236 episodes

The classical education you never knew you were missing. Join scholar and writer Spencer Klavan on a tour through the great works of the West. In a world gone mad, we're not alone: the great men and women who went before us have wisdom to guide us. With their help, we can recover truth, beauty, and the stuff that matters.

Young Heretics Spencer Klavan

    • Education

The classical education you never knew you were missing. Join scholar and writer Spencer Klavan on a tour through the great works of the West. In a world gone mad, we're not alone: the great men and women who went before us have wisdom to guide us. With their help, we can recover truth, beauty, and the stuff that matters.

    AI Demons: Allegregores II

    AI Demons: Allegregores II

    Is AI taking on a life of its own? Or is it just a mindless machine? Sly grin why can't we have both?
    Some of our earliest Western literature is fraught with the suggestion that one day we might make a machine so complex, it would think for itself. But what would that say about us? Our new, allegregorical way of talking about AI shows that when we fear that our machines might be like us, we're really afraid that we might be like our machines.
    Check out our sponsor, the Ancient Language Institute: https://ancientlanguage.com/youngheretics/
    I maked this: "A Matter of Taste" https://americanmind.org/salvo/a-matter-of-taste/
    Subscribe to be in the mailbag: https://rejoiceevermore.substack.com
    Subscribe to my joint substack with Andrew Klavan (no relation): https://thenewjerusalem.substack.com

    • 59 min
    Words, Words, Words 15: HWÆT!

    Words, Words, Words 15: HWÆT!

    Next time you want to get everyone's attention for a speech at a party, try this: stand up on a table, pound your mead-chalice on a hard surface (you've got a mead-chalice, right?) and shout HWÆT! No one will have any idea what you're saying, but they'll have no choice but to listen. That's the power of Old English. We've hit bedrock in our excavation of the history of English, which brings us to Beowulf and what Seamus Heaney calls "the coffered riches of grammer and declensions."
    Check out our sponsor, the Ancient Language Institute (now offering Old English instruction!): https://ancientlanguage.com/youngheretics/
    Pre-order my new book, Light of the Mind, Light of the World: https://a.co/d/2QccOfM
    Subscribe to my new joint Substack with Andrew Klavan (no relation): https://thenewjerusalem.substack.com
    Mark Forsyth's books on curiosities of the English language: https://a.co/d/fxudMAn
    https://a.co/d/3A5XpbQ
    Live reading of Beowulf from Hillsdale: https://youtu.be/CH-_GwoO4xI?si=tQCTnID9A7gi5s5_
     

    • 31 min
    Mother Nature Returns: Allegregores I

    Mother Nature Returns: Allegregores I

    Mother nature is one of the most ancient pagan deities, and also one of the trendiest in modern times. What gives--why is a character whose name you can literally find carved into primitive rocks also being portrayed by Octavia Spencer in Apple PR campaigns? In this essay, I argue that Mother Earth or Mother Nature represents one of the most natural assumptions for humans to make about the world, transformed by the scientific revolution into something materialist, and now re-made via allegory into something very like the old pagan god. I call it, an "allegregore": a supposedly metaphorical way of talking that takes on a life of its own.
    Check out our sponsor, the Ancient Language Institute: https://ancientlanguage.com/youngheretics/
    I maked this: Gateway to the Epicureans: https://a.co/d/2uyMIWw
    Subscribe to be in the mailbag: https://rejoiceevermore.substack.com
    Subscribe to my joint substack with Andrew Klavan (no relation): https://thenewjerusalem.substack.com

    • 1 hr
    Interview: Discovering the Great Books with Johnathan Bi

    Interview: Discovering the Great Books with Johnathan Bi

    I really enjoyed comparing notes with Johnathan Bi, whose journey in some ways mirrors my own: whereas I moved from a humanities background into an interest in science, Johnathan started in the science and tech world, then came to appreciate the importance of great literature. Together we discuss the rise of generalism, the promise and perils of the AI age, and what the canon has to teach us in our unusual times.
    Take a look at Johnathan's website: http://greatbooks.io/
    And his new lecture series: https://youtu.be/M0w2eQ-FcEA
    Check out our sponsor, the Ancient Language Institute: https://ancientlanguage.com/youngheretics/
    I maked this: Paradise Lost, the audiobook: https://rejoiceevermore.substack.com/p/paradise-lost
    Subscribe to be in the mailbag: https://rejoiceevermore.substack.com
    Subscribe to my joint substack with Andrew Klavan (no relation): https://thenewjerusalem.substack.com

    • 37 min
    World's Wildest Travel Blog: Dr. Fauci, the Science, and the Return of the Pagan Gods

    World's Wildest Travel Blog: Dr. Fauci, the Science, and the Return of the Pagan Gods

    Will we ever get to stop hearing about Dr. Fauci? Does anyone even remember COVID anymore? These are the sorts of profound questions that define our times. I will not be answering them. Instead, I want to tell you a Very Young Heretics story about how the pagan gods found their way into modern science--and why they might be finding their way back out again in the age of "The Science" (TM). Plus: is listening to audiobooks the same as reading? No, but you should still do it anyway.
    Check out our sponsor, the Ancient Language Institute: https://ancientlanguage.com/youngheretics/
    I maked this: Paradise Lost, the audiobook: https://rejoiceevermore.substack.com/p/paradise-lost
    Subscribe to be in the mailbag: https://rejoiceevermore.substack.com
    Subscribe to my joint substack with Andrew Klavan (no relation): https://thenewjerusalem.substack.com
     

    • 1 hr 2 min
    Words, Words, Words 14: The Father of English Literature

    Words, Words, Words 14: The Father of English Literature

    The prologue of The Canterbury Tales used to be part of a standard-issue training set in English courses. Today I'm RETVRNing to tradition and rebooting the old practice of memorizing--or at least reciting--the first few lines of this defining English poem in Middle English. Plus: should whisky be spelled with an -ey, or a -y? The answer will show you just what a carnival the English language is.
    Check out our sponsor, the Ancient Language Institute (now offering Old English instruction!): https://ancientlanguage.com/youngheretics/
    Pre-order my new book, Light of the Mind, Light of the World: https://a.co/d/2QccOfM
    Subscribe to my new joint Substack with Andrew Klavan (no relation): https://thenewjerusalem.substack.com
    Harvard's interlinear translation of The Canterbury Tales: https://chaucer.fas.harvard.edu/pages/general-prologue-0
     

    • 27 min

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