
Equality
What It Means and Why It Matters
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Narrated by:
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Derek Dysart
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Stephen Graybill
About this listen
In this compelling dialogue, two of the world’s most influential thinkers reflect on the value of equality and debate what citizens and governments should do to narrow the gaps that separate us. Ranging across economics, philosophy, history, and current affairs, Thomas Piketty and Michael Sandel consider how far we have come in achieving greater equality. At the same time, they confront head-on the extreme divides that remain in wealth, income, power, and status nationally and globally.
What can be done at a time of deep political instability and environmental crisis? Piketty and Sandel agree on much: more inclusive investment in health and education, higher progressive taxation, curbing the political power of the rich and the overreach of markets. But how far and how fast can we push? Should we prioritize material or social change? What are the prospects for any change at all with nationalist forces resurgent? How should the left relate to values like patriotism and local solidarity where they collide with the challenges of mass migration and global climate change?
To see Piketty and Sandel grapple with these and other problems is to glimpse new possibilities for change and justice but also the stubborn truth that progress towards greater equality never comes quickly or without deep social conflict and political struggle.
©2025 Thomas Piketty and Michael J. Sandel (P)2025 Blackstone PublishingListeners also enjoyed...
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- Narrated by: James Gillies
- Length: 12 hrs and 10 mins
- Unabridged
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Madness, sexuality, power, knowledge—are these facts of life or simply parts of speech? In a series of works of astonishing brilliance, historian Michel Foucault excavated the hidden assumptions that govern the way we live and the way we think. The Archaeology of Knowledge begins at the level of things aid and moves quickly to illuminate the connections between knowledge, language, and action in a style at once profound and personal. A summing up of Foucault's own methodological assumptions, this book is also a first step toward a genealogy of the way we live now.
By: Michel Foucault
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Righteous Strife
- How Warring Religious Nationalists Forged Lincoln's Union
- By: Richard Carwardine
- Narrated by: Fred Sanders
- Length: 17 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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How did slavery figure in God’s plan? Was it the providential role of government to abolish this sin and build a righteous nation? Or did such a mission amount to “religious tyranny” and “pulpit politics,” in an effort to strip the southern states of their God-given rights? In 1861, in an already fracturing nation, the tensions surrounding this moral quandary cracked the United States in half, and even formed rifts within the North itself, where antislavery religious nationalists butted heads with conservative religious nationalists over their visions for America’s future.
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The Road to Freedom
- Economics and the Good Society
- By: Joseph E. Stiglitz
- Narrated by: Paul Boehmer
- Length: 12 hrs and 38 mins
- Unabridged
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In The Road to Freedom, Nobel prize winner Joseph E. Stiglitz dissects America's current economic system and the political ideology that created it, laying bare their twinned failure. Free and unfettered markets have exploited consumers, workers, and the environment alike. These movements now pose a real threat to true economic and political freedom.
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Send neoliberalism into the abyss where it belongs
- By marwalk on 08-16-24
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The Plunder of Black America
- How the Racial Wealth Gap Was Made
- By: Calvin Schermerhorn
- Narrated by: Lisa S. Ware
- Length: 8 hrs and 45 mins
- Unabridged
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Historian Calvin Schermerhorn traces four hundred years of Black dispossession and decapitalization—what Frederick Douglass called plunder—through the stories of families who have strived to earn and keep the fruits of their toils. Their struggles reveal that the ever-evolving strategies to strip Black income and wealth have been critical to sustaining a structure of racialized disadvantage. These accounts also tell of the quiet heroism of those who worked to overcome obstacles and defy the plunder.
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El descontento democrático [Democracy's Discontent]
- En busca de una filosofía pública [America in Search of a Public Philosophy]
- By: Michael J. Sandel, Albino Santos Mosquera - translator
- Narrated by: Alejandro Vargas-Lugo
- Length: 14 hrs and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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El profesor de filosofía más famoso del mundo analiza los peligros a los que se enfrenta la democracia.
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Opinion book
- By Faycal Ikhouane on 12-08-24
By: Michael J. Sandel, and others
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The Capital Order
- How Economists Invented Austerity and Paved the Way to Fascism
- By: Clara E. Mattei
- Narrated by: Susan Ericksen
- Length: 15 hrs and 26 mins
- Unabridged
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For more than a century, governments facing financial crisis have resorted to the economic policies of austerity—cuts to wages, fiscal spending, and public benefits—as a path to solvency. Today, an important question remains: What if solvency was never the goal? In The Capital Order, political economist Clara E. Mattei explores the intellectual origins of austerity to uncover its originating motives: the protection of capital—and indeed capitalism—in times of social upheaval from below.
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Must listen to. Essential.
- By Gus More on 01-03-25
By: Clara E. Mattei
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When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows . . .
- Common Knowledge and the Mysteries of Money, Power, and Everyday Life
- By: Steven Pinker
- Length: 9 hrs and 30 mins
- Unabridged
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From one of the world’s most celebrated intellectuals, a brilliantly insightful work that explains how we think about each other’s thoughts about each other’s thoughts, ad infinitum. It sounds impossible, but Steven Pinker shows that we do it all the time. This awareness, which we experience as something that is public or “out there,” is called common knowledge, and it has a momentous impact on our social, political, and economic lives.
By: Steven Pinker
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The Art of More
- How Mathematics Created Civilization
- By: Michael Brooks
- Narrated by: Nick Afka Thomas
- Length: 9 hrs and 43 mins
- Unabridged
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In this captivating, sweeping history, Michael Brooks makes clear that mathematics was one of the foundational innovations that catapulted humanity from a nomadic existence to civilization, and that it has been instrumental in every subsequent great leap of humankind: from charting the movements of celestial bodies to navigating the globe to tracking the dissemination of viruses.
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Wow!
- By Cinski446 on 07-12-22
By: Michael Brooks
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Siliconned
- How the Tech Industry Solves Fake Problems, Hoards Idle Workers, and Makes Doomed Bets with Other People's Money
- By: Emmanuel Maggiori
- Narrated by: Ariel Paredes
- Length: 4 hrs and 42 mins
- Unabridged
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A start-up wastes a billion dollars making videos nobody wants to watch. A city rushes to build landing pads for flightless air taxi prototypes. Tech giants hire thousands of techies for fake projects to stop them working for rivals. The tech industry has a tendency to go crazy. In Siliconned, industry insider Emmanuel Maggiori decodes tech’s hysteria and explains why we all pay the price for it.
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Excellently written and extremely informative.
- By Robert on 11-06-24