Philosophy for Better Humans.

Joey Caster

If you want to build character, deepen your thinking, and understand yourself, this show gives you the ideas to do it — one episode at a time.

  1. Why the Smartest People, Make the Biggest Mistakes - Friedrich Hayek

    1D AGO

    Why the Smartest People, Make the Biggest Mistakes - Friedrich Hayek

    In 1959, MIT's brightest minds tried to plan the Soviet economy with computers. 30 years later: 70 million dead. Why do brilliant people create catastrophic disasters? [MAIN DESCRIPTION] In this episode of Philosophy for Better Humans, we explore one of the most uncomfortable truths in history: The smartest people often make the worst mistakes. Not despite their intelligence—but BECAUSE of it. Nobel Prize-winning economist Friedrich Hayek spent his life warning about "The Fatal Conceit"—the dangerous belief that human beings are smart enough to centrally plan economies, societies, and civilizations. His insights are more urgent than ever as experts demand control over AI, climate policy, information, and your personal choices. 🔥 What You'll Discover: Why MIT economists tried to design the Soviet economy (and failed catastrophically) The "Knowledge Problem" that makes central planning impossible—no matter how much data you have How The Road to Serfdom explains why economic planning inevitably destroys freedom Why the most sophisticated systems (language, cities, markets) have NO designer The psychology of why intellectuals are attracted to socialism and comprehensive plans What "scientism" is and why treating society like a physics experiment kills millions How Hayek's warnings apply to AI governance, COVID policy, and climate regulation TODAY 📊 Key Topics Covered: ✅ The Fatal Conceit - Why intelligence without humility is catastrophic ✅ The Knowledge Problem - Why no one can know enough to plan society ✅ Spontaneous Order - How complexity emerges without conscious design ✅ The Road to Serfdom - Why planning leads to tyranny ✅ Intellectuals and Socialism - Why smart people support failed systems ✅ Scientism - When science becomes dangerous pseudo-religion ✅ Soviet economic planning failures and famines ✅ The Holodomor - 7 million dead from "expert" wheat planning ✅ Public housing disasters (Pruitt-Igoe, Brasília, Soviet blocks) ✅ Jane Jacobs vs. Robert Moses - Wisdom beats expertise ✅ COVID-19 policy failures and expert overconfidence ✅ AI regulation debate and the limits of expert control ✅ Climate policy and the dangers of comprehensive planning ✅ Why markets solve problems experts can't even see 💡 Why This Matters NOW: Right now, the smartest people in the world want to: Control AI development "for our safety" Reorganize the global economy around climate Regulate information to fight "misinformation" Mandate health behaviors based on "expert consensus" Redesign capitalism, education, and society itself They're absolutely certain they know enough to do this. Hayek would say: That certainty is the problem. This episode will show you why—with historical examples that should terrify you and contemporary parallels you can't ignore. 🎯 Perfect For: Anyone concerned about government overreach and expert authority Entrepreneurs and business leaders who deal with bureaucracy People skeptical of central planning and comprehensive solutions Those interested in Austrian economics and classical liberalism Anyone worried about AI regulation and tech governance Students of political philosophy and economic theory Fans of free market thinkers like Milton Friedman, Thomas Sowell, Ludwig von Mises Anyone who wants to understand why smart people supported communism Critical thinkers questioning COVID policies, climate mandates, and expert consensus Parents fighting standardized education and one-size-fits-all systems

    1h 7m
  2. Milton Friedman: If Government Could Fix Poverty, Why Hasn't It?

    3D AGO

    Milton Friedman: If Government Could Fix Poverty, Why Hasn't It?

    Since 1964, America has spent over $30 TRILLION fighting poverty—yet poverty rates remain unchanged. Nobel economist Milton Friedman knew why, and his answer will shock you. [MAIN DESCRIPTION] In this episode of Philosophy for Better Humans, we dive deep into one of the most controversial economic minds of the 20th century: Milton Friedman. Why did the War on Poverty fail? How do welfare programs trap people instead of helping them? And what does this mean for our future as AI threatens millions of jobs? 🔥 What You'll Discover: Why $30 trillion in anti-poverty spending hasn't reduced poverty rates since 1967The "welfare cliff" that punishes poor people for working (effective tax rates over 100%)How public housing projects like Pruitt-Igoe became government-backed ghettosMilton Friedman's radical solution: The Negative Income Tax (precursor to Universal Basic Income)The moral case for free markets vs. government interventionWhy good intentions often create terrible outcomesHow to apply Friedman's philosophy to modern problems like AI automation📊 Key Topics Covered: ✅ War on Poverty - Why 60 years of government programs failed ✅ Welfare trap economics and poverty cliffs ✅ Public housing failures (Robert Taylor Homes, Pruitt-Igoe) ✅ Negative Income Tax explained simply ✅ Free market capitalism vs. socialism debate ✅ Universal Basic Income and the future of work ✅ AI automation and technological unemployment ✅ Economic freedom and political freedom ✅ Unintended consequences of government policy ✅ Real solutions to poverty that actually work 💡 Why This Matters NOW: As we face the biggest economic transformation in history—AI and automation threatening to replace millions of jobs—Friedman's insights are more relevant than ever. Should we implement Universal Basic Income? Will robots create mass unemployment? Can government solve these problems, or will it make them worse? This isn't just economic theory. This is about YOUR future, YOUR freedom, and YOUR ability to build a better life. 🎯 Perfect For: Anyone interested in economics, philosophy, or politicsEntrepreneurs and business ownersPeople concerned about poverty and inequalityThose curious about Universal Basic Income (UBI)Anyone worried about AI taking their jobFans of free market economics or libertarian philosophyStudents of Milton Friedman, Friedrich Hayek, Thomas SowellAnyone who wants to understand why government programs often fail🧠 About Milton Friedman: Nobel Prize-winning economist, advisor to presidents, and champion of economic freedom. Friedman's ideas shaped policy worldwide through his books "Capitalism and Freedom" and "Free to Choose." Love him or hate him, you can't understand modern economics without understanding his philosophy. This episode will challenge everything you thought you knew about poverty, welfare, and the role of government in society. 🔔 SUBSCRIBE to Philosophy for Better Humans for more deep dives into the ideas that shape our world!

    28 min
  3. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - The line that runs through every human heart

    6D AGO

    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - The line that runs through every human heart

    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Target Keywords: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago, Live Not By Lies, Stoicism, Moral Philosophy, Personal Responsibility, Truth. Description: What happens to the human soul when it is stripped of everything? In this episode, we dive into the life and philosophy of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the man who survived the Soviet Gulags to deliver a message that still shakes the world today: "Live Not By Lies." > Most people blame "the system" for their problems, but Solzhenitsyn discovered a terrifying truth while lying on rotting prison straw: the line between good and evil doesn't run between political parties or nations—it runs through every human heart. In this episode, you will learn: Why small, "harmless" lies are the most dangerous thing you can do.How to take radical responsibility for your own life.Why comfort makes us shallow and how suffering can actually refine us.How one person choosing the truth can shake an entire empire.Timestamps: 0:00 - The 4 words that changed history 2:15 - From Soldier to Prisoner: The birth of a conscience 8:40 - The Gulag as a moral laboratory 12:13 - Practical Philosophy: Live Not By Lies 18:52 - Why suffering is a school for the soul 22:33 - The line through every heart 32:50 - 4 Pillars of a better human 43:50 - Final Recap Subscribe to Philosophy For Better Humans for weekly deep dives into the minds that shaped humanity.

    29 min
  4. The best explanation of Simone Weil's philosophy

    FEB 11

    The best explanation of Simone Weil's philosophy

    Simone Weil Target Keywords: Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace, Mindfulness, Attention, Modern Anxiety, Philosophy of Love, Self-Improvement, Mental Clarity. Description: Are you living your life on "autopilot"? Simone Weil was a philosopher, activist, and mystic who believed that two forces rule our lives: Gravity and Grace. Gravity is the downward pull of our ego, our impulses, and our habit of reacting without thinking. Grace is the silent force that lifts us up—but it can only enter when we learn the rarest skill in the modern world: Attention. In an age of digital confetti and constant outrage, Weil’s philosophy is a radical toolkit for reclaiming your mind and your heart. In this episode, we explore: Gravity: Why we are addicted to outrage and ego-protection.Grace: How to find clarity in a world designed to distract you.The Art of Attention: Why truly "seeing" someone is the highest form of love.The Slow Yes: How to stop overcommitting and start living with integrity.Timestamps: 0:00 - The woman who lived her philosophy 3:21 - Gravity vs. Grace: The two forces of the universe 6:02 - Why your ego is like physical gravity 10:35 - How to let Grace into your life 14:24 - Why Attention is the same thing as prayer 18:52 - Seeing the person behind the label 27:32 - The sacrifice of clarity 37:37 - Summary: How to practice Grace today If you're feeling overwhelmed by the noise of modern life, this episode is your guide to finding the silence that saves.

    31 min
  5. Nietzsche vs Dostoevsky - When God Dies, who was right?

    FEB 9

    Nietzsche vs Dostoevsky - When God Dies, who was right?

    What happens to humanity after God dies? Over a century ago, Friedrich Nietzsche and Fyodor Dostoevsky stood at the same historical crossroads—and saw the same crisis coming. Meaning was collapsing. Faith was eroding. Moral certainty was dissolving. But they gave radically different answers to the same terrifying question. Nietzsche believed humanity would have to become strong enough to create its own meaning—to rise beyond good and evil through power, will, and self-overcoming. Dostoevsky believed that without transcendent meaning, humans wouldn’t rise at all—they would fracture, justify cruelty, and destroy one another in the name of ideology. In this long-form episode of Philosophy for Better Humans, Joey Caster walks you through: What Nietzsche really meant by “God is dead”Why Dostoevsky warned that “everything becomes permissible”How power, meaning, and morality collide in the modern worldWhy anxiety, nihilism, and identity crises are exploding todayAnd what this 19th-century debate reveals about your life right nowThis is not an academic lecture. It’s a cinematic, emotionally grounded exploration of meaning, suffering, strength, love, and responsibility—and why the future of civilization may depend on how we answer this question. 🎧 Listen if you’ve ever asked: “Why does modern life feel empty?”“Can we really create our own meaning?”“Is compassion weakness—or the deepest form of strength?”“What actually holds a society together?”📌 Listen to the full episode 🎙️ Philosophy for Better Humans Hosted by Joey Caster Keywords / SEO Tags: Nietzsche vs Dostoevsky, God is dead meaning, philosophy podcast, existentialism explained, nihilism modern life, meaning of suffering, philosophy for beginners, moral philosophy, power vs compassion, Friedrich Nietzsche philosophy, Dostoevsky philosophy, long form philosophy podcast

    30 min
  6. "There Are No Solutions, Only Trade-Offs": Thomas Sowell’s Most Uncomfortable Truth

    FEB 6

    "There Are No Solutions, Only Trade-Offs": Thomas Sowell’s Most Uncomfortable Truth

    Here is a high-converting, SEO-optimized description for this episode, tailored for platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube. Episode Title "There Are No Solutions, Only Trade-Offs": Thomas Sowell’s Most Uncomfortable Truth Episode Summary What if the "solutions" you are chasing—in politics, in your career, and in your love life—are actually making things worse? In this cinematic deep-dive, narrator Joey Caster walks you through the mind of legendary economist Thomas Sowell to reveal the one concept that explains why good intentions so often lead to disastrous results. From the rubble of rent-controlled cities to the existential risks of Artificial Intelligence, we explore why maturity means accepting that there are no solutions—only trade-offs. Show Notes & Key Takeaways In a culture obsessed with "fixing" everything, Thomas Sowell offers a sobering, liberating reality check. We dismantle the Unconstrained Vision (the utopian belief that we can engineer a perfect world) and replace it with the Constrained Vision (the tragic realization that we must choose what to sacrifice). In this episode, you will learn: The River Paradox: Why the "hero" who tries to save everyone often destroys the bridge.The Architecture of Ruin: How Rent Control destroyed housing markets more effectively than bombing, and why the War on Poverty dismantled the nuclear family.The 1948 Mystery: The shocking data showing why black teen unemployment was lower in Jim Crow America than it is today.Modern Battlefields: Applying Sowell’s lens to 2026 crises:AI vs. Safety: The existential gamble of the "Accelerationists."The Anxious Generation: How "Safetyism" traded broken bones for broken minds.Modern Dating: Why algorithms and the "Paradox of Choice" are keeping you single.Ozempic & The Body: The biological trade-off between weight loss and the loss of pleasure.The Philosophy of the Camera: How the technical constraints of photography explain the limits of the human condition.Featured Thinkers & Concepts: Thomas Sowell (A Conflict of Visions, The Vision of the Anointed)Jonathan Haidt (The Anxious Generation)Barry Schwartz (The Paradox of Choice)Reinhold Niebuhr (The Irony of American History)The McNamara FallacyMemorable Quote: "The tragedy is not that we have to choose. The tragedy is believing we don't." Listen to this if: You are tired of empty political promises, you are struggling with perfectionism in your own life, or you want to understand the hidden mechanics of how the world actually works. SEO Keywords / Tags Thomas Sowell, Economics, Philosophy, Personal Growth, Unconstrained Vision, Social Justice, AI Ethics, Modern Dating, Mental Health, Rent Control, Minimum Wage, Libertarian Philosophy, Stoicism, Realism, History, The Anxious Generation, Decision Making.

    1h 12m
  7. Power, Systems & Modern Life: Why Incentives Matter More Than Intentions. (The System doesn't care what you meant)

    JAN 28

    Power, Systems & Modern Life: Why Incentives Matter More Than Intentions. (The System doesn't care what you meant)

    Power, Systems & Modern Life | Why Incentives Matter More Than Intentions Why do well-intentioned policies so often lead to disastrous outcomes? In this episode of Philosophy for Better Humans, Joey Caster takes you on a deep, non-partisan philosophical journey through power, systems, and unintended consequences—and why incentives shape behavior more than intentions ever could. Drawing on history’s greatest thinkers—Friedrich Hayek, Edmund Burke, G.K. Chesterton, Karl Marx, Hannah Arendt, Thomas Sowell, and more—this episode explores how compassionate ideas, centralized planning, and market forces can quietly produce outcomes no one intended. We examine real historical case studies like: Prohibition in the United StatesThe Great Leap Forward in ChinaUrban renewal and welfare systemsFinancial incentives behind the 2008 crisisAnd connect them to modern life, including: Social media algorithms and outrage cultureESG metrics and moral signalingAI alignment and incentive designCorporate culture and performance metricsThis episode is not about left vs right. It’s about how systems actually work—and how good people can unknowingly participate in harmful outcomes when incentives are misaligned. If you’re interested in: Political philosophy without partisan baitIncentives vs intentionsPower, systems, and modern societyEthics, capitalism, progressivism, and technologyThinking clearly in a complex worldThis episode is for you. 🎧 Listen, reflect, and share with someone who values truth over slogans. Subscribe for more long-form philosophical conversations on becoming better humans. 📌 CHAPTER KEYWORDS power and systems unintended consequences incentives vs intentions political philosophy podcast capitalism and progressivism philosophy of power AI ethics and incentives social media algorithms ESG criticism philosophy for better humans

    1h 10m
  8. Should ICE Deport Undocumented Immigrants? | A Deep Philosophical Debate

    JAN 25

    Should ICE Deport Undocumented Immigrants? | A Deep Philosophical Debate

    Should ICE Deport Illegal Immigrants? | A Deep Philosophical Debate 🎙️ Philosophy for Better Humans | Narrated by Charles Sebastian Whitby What happens when the law and compassion collide? In this powerful, long-form episode, we explore the deeply human and controversial question: Should U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrest and deport undocumented immigrants? With vivid storytelling, philosophical insight, and emotional depth, narrator Charles Sebastian Whitby guides you through the moral and legal crossroads that define one of America’s most divisive issues. You’ll journey through: – Heart-wrenching real stories from immigrants, ICE agents, and American families – A philosophical showdown: Socrates vs. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on justice and law – Ethical frameworks from modern thinkers like Joseph Carens, Michael Walzer, and David Miller – The rule of law vs. the cry for mercy – National security, fairness, and the human cost of enforcement – Real-world policy implications and personal reflections This isn’t a political rant — it’s a timeless, soul-stirring debate that invites you to pause, reflect, and engage. Whether you lean left, right, or somewhere in between, this episode offers a space for deeper understanding, critical thought, and meaningful conversation. 🔔 Subscribe to the channel for more philosophical deep dives that make us all better humans. 💬 Share your thoughts in the comments — What do YOU believe justice looks like in this debate? 👉 Listen now and explore the law not just as a system… but as a reflection of who we are. #PhilosophyForBetterHumans #ImmigrationDebate #ICE #Ethics #PhilosophyPodcast #Justice #UndocumentedImmigrants #LawAndMorality #BetterHumans

    1h 55m

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If you want to build character, deepen your thinking, and understand yourself, this show gives you the ideas to do it — one episode at a time.