The Question Of
The Question Of is a new series by Socrates+ where Socrates in the City guests discuss often controversial, complex, and foundational topics that shape culture, science, and faith.
The Question Of
The Question Of is a new series by Socrates+ where Socrates in the City guests discuss often controversial, complex, and foundational topics that shape culture, science, and faith.
PlayThe Question of Human Dignity | Robert George
How should we live in a way that is consistent with our own human dignity? And what truly constitutes our well being and fulfillment as rational creatures? In this episode of The Question Of, Princeton Professor Robert George explores what makes every human being morally inviolable.
The Question of Youth Politics | Olivia Reingold
In the latest episode of The Question of, journalist Olivia Reingold takes a close look at New York Mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani’s strikingly modern approach to politics. Rather than relying on traditional campaigning, Mamdani has built a digital-first movement aimed squarely at younger New Yorkers. Reingold analyzes the strategies behind energizing a younger generation, the appeal of the socialist policies of Mamdani’s campaign, and the death of the establishment within the democratic party.
The Question of Bio-Ethics I Dr. William Hurlbut
What does it mean to be human—and how far should we go in trying to change that? In this thought-provoking episode of The Question Of, Stanford bioethicist and NASA consultant Dr. William Hurlbut explores The Question of Bioethics. At the intersection of science, morality, and human identity, bioethics opens the door to some of the most urgent and profound questions of our age: Where did we come from? Where are we going? What is life for? From the ethics of human enhancement to the deeper existential implications of technological progress, this conversation challenges viewers to think seriously about the future of our species—and the enduring mystery of what it means to be fully, truly human.
The Question of Scientism | Dr. John West
In The Question of Scientism, John West of the Discovery Institute explores the seductive but flawed idea that only modern science and its methods provide access to reality—that disciplines like philosophy, theology, and the arts are somehow less real or irrelevant. Challenging this view, West asks provocative questions like, “Can you measure morality in a lab?” and warns against the dangers of reducing all knowledge to what can be tested or quantified. Drawing on C.S. Lewis’s insight that science and magic are “twins,” he reveals how scientism can become a kind of modern superstition. West also offers practical advice on how to engage thoughtfully and charitably with those caught in the grip of scientism, making this conversation both intellectually rigorous and deeply humane.
The Question of Evil I Andrew Klavan
What is evil? Is it merely a social construct, a shadow cast by human psychology, or something far more real—and more terrifying? In this personal and philosophically rich episode, Crime Novelist Andrew Klavan explores the nature of evil as a rupture in love, a failure to recognize the divine image in others, and a refusal to see ourselves in them. Klavan also probes our cultural obsession with evil—why it fascinates us, why it terrifies us, and why it forces us to confront the boundary between right and wrong. And what of the age-old question: how can an all-good, all-powerful God permit evil? Rather than offering a tidy answer, Klavan reframes the question, suggesting that our yearning for justice—and our heartbreak in the face of suffering—are themselves signs pointing toward a moral order beyond this world.
The Question of Belief | Ross Douthat
In this premiere episode of THE QUESTION OF, author and New York Times columnist Ross Douthat tackles The Question of Belief. This isn’t merely an exploration of whether belief in God is permissible or intellectually respectable. Douthat makes a far more provocative claim: that belief in God is not only reasonable, but may actually be rationally obligatory—something a thoughtful person should embrace, not just something they might consider. Drawing from philosophy, history, and the enduring power of religious experience, Douthat argues that human beings—marked by conscience, imagination, moral intuition, and longing—bear the unmistakable imprint of the divine.
The Question Of Modern Man | Carl Trueman
In this episode of The Question Of, author and professor Carl Trueman takes on one of the defining questions of our age: what does it mean to be human in the modern world? As traditional understandings of identity, freedom, and purpose have shifted, Trueman asks whether our endless pursuit of autonomy has left us with more confusion, responsibility, and instability than we were ever prepared to bear. Tracing the intellectual journey from man being understood as made in the image of God to man remaking himself in endlessly self-fashioned images, he explores how modern culture has become both captivated by technological progress and increasingly detached from any enduring sense of human significance. From Saint Augustine to Friedrich Nietzsche, Trueman examines the transformation of freedom itself — from freedom for truth, virtue, and responsibility to freedom from limits, accountability, and even human nature. Ultimately, he confronts the unsettling question at the heart of modernity: who is man once God is removed from the center?
The Question of Revolution | Eric Metaxas
What does it mean to be free? And how have we forgotten truths that were once self-evident at the time of the American Revolution? In this episode of The Question Of, Eric Metaxas explores the meaning of liberty through the lens of the American Revolution, arguing that America’s founders were not pursuing a utopian dream, but drawing on a deeply rooted, biblical vision of self-government. Ultimately, Metaxas warns that if we lose touch with the foundational ideas that gave rise to the nation, we risk losing our understanding of freedom itself.
The Question Of The Classics I Louis Markos
What do we miss when we skip over the classics? In this episode of The Question Of, author and academic Louis Markos invites us to reconsider what we mean by “the classics” and why they still matter. Often seen as intimidating or distant, works by Thucydides, Aristotle, Cicero, and even the first five books of the Bible are too easily skimmed or set aside, but these texts offer far more than historical insight. Rather than simply answering questions, they expand our intellectual and moral imagination, equipping us to ask deeper, more enduring ones: Why am I here? What is the nature of goodness? What does a just society look like? In returning to the classics, we encounter not only the foundations of our civilization but also a richer understanding of our shared humanity, a history rooted in wisdom, virtue, and truths that have endured far beyond the passing currents of modern thought.
The Question of Fantasy | Holly Ordway
What if fantasy isn’t an escape from reality but a way to see it more clearly? In The Question of Fantasy, author Holly Ordway shares how fantasy renews our vision of the world. Drawing on the ideas of J.R.R. Tolkien, Ordway explores the three essential functions of fantasy: recovery, escape, and consolation. Recovery, which helps us see ordinary things as they truly are again; escape — far from escapism — reflects Tolkien’s belief (shaped by his experience in World War I) that a prisoner has a duty to escape and imagine possibilities beyond captivity; and consolation, which offers the unexpected joy of a happy ending that echoes the deeper hope of resurrection.Because fantasy is not tied to a particular time or place, it speaks across generations. Its very difference from the ordinary world invites audiences to see themselves in its characters — and to glimpse reality itself from a renewed and hopeful perspective.
The Question of Myth | Martin Shaw
How do we become real human beings? For storyteller Martin Shaw, the answer lies in recovering the ancient power of myth — those sacred, poetic stories carried across cultures for thousands of years that meet us most truly in times of suffering, where the timeless breaks into the everyday.Raised among books instead of modern distractions, Shaw discovered that myth is not childish fantasy but a kind of “ancient technology” meant to grow us up — stretching our imagination and deepening our reality. Far from being untrue, myth becomes most necessary when life is hardest, and that pinpricks of eternity are scattered through the world — if only we have eyes to see them.
The Question of The Machine | Paul Kingsnorth
What is it about this time in history that feels so oppressive and detached? How has the machine shaped our worldview? In the latest episode of The Question Of, the furiously gifted writer Paul Kingsnorth, unpacks the mechanisms of the machine by setting out to discover why there’s an ever present sense of a metastasizing, encroaching technology that’s entrapping humanity. What he calls “the machine” — the fusion of technology and power — has been growing since the Industrial Revolution, slowly overtaking nearly every aspect of human life. Kingsnorth argues that it represents a way of seeing the world through the pure lens of reason and science, and uses technology in an attempt to construct paradise. In response, he invites us to recover our humanity through prayer, people, place, and the past.