ISI Lecture Podcast
Summary: If the free market is so great, why does the economy always seem to be in crisis? The Constitution was written so long ago, when life was so different than it is today. Why should we constrain ourselves within its limits? As long as one’s actions don’t hurt anyone else, isn’t true freedom all about letting people do what they want? What happened to live and let live? Since 1953 The Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ISI) a non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt educational organization, has been asking and answering questions like these to inspire college students to discover and embrace the principles and virtues that make America free and prosperous. Through lectures, publications, and a host of programs aimed at America's college youth, ISI explores the meaning and application of our nation's founding principles — limited government, individual liberty, personal responsibility, the rule of law, market economy, and moral norms.
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Podcasts:
Lecture given in 1973
England: An Elegy
From ISI's Cicero's Podium: A Great Issues Debate Series.
Equality and Divinity: The Challenge of Godly Order
From ISI's Cicero's Podium: A Great Issues Debate Series.
Europe and Islam
Cicero's Podium From ISI's Cicero's Podium: A Great Issues Debate Series.
Lecture given in 1975
Designed to educate college students and journalists on the most relevant topics regarding our own security, the lectures from the Collegiate Network’s first annual National Security Seminar focus on emerging threats to the national security of the United States and propose solutions to counter these threats. The National Security Seminar is an extension of The National Security Online Resource Center, a website dedicated to providing college journalists with a solid grounding in national security issues.
Social Responsibility
Federal Government Power and Influence
ROBIS summer seminar in 1977
Festivity, Equality, and the 'wrackful siege of battering days'
Solzhenitsyn and Chambers
Fiction and the Armed Doctrine