The World in Time

Roosevelt Montás

Friday, March 04, 2022

Exhibit from a conference on the future of the Smithsonian, 1927. Photograph by Arthur J. Olmsted. Smithsonian Institution Archives.

“In my sophomore year of high school, I came upon a remarkable book in a garbage pile next to the house where we rented an apartment in Queens,” scholar Roosevelt Montás writes at the beginning of Rescuing Socrates: How the Great Books Changed My Life and Why They Matter for a New Generation. “It was the second volume of the pretentiously bound Harvard Classics series, and it contained a set of dialogues by Plato that record the last days of Socrates’ life. This first encounter with Socrates was a fortuitous as it was decisive. There is probably no better introduction to the life of the mind than Socrates’ defense of his philosophic activity in these dialogues.”

 

This week on the podcast, Lewis H. Lapham speaks with Roosevelt Montás, author of Rescuing Socrates: How the Great Books Changed My Life and Why They Matter for a New Generation, about what came after Montás read Plato for the first time and why he considers access to a liberal education so vital.

 

Thanks to our generous donors. Lead support for this podcast has been provided by Elizabeth “Lisette” Prince. Additional support was provided by James J. “Jimmy” Coleman Jr.

Discussed in this episode

More Podcasts

December 22, 2021

The World in Time:

David Wengrow

Lewis H. Lapham speaks with the coauthor of The Dawn of Everything. More

September 23, 2022

The World in Time:

Andrea Wulf

Lewis H. Lapham speaks with the author of Magnificent Rebels: The First Romantics and the Invention of the Self. More

May 13, 2022

The World in Time:

Richard Cohen

Lewis H. Lapham speaks with the author of Making History: The Storytellers Who Shaped the Past. More

September 13, 2019

The World in Time:

Isabella Tree

Lewis H. Lapham speaks with the author of Wilding: Returning Nature to Our Farm. More

June 14, 2019

The World in Time:

David Wallace-Wells

Lewis H. Lapham talks with the author of The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming. More

The Cantino planisphere, made by an anonymous cartographer in 1502, shows the world as it was understood by Europeans after their great explorations at the end of the fifteenth century.

May 26, 2017

The World in Time:

Ian Mortimer

Lewis Lapham talks with Ian Mortimer about the past millennium of human innovation. More