American Socrates
Matt Rupert
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American Socrates is a podcast that applies Socratic thinking to everyday American life. Host Matt Rupert, a professional philosopher, helps listeners think more deeply about decisions, relationships, and cultural debates. The show aims to provide rigorous, honest thinking rather than self-help or philosophy lectures. New episodes are released every Wednesday.
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Is Character a Matter of Habit? 01.07.2026 30minSend us Fan Mail Am I What I Do Repeatedly? Character is not what you intend. It is what you do repeatedly. Aristotle's account of habit formation is one of the most practically actionable ideas in his ethics and one of the most uncomfortable, because it means that the person you are right now is substantially the product of what you have been actually doing all along. This episode examines how habits form, why intentions consistently lose to well-practiced patterns under pressure, what role ...
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How Do I Fit Into My Society? 24.06.2026 29minSend us Fan Mail What is the Ethics of Politics? Aristotle believed that human beings are political animals, not in the electoral sense, but in the deeper sense that we can only fully develop and flourish within a community. That means the kind of person you become is inseparable from the community that formed you. This episode examines the relationship between personal ethics and the society that shapes it, and why Aristotle thought you couldn't fully understand one without the other. Ethics...
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How Do I Make Ethics Practical? 17.06.2026 29minSend us Fan Mail How are you supposed to act when you’re not sure what to do? Every ethical system eventually has to answer this same practical question. Aristotle's answer is the doctrine of the golden mean, that is, the idea that virtue lies between extremes, and that the right response to any situation is neither too much nor too little. This episode unpacks what the mean actually is, why it's not the same as splitting the difference, why the extremes are almost always easier to occupy, an...
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How Do I Thrive? 10.06.2026 29minSend us Fan Mail How do you live your best life? Aristotle's answer to the question of what human life is for is eudaimonia, usually translated as happiness, but closer in meaning to flourishing. His argument that the highest form of eudaimonia is the contemplative life sounds, at first, like something only a philosopher would say. This episode makes the case that he's right and that the evidence is hiding in plain sight. We find critical thinking to be very satisfying. Aristotle understood t...
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How Do I Find Purpose in Life? 03.06.2026 30minSend us Fan Mail Before you can get good at living, you need to know what you're living for. Aristotle's concept of teleology, the idea that everything has a purpose, and that purpose determines what success looks like, turns out to be one of the most practically useful ideas in ethical philosophy. This episode explores what it means to have a telos, why most people are pursuing goals they never consciously chose, and why skills without direction are just circular motion. If you can't define ...
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What is Love? 27.05.2026 31minSend us Fan Mail Erich Fromm argued in The Art of Loving that love is a skill — and that most people are bad at it not because they are unloving but because they have never treated it as something that requires practice and development. This episode builds on Fromm's framework to examine love as a discipline made up of care, responsibility, respect, and knowledge, and contrasts it with the modern romantic model in which love is something that happens to you rather than something you build. We...
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What are the Ethics of Loyalty? 20.05.2026 30minSend us Fan Mail How loyal should one be? Loyalty is one of the most emotionally compelling ideas in human life and one of the most philosophically slippery. This episode defines loyalty as a binding commitment that resists constant recalculation — which is exactly what makes it powerful and exactly what makes it dangerous. We examine the difference between loyalty to persons versus loyalty to causes and ideologies, trace the shift from ancient reverence for loyalty to modern suspicion of it,...
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Am I Guilty for the Sins of My People? 13.05.2026 32minSend us Fan Mail What is Collective Guilt? Can guilt be shared without becoming meaningless? This episode untangles four concepts that keep getting collapsed into one — collective responsibility, liability, complicity, and guilt — and argues that the confusion between them produces neither justice nor repair. We look at when collective moral thinking makes sense, when it functions as a political weapon or a substitute for actual restitution, and why performed guilt so often discharges social ...
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What does Forgiveness Bring Us? 06.05.2026 24minSend us Fan Mail What does forgiveness actually do to the people who practice it — and what does real transformation look like when it happens? In this episode, we move past the question of why forgiveness is hard and into the territory of what it produces. We look at Simon Wiesenthal's famous decision not to forgive a dying SS soldier — a choice that still holds up — and use it to set the scale for what forgiveness can and can't do. Then we spend time with the story of Hector Black, an elder...
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What is the Silver Rule? 29.04.2026 30minSend us Fan Mail Is Fairness Enough? Tit-for-tat is mathematically elegant and emotionally satisfying: you get what you give, and nobody gets taken advantage of. Game theory even proves it works — under the right conditions. This episode examines what those conditions are, where they break down, and what happens when the logic of reciprocity runs loose in marriages, workplaces, social media, and political life. Fairness stabilizes systems that are already functional. It cannot heal systems th...
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What is the Golden Rule? 22.04.2026 28minSend us Fan Mail Isn't Morality Just the Golden Rule? Most people think the Golden Rule is about fairness — treat others the way you want to be treated. But fairness and forgiveness are not the same thing, and the difference matters. This episode explores why forgiveness looks like weakness but functions like power, how moral scorekeeping corrodes relationships, families, and communities, and what it actually means to forgive someone without excusing what they did or trusting them again. We d...
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Do I Owe Anything to the Future? 15.04.2026 29minSend us Fan Mail What do we owe people who do not yet exist? This episode begins with the “seventh generation” principle of the Iroquois Confederacy—evaluating decisions by their impact 150 years into the future—and asks why that standard feels so alien in a world structured around short-term gain. Drawing on virtue ethics and the technological warnings of Hans Jonas, we examine how modern power allows us to push real, irreversible costs forward in time, especially in the case of climate chan...
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Can I Judge Others? 08.04.2026 29minSend us Fan Mail “Don’t judge” is often treated as the highest moral command, but this episode argues that tolerance has never meant moral silence. Drawing on the classic formulation of the paradox of tolerance by Karl Popper, we examine how a society that refuses to judge intolerance risks dissolving the very conditions that make pluralism and free speech possible. Tolerance originally required judgment—disagreeing deeply while refusing coercion—and it distinguished between criticizing ideas...
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How Responsible Are We For Our Own Happiness? 01.04.2026 28minSend us Fan Mail We’re told that happiness is a choice and that we are fully responsible for our own lives. This episode questions that assumption and asks whether the good life is really a private achievement. Drawing on virtue ethics, the African philosophy of Ubuntu—“I am because we are”—and the social critiques of thinkers like G. W. F. Hegel and Adam Smith, we examine how trust, dignity, meaningful work, and recognition are social goods no individual can manufacture alone. In contrast to...
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Is the Good Life An Easy Life? 25.03.2026 29minSend us Fan Mail After a long day of emails, meetings, and micro-decisions, an easy life feels like salvation. This episode examines the seduction of convenience and the psychology of decision fatigue: how constant low-stakes choices for institutions, platforms, and employers quietly drain the clarity we need for the decisions that actually shape a life. Ease promises relief, but often delivers numbness—less friction, yet less meaning. By contrasting rest with avoidance and comfort with agenc...
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Is Foul Language Immoral? 18.03.2026 30minSend us Fan Mail This episode examines how so-called “clean speech” is less about ethics than about power, class, and control. From the linguistic fluidity of taboo in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales to the euphemism treadmill that turned our “cocks” into “roosters,” we trace how words become “dirty” when institutions decide they are. The argument is not relativism; harm and intention still matter. But much of what passes for moral judgment about language is really status enforcement....
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Why Be Good? 11.03.2026 30minSend us Fan Mail If being good doesn’t pay, why be good at all? This episode takes the cynical case seriously, channeling Thrasymachus in Republic: justice serves the strong, and injustice often works. The problem isn’t confusion about ethics—we know what cheating and cruelty are—but incentive in a world where goodness can feel naïve. Yet we can examine if this is really the "good" life by looking at the hidden cost of “winning” through exploitation, like the erosion of trust. If evil is effi...
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What is a Good Life? 04.03.2026 29minSend us Fan Mail Most people hear “hedonism” and think excess, but this episode revisits Epicurus to recover a very different account of the good life and its ethics. Rather than maximizing pleasure, Epicurus argued for minimizing misery—freedom from physical pain (aponia) and mental disturbance (ataraxia)—through simple living, disciplined desire, and durable friendship. By distinguishing between natural and necessary desires and the endless cravings for wealth, status, and power, he reframe...
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What Can Philosophy Do for Us? 25.02.2026 38minSend us Fan Mail Philosophy isn’t just for professors or ivory-tower thinkers — it’s a practical tool for anyone trying to navigate chaos, confusion, and the daily grind. In this capstone episode of American Socrates, we explore how philosophy can help you see clearly, act deliberately, and live freely with others. From the factory floor to the family kitchen, from political confusion to online noise, philosophy trains your mind to recognize truth from falsehood, resist manipulation, and recl...
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Is MAGA Rage based on Ignorance? 18.02.2026 40minSend us Fan Mail When people stop believing in anything, power fills the vacuum. In this episode of American Socrates, Matt explores how moral collapse and despair feed the rise of authoritarian movements — from Bonhoeffer’s warning about “stupidity” to Nietzsche’s prophecy of nihilism. Through vivid stories drawn from fiction and real life — from The Walking Dead to the hollowing of America’s small towns — we uncover how cynicism and isolation destroy hope, leaving only resentment behi...
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