This episode is about
where you choose to live and the impact that this choice can have
on your level of freedom. Many people who have written about
personal and political liberty have suggested a link between where
you choose to live and how free you are. In the podcast we explore
3 different ideas about this choice:
The ideas in "Walden"
by Henry David Thoreau: finding freedom by living self-sufficiently
alone in a rural setting
The idea of 'Galts Gulch' in "Atlas
Shrugged" by Ayn Rand: finding freedom by living in a small
community of like-minded people (again in a rural setting with an
emphasis on self-sufficiency)
The idea that 'City Air Makes
You Free' (expressed by writers such as
Jane Jacobs): finding freedom in the division of labour and
diversity that cities provide.
Arguably, the benefits of self-sufficiency have been overestimated
in books like Walden and Atlas Shrugged, whereas
the benefits of interdependence in cities have been
under-appreciated by previous writers on liberty. It is suggested
that Galt's Gulch wouldn't actually work in real life because it
would lack the division of labour of a big city that is necessary
to support the kind of advanced and specialised roles of it's
inhabitants. In contrast, living in a city can provide many
opportunities for greater work and personal freedom because of the
benefits of the division of labour in cities.
A podcast about living a life of your choosing. Topics covered include financial independence, productivity, entrepreneurship, peaceful parenting, minimalism, and rational thinking.