The turn is a choice, and the people who make it tend to share temperament more than they share intellectual position.
Both trajectories show what happens when a scholar prioritizes a substantive claim over institutional belonging. Institutions select for restraint. Public coalitions select for boldness. The two reward systems pull in opposite directions. Once a scholar moves from one reward system to the other, the trajectory tends to look like Wax’s or Cofnas’s. The personalities differ. The shape rhymes.

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A Literary Analysis Of Amy Wax

Amy Wax’s prose changes more than her positions do. Reading the forty-plus pieces in sequence shows a writer whose convictions stay roughly stable from 1996 through 2026 while her relationship to the page, the reader, and the academy shifts in ways the prose registers before the biography does.
The early Wax of the mid-to-late 1990s writes long sentences. The 1996 review of Robert Wright builds paragraphs through accumulation. Subordinate clauses qualify subordinate clauses. The reader has to hold three or four moves in mind before the sentence resolves. The voice is patient. It assumes a reader who will follow because the argument earns the following. The “Two-Parent Family in the Liberal State” essay from the same year reads in the same idiom: doctrinal exposition, careful glossing of cases, models built up through stages. She names her interlocutors. She engages their positions at length. She concedes points as she goes. Her preferred move is the qualifier that doesn’t retreat. “This may be true, but it does not entail what its proponents claim it entails.” The sentence does work and pays its costs.
The 1998 Bargaining in the Shadow of the Market runs 163 pages because the argument needs every page. The piece reads as a dissertation in disguise. Wax distrusts the shortcut. If a model has five steps, she walks the reader through five steps. If a counterargument has three forms, she addresses all three. The footnotes do real work: they cite, they qualify, they extend. A reader trained in the period will recognize the form. It is the register of legal scholarship at its most ambitious, when the goal is to publish something that other law professors will have to engage for a decade.
The voice in this period is third-person impersonal. Wax does not say “I.” She says “this Article argues” or “the position defended here.” The persona is the law-review author as such, anonymous in her style even when distinctive in her conclusions. She is writing within the conventions of her field and accepting their constraints because the conventions still confer authority she wants to claim.
What runs underneath the careful prose is already what will surface later. Her 1996 review of Wright already contains the civilizational pessimism. Her 1996 piece on the two-parent family already names elite hypocrisy. Her 1998 marriage piece already treats women’s choices as adaptations to durable structural asymmetries that formal equality cannot dissolve. The substantive Wax is in place. The literary Wax is still wearing institutional clothing.
The mature law-and-economics period from roughly 1999 through 2005 produces her most accomplished prose. The 1999 Discrimination as Accident, the 2000 Expressive Law and Oppressive Norms, the 2002 Something for Nothing, the 2003 Disability, Reciprocity, and Real Efficiency. The sentences shorten slightly. The architecture grows clearer. She begins using a recurring rhetorical move: state the conventional wisdom, accept whatever in it deserves acceptance, then mark precisely where it fails. The move requires confidence on both sides of the qualification. Wax has it.
The 2002 Something for Nothing is the point at which her prose acquires an unmistakable signature. The signature has three elements. The first is the willingness to name a tension other writers handle by smoothing. Liberal egalitarianism wants compassion without distinguishing the contributor from the dependent. Wax says it cannot have both. The second is the use of moral psychology as a tool against pure normative argument. She pulls Joseph Henrich-style evolutionary findings into welfare theory and lets them do work that Rawlsian (1921-2002) constructions cannot. The third is a refusal of the conciliatory closing. Most law review articles close by gesturing toward future work or proposing modest reforms. Wax closes by stating what the analysis has shown and stopping. The discipline of the ending shapes the discipline of everything that precedes it.
The middle period also brings her into recognizable command of an extended technical argument that builds across multiple pieces. The reciprocity work, the disability work, the welfare work, the family work all share an institutional logic. By the time she writes the 2007 Engines of Inequality, she does not need to rebuild the framework on each occasion. She references it with a sentence and moves on. The economy of reference is itself a literary achievement. It signals a writer who has built an apparatus and now uses it.
In this period she also begins to allow herself sentences that would have been suppressed in the apprentice work. Sentences with rhetorical force. Sentences that name elite practices in language elite practitioners would resent. The 2007 piece on family inequality contains the observation that the men and women who staff the universities and foundations advocating for the deinstitutionalization of marriage do not, in their own lives, deinstitutionalize marriage. The sentence is not new in 2007. The sentence is new in Wax.
The synthesis period that runs from about 2005 through 2011 is the period of her most consequential academic publications. The 2010 Diverging Family Structure, the 2011 Disparate Impact Realism, and the 2008 The Discriminating Mind belong here. The prose grows more confident still. She no longer bothers concealing her surprise at what her critics will not concede. The qualifier that doesn’t retreat acquires a sharper edge. She is increasingly willing to write sentences that read as findings rather than as proposals. Disparate Impact Realism is the cleanest example. The article proceeds as if the empirical claims are simply true and the doctrinal accommodations have to be made around them. A 1996 Wax might have spent ten pages defending the empirical claims before drawing doctrinal conclusions. The 2011 Wax assumes the reader has done the reading.
The change is partly a matter of fatigue. She has been making these arguments for fifteen years. The audience that wants to hear them has heard them. The audience that does not want to hear them has not been moved by repetition. So she compresses the foundation and extends the application. The literary effect is a prose that feels surer of itself, perhaps too sure for a reader who comes to the work fresh. Her early work brings the reader along. Her middle work assumes the reader has caught up.
The combative academic period from roughly 2011 through 2017 shows the prose under new pressures. The Poverty of the Neuroscience of Poverty in 2017, the Stereotype Threat chapter, the implicit bias work. The texts read as critique of fields rather than engagement with arguments. Where the 1999 Discrimination as Accident engages the unconscious bias literature as a coherent intellectual project worth taking seriously, the 2017 neuroscience piece treats the field as a case study in modern academic overreach. The shift is a literary one before it is a political one. The move from interlocutor to anatomist changes the shape of every paragraph.
The sentences shorten further. The footnotes thin. The willingness to grant opponents their best case diminishes. The patience that defined the early prose has run out. The writing keeps its argumentative discipline but loses some of its generosity.
The 2017 op-ed on bourgeois norms is the public turning point but the literary turning point came earlier. By the time of the 2017 op-ed, Wax has already developed the prose habits that make the 2017 op-ed possible. The 2017 op-ed reads as a compressed version of arguments she has been making in long form for two decades. Its critics treat it as a sudden lurch. Its readers in the academy recognize it as the visible surface of work whose underground had been visible for years to anyone reading the law reviews.
The public intellectual period from 2017 through the present brings the largest literary change. The Loury shows, the Cofnas conversation, the Restoration Podcast appearance, the lectures, the responses to media coverage. The prose she writes for these settings is no longer law review prose. It is spoken or speech-adjacent. It is built for audiences that will listen rather than read, and that will signal agreement rather than test the argument.
The change shows in several ways. First, her sentences become more declarative. The qualifier-that-doesn’t-retreat gives way to the assertion that doesn’t qualify. Second, the evidence base loosens. In a law review article she could not say something without a footnote. On a podcast she states findings as widely known. Third, the rhetoric grows polemical in ways the academic work avoided. “Cowardly,” “sophistry,” “bizarre point in our society.” These are not law-review words. They are public-intellectual words, and Wax in 2024 is fluent in them.
Fourth, the persona changes. The 1998 Wax is the law professor as such, anonymous in her style. The 2024 Wax is the dissident, the heterodox figure, the woman who has paid the price for saying what credentialed peers will not say. The persona becomes a content of the work rather than a frame around it. The 2017 2017 op-ed already shows this. By the 2024 podcasts, the persona is the stable through-line, and the substantive arguments come and go around it.
Fifth, her targets specify. The early Wax engages Joel Schwartz, Alan Wolfe (b. 1942), John Rawls, McAdams, Steele. The targets are scholars working in identifiable fields with traceable arguments. The late Wax names categories: “the academy,” “the woke,” “DEI,” “elite progressives.” The category replaces the person. The polemic widens its reach and shallows its grip. A reader who wants to see the argument tested cannot find the specific opponent it targets.
The Loury exchange of December 2021, the Cofnas conversation of 2024, the C-SPAN interview of 2018, the Restoration Podcast of 2024, the Vancouver speech of 2025, the Brain in a Vat interview of 2026: these appearances form a sequence in which the literary persona becomes more confident and more compressed. She knows what her audiences want to hear. She can deliver it without notes. The intellectual labor is increasingly behind her. The performance is increasingly the work.
The trajectory is not unique to Wax. Many academic writers who become public figures undergo a similar literary compression. What is unusual in her case is that the substantive arguments do not change. The 1996 piece on family structure contains, in seed form, the 2017 2017 op-ed on bourgeois culture. The 1998 marriage piece contains, in extended form, the claims about female labor and male obligation she will later restate in shorter, sharper sentences. A reader who tracks the substance through the corpus will find few real surprises. The civilizational pessimism, the institutional realism, the impatience with elite hypocrisy, the suspicion of therapeutic environmentalism: all of these are present early. What changes is how the prose carries them.
The early prose carries them as conclusions of arguments. The late prose carries them as premises of complaints. The first form invites engagement. The second form invites alignment. Different audiences. Different functions. Different rhetorical needs.
A literary judgment, then. Her best prose belongs to the 1999 through 2007 period. Bargaining in the Shadow of the Market, Something for Nothing, Disability, Reciprocity, and Real Efficiency, the 2007 family essay. These pieces reward rereading. The sentences hold up under the pressure of close attention. The arguments build cumulatively. The qualifier-that-doesn’t-retreat does honest work. The reader is treated as an adult capable of following an extended chain of reasoning. The reader is also treated as someone whose disagreement is worth anticipating and addressing.
The public-period prose has its own virtues. It is clearer about what she believes. It costs the reader less. It permits faster identification of agreement or disagreement. It travels well across formats. It has reached audiences her academic work never could. These are real achievements. They come at a literary cost the early work did not have to pay.
The sanctions, the lawsuits, and the institutional pressure of the post-2017 period shape the late prose, but the late prose was already shaping itself before the sanctions arrived. The literary trajectory and the biographical trajectory ran parallel rather than one causing the other. Wax’s prose was already moving toward declaration over argument, persona over position, category over interlocutor, when the institutional pressure arrived and gave her further reasons to move that way. The institutional pressure accelerated a transformation already underway.
She has to keep correcting paraphrases that flatten her actual claims. The flattening is partly the work of careless readers. It is partly the byproduct of a public-facing prose that sacrifices precision for impact. Her academic readers in the 1990s would not have flattened her in the way her public critics now do. They had longer sentences to hold them in check.
The arc has a literary moral worth stating. Confidence is good for prose. Polemical confidence is mixed. The early Wax is confident because she has done the work and knows what it shows. The late Wax is confident because she has paid the cost and feels entitled to the conclusions. The first kind of confidence carries the prose. The second kind risks substituting for it.
If a younger Wax read the late Wax, she might suggest that some of the late assertions get re-grounded in the kind of sustained argument the 1998 Virginia Law Review piece would have demanded. If the late Wax read the early Wax, she might find the prose slow and the qualifications excessive. Both judgments would be partially right. The work she leaves behind will be read in both registers. The academic pieces will hold their place in the legal-academic literature on family, welfare, discrimination, and meritocracy. The public pieces will hold their place in the cultural and political record of a particular moment in American intellectual life. The two records will not be identical. They will not contradict each other. They will rhyme.

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