Justice: What's The Right Thing To Do? Episode 04: "THIS LAND IS MY LAND"

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  • čas přidán 13. 07. 2024
  • To register for the 2015 course, visit www.edx.org/course/justice-ha....
    PART ONE: THIS LAND IS MY LAND
    The philosopher John Locke believes that individuals have certain rights so fundamental that no government can ever take them away. These rights-to life, liberty and property-were given to us as human beings in the the state of nature, a time before government and laws were created. According to Locke, our natural rights are governed by the law of nature, known by reason, which says that we can neither give them up nor take them away from anyone else. Sandel wraps up the lecture by raising a question: what happens to our natural rights once we enter society and consent to a system of laws?
    PART TWO: CONSENTING ADULTS
    If we all have unalienable rights to life, liberty, and property, how can a government enforce tax laws passed by the representatives of a mere majority? Doesnt that amount to taking some peoples property without their consent? Lockes response is that we give our tacit consent to obey the tax laws passed by a majority when we choose to live in a society. Therefore, taxation is legitimate and compatible with individual rights, as long as it applies to everyone and does not arbitrarily single anyone out.

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @HEMANTRAJYADAV
    @HEMANTRAJYADAV Před 3 lety +472

    At this point, I've started to recognize most of the faces

  • @aissatoufanny5622
    @aissatoufanny5622 Před 4 lety +1989

    me, a high school student, in 2020, during quarantine, binge watching these like I would a Netflix series

    • @abhilashtyagi1997
      @abhilashtyagi1997 Před 4 lety +21

      same

    • @Rahul-op2vc
      @Rahul-op2vc Před 4 lety +34

      same bro from india

    • @devanferguson9872
      @devanferguson9872 Před 4 lety +29

      Same!! Binge watching something like this at 3am gives me the same satisfaction as binge watching JRE podcasts with scientists haha

    • @dilshaniwijayawardana950
      @dilshaniwijayawardana950 Před 4 lety +19

      Me toooooo I’m watching this for debating. From Sri Lanka

    • @565ChAr
      @565ChAr Před 4 lety +11

      Same binge watching these so that they can help me when I apply to university at the end of this year. I need that knowledge if I want to stand a chance at getting into Oxford.

  • @santhoshnamballa
    @santhoshnamballa Před 7 lety +1352

    Best thing about these lectures is that he never takes sides. He has been neutral all the way and made students make their own claims. Interesting.

    • @rogerpattube
      @rogerpattube Před 6 lety +10

      He's not neutral but incredibly left wing. Otherwise he would point out the blindingly obvious benefits that following Locke's ideas has brought for the nation as a whole, as compared with other systems of property historically. Either left wing or a complete idiot, and presumably being a lecturer at Harvard not the latter.

    • @dannedifyoudo
      @dannedifyoudo Před 5 lety +74

      Lol....look who's biased, now?

    • @bjorsam6979
      @bjorsam6979 Před 5 lety +38

      @@rogerpattube except all nations follow just about the same rules when it comes to property and such because of economic necessity. Then there are nuances. Like for example if you compare USA to Scandinavia:
      Guess which place offers better education, health, life expectancy and general reported life satisfaction as well as less crime, incarceration, teenage pregnancy, bad health (WHODAS) and murder? Because the nordic countries don't go all in Locke.

    • @xuchen8798
      @xuchen8798 Před 5 lety +5

      @@rogerpattube When did the USA government follow Locke's ideas? Anything prior to the 1964 civil rights act is problematic...

    • @arnav257
      @arnav257 Před 4 lety +67

      @@rogerpattube So, just to clarify what you're saying: He's not neutral because he didn't broadcast the benefits of ONE idea over any others (id est, he was carefully neutral)?
      By that token, he's not neutral because he was neutral. Sounds to me like you're indoctrinated against the so-called 'leftists' you're generalising all of Harvard to be.
      You have some serious thinking to do.

  • @matthewmurdoch6932
    @matthewmurdoch6932 Před 6 lety +446

    Congratulations to an excellent professor for expertly guiding a room not just to memorize but to think and articulate themselves.

  • @susanjones4904
    @susanjones4904 Před 3 lety +430

    This shows how necessary a lecture hall is instead of virtual education. The dialogue and input and interactive connections are part of the learning process. An excellent teacher must be experienced. We are social creatures and our physical connections are being virtually constrained by Covid.

    • @susanjones4904
      @susanjones4904 Před 3 lety +3

      @@onlyabudi That's a very small minority, judging by the full to capacity lecture hall.

    • @scottheid9936
      @scottheid9936 Před 3 lety +4

      Everything societal has a dual responsibility. Which is preceded by having freedom of CHOICE . 90% of the world doesn’t have this luxury .

    • @jordansteinohrt
      @jordansteinohrt Před 3 lety +11

      Why couldnt you just pick out random student via zoom to do the same thing? Virtual education is fine.

    • @Angelen
      @Angelen Před 2 lety +1

      This shows that in a Harvard study hall in 2009, when filmed, students who can critically articulate themselves stood up and iterate their very diverse arguments when offered the opportunity. Such lecture dynamic has yet been replicated to par in other live lecture halls in my decade and a lustrum of post-secondary, post-graduate experience.... nevertheless, I do prefer what you're trying to advocate.

    • @davidhancock1677
      @davidhancock1677 Před 2 lety

      @@susanjones4904 no I’m iujuuupiuyiioo up opiuuU see ooo we ssiiiisis

  • @zi784
    @zi784 Před 3 lety +48

    '.. I think this is the answer Locke would give '
    That's the best compliment I've ever heard Gogol.

  • @kamalkamal0123
    @kamalkamal0123 Před 2 lety +145

    00:44 - John Locke Analogy of natural rights - life, liberty and property
    12:41 - Right to property - our labor can take something unowned and convert it to private property -
    example of drug patent - IPR - dispute over cheap AIDS drug
    21:13 - Locke says - There is right to property which arise even before the existence of state itself but it is subjected to the provision that there is enough as much and as good, left for others on earth
    26:06 - Locke's theory on Legitimate government
    33:03 - Consent role in society by John Locke - Collective Consent
    45:55 - Locke's view of natural right is that they are unalienable to the extent that they are not ours to give them up. that's what creates the legitimate govt. Its not what we consent to - limits govt. But it is our lack of power to give away our natural rights.
    then the question arises that if we don't have that powers then how can we give consent to limit our natural rights to society/state.
    49:24 - Locke is against arbitrary govt, he is against arbitrary taking. But if there is general law such that the government's choice is non arbitrary, it doesn't really amount to violation of peoples rights.

  • @chiranjitsamanta16
    @chiranjitsamanta16 Před 3 lety +69

    These lectures are actual gems of CZcams

  • @theRiver_joan
    @theRiver_joan Před 11 lety +302

    i should be doing homework for classes im actually enrolled in... instead i cant stop watching these.

    • @c0mf0rta61ynum6
      @c0mf0rta61ynum6 Před 4 lety +6

      Ironically, I actually have to watch these for a Ethics in Criminal Justice class I'm enrolled in.

    • @cyberblock7619
      @cyberblock7619 Před 3 lety +4

      @@c0mf0rta61ynum6 want a cookie

    • @c0mf0rta61ynum6
      @c0mf0rta61ynum6 Před 3 lety +12

      @@cyberblock7619 Well, since you asked, sure, I guess. My favorite is White Chocolate Chip Macadamia.

    • @kanhaiya1825
      @kanhaiya1825 Před 3 lety +2

      Physics vs philosophy
      My life in a nutshell

    • @1XclusiveFBA
      @1XclusiveFBA Před 2 lety +1

      What is life!

  • @fixdeluxe1
    @fixdeluxe1 Před 9 lety +339

    Thank you Harvard for uploading these resources! Incredibly insightful and enlightening. General information and context is provided, with discussion and debate on the key ideas. Locke's concepts of life, liberty and property are the fairest and most equitable forms of freedom in the modern world.

    • @jstout333
      @jstout333 Před 9 lety +1

      Hell no. Libertarianism is a far superior way of thinking, this lecture supports this fully.

    • @fixdeluxe1
      @fixdeluxe1 Před 9 lety +5

      Are you kidding? I just supported Locke's concepts of "life, liberty and property"? Read the comment before your respond.

    • @jstout333
      @jstout333 Před 9 lety +1

      ***** Hey Ryan, enjoy making the same mistake the last two generations of Americans did, ignoring the Libertarians who will remain right throughout the years of your ignorance and others despite baseless criticism.

    • @jstout333
      @jstout333 Před 9 lety

      ***** Really. The party who hasn't won an election. The party resisting the two party monopoly that formed after the civil war and we are the ones supporting what the last two generations have been doing?
      I can't even comprehend the irrational thoughts you're having, this is a pointless debate if this is your state of mind.

    • @jstout333
      @jstout333 Před 9 lety

      ***** Random and unfounded claims about libertarian ideas once again, surprise surprise. Liberalization of markets.. how is this what we have today? Last I checked Monopolies have unchecked power and unending reigns today, something Libertarian ideals actually shuts down unlike republican or democrat ideals that serve to promote their own monopolies and shut down their competitors. Libertarians provides a free market while disbanding any monopolies to ensure a free market just like the founding fathers, :O. big shocker our ideals match the founders again, unlike your two treasonous parties). Destroy liberty? Perverse effect? We're the libertarian party, fighting for the rights of the people and the restoration of the people's wealth instead of banks owning our asses. How can you again claim such ignorant views so unfounded that it crosses the line of comedy? Ignorance must be bliss, it must be.

  • @user-sz7tk6zu6z
    @user-sz7tk6zu6z Před 3 lety +49

    I thank my dad for introducing a 13 year old me to Justice. It has really helped me expand my thinking of the world in general.

    • @gulcincan989
      @gulcincan989 Před 2 lety

      M6uuxj😄😄 9

    • @ExploreLifeBaby
      @ExploreLifeBaby Před 10 měsíci

      thats interesting, were you able to understand it at such a young age?

    • @Clain-Metzger
      @Clain-Metzger Před 9 měsíci

      @@ExploreLifeBabywell, to be honest, I’m high school student also, but my dad definite justice and equality what I was young

    • @Clain-Metzger
      @Clain-Metzger Před 9 měsíci

      @@ExploreLifeBabyI reckon that’s no matter of ago, only perspective and educational levels or quality

  • @evracer
    @evracer Před 9 lety +122

    Seeing the number of views on this excellent series in some minor way helps me have hope for the human race.

    • @savchil
      @savchil Před 2 lety +6

      We all desire to be better humans! We are simply prone to doing whatever is easiest (makes sense... less energy expenditure) and in the complex social structures we have now that provide the resources we need for survival with little to no effort on our part (at least mentally), the incentive to learn and become better in this way has dramatically decreased. Humans, however, still have an intense innate desire to obtain knowledge as this is how our species has survived and thrived for so long. We just need to, now that knowledge is not necessarily essential to surivival, find ways to make learning easier on ourselves and, more importantly, easier than the alternative option (ignorance and becoming worse humans). These videos help! We can get our fix of visual and auditory stimuli and obtain a decent amount of useful knowledge in the process!

  • @priyasehgal3557
    @priyasehgal3557 Před 7 lety +132

    stupendous ,no mean a wonder that Harvard university is one of the best universities on the Globe. It encourages such a healthy level of debate.

    • @andylam2372
      @andylam2372 Před 4 lety +1

      You're comment gave me cancer

    • @anders8327
      @anders8327 Před 4 lety +23

      @@andylam2372 "You're"??? Dude, your stupidity gave me cancer.

    • @cadkls
      @cadkls Před 3 lety +8

      @@andylam2372 Her name suggests english is not her native language, i can forgive poorer english on those grounds.
      Her english wasn't perfect but it's more than understandable.
      Your english however, if you are a native there is no excuse.

    • @heliiminum
      @heliiminum Před 3 lety

      @@anders8327 Good point dude.

    • @joshingtonbarthsworth631
      @joshingtonbarthsworth631 Před 2 lety +6

      This isn't necessarily a Harvard thing. This is how philosophy classes work.

  • @normstan9521
    @normstan9521 Před rokem +8

    Thank you Harvard for having these on CZcams!! This professor is incredible!! I wish all professors were like this. He challenges how and the way we think... and is very respectful of others viewpoints This man is gold !!!11

  • @ebrimasaine8795
    @ebrimasaine8795 Před 7 lety +134

    I keep in a dream, that have never sat in a class. Frankly I envy the students in that room. Sandel has successfully made me realize my worth as a social being. I wish I could enroll into Harvard!

    • @anacletobermudez6679
      @anacletobermudez6679 Před 7 lety +7

      You don't need to become "A Harvard's man" to reach the pinnacle of your worth as social being. But if your idea of this "pinnacle" is of landing a job in a great Corporation then don't waste your time and enroll right away.

    • @ebrimasaine8795
      @ebrimasaine8795 Před 7 lety +13

      i didn't say i won't reach the pinnacle of my worth if i do not enroll into Harvard, i said sadel has made me realise it, and that i envy the harvards not because of Harvard but because of being present in the justice class having the opportunity to contribute during the lectures

    • @manthony777
      @manthony777 Před 6 lety +1

      Ebrima, This is typical in most university settings. However, when I attended college, we had smaller numbers of students. The Profs were able to learn the names of each student. I never took a class with 200 students. I think that's too many.

    • @cyberblock7619
      @cyberblock7619 Před 3 lety +5

      @@manthony777 You wont get this level of expertise in most colleges

    • @suffragettesoul2687
      @suffragettesoul2687 Před 7 měsíci

      Some of those who sit in the crowd of these extraordinary classes become the lawyers who chase the legal loopholes or estimate the cost of being caught by those who can afford more than the $90/day to stay for some years in an upgraded room.

  • @19EHF
    @19EHF Před 10 lety +559

    Yes lets go online and watch a Harvard, Yale, Princeton, MIT, Stanford, etc, lecture and just pretend for 55 minutes that we too are Ivy Leaguers

    • @mayattv4986
      @mayattv4986 Před 4 lety +55

      Oh my God, look at how far we've become. I'm a freshmen from a third world country. These Ivy League videos are super refreshing lol. In my country they lecture as if we're middleschoolers

    • @kristybarnes2563
      @kristybarnes2563 Před 4 lety +6

      You're still receiving the benefit! Whatta bonehead!

    • @zacharychandler8399
      @zacharychandler8399 Před 3 lety +15

      @@kristybarnes2563 I don't think it was a negative thing to say. Beyond simple prestige there's something compelling about this large room in the video, the active discussion, and the gifted orator offering a critical insight into ethics. I concede that it can be read in a negative fashion, but also a positive one.

    • @anonymous_channel
      @anonymous_channel Před 3 lety

      Haha

    • @kristybarnes2563
      @kristybarnes2563 Před 3 lety

      @@zacharychandler8399 I took it as ungrateful. Honestly, where's the prestige in taped lectures?

  • @steveloewen8270
    @steveloewen8270 Před 2 lety +5

    A Professor so in Command of the Subject he’s confident in riffing the entire lecture with his students providing the arguments….brilliant!!

  • @wilsonlomotey1167
    @wilsonlomotey1167 Před 3 lety +26

    I would never have missed class if this was my lecturer

  • @kierachia3650
    @kierachia3650 Před 9 měsíci +2

    My fav proff of all time. He always tries to remain neutral, clarifies and helps students put their ideas into words and provide various ideas and texts with in depth explanation. I wish all professors were like this! Would make learning such a joy!! (also, hes funnyyy)

  • @THESHOMROM
    @THESHOMROM Před 5 lety +36

    I love this professor and wish he had been around when I went to Uni. It is an extreme privelege to be able to share these students experience of learning from this great teacher. I would have given him a standing ovation after every lecture.

    • @mustafamohammed9317
      @mustafamohammed9317 Před 3 lety

      ONLY TO YOUR MASTERS

    • @jonathanman8299
      @jonathanman8299 Před 2 lety

      @@mustafamohammed9317 not all teacher are master it depends on their quality are they really pro or not

  • @hihihidddd
    @hihihidddd Před 13 lety +19

    I think my History teacher was inspired by this guy. He teaches the exact same way. I feel as if I was in tenth grade World History again whenever I watch these. That, plus our teacher showed us the first talk when we were learning about utilitarianism.

  • @shubh_2733
    @shubh_2733 Před 2 lety +9

    Michael is one of the most intellectual person of our times ✨
    Loved his way of teaching philosophy so much 🌠

  • @welearntogether7110
    @welearntogether7110 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thank you so so so much for having made these lectures publicly available!!!!! Fantastic professor., amazing way of teaching and also a great audience :)

  • @becky7468
    @becky7468 Před 4 měsíci +1

    2024 and this is great. Second time watching.

  • @fuuud3005
    @fuuud3005 Před 5 lety +262

    Who is still watching in 2019?

    • @sandys8753
      @sandys8753 Před 5 lety +2

      I certainly am. I'm on lecture #24. It's so enjoyable.

    • @shubhamsatyam8882
      @shubhamsatyam8882 Před 5 lety +4

      I am. I have Political science as subject for Indian Civil Services exam. I am totally relying on these for western political thinkers' part.

    • @DaHookKim
      @DaHookKim Před 4 lety

      Watching this during working hours

    • @2b3pro
      @2b3pro Před 4 lety +1

      @@AlexIgSmith42 She watched them twice, once forwards, once backwards. :P

    • @suhaspargavkar8638
      @suhaspargavkar8638 Před 4 lety +2

      hey alex, there are two lectures in one video. for information on the name of lecture see the description..

  • @JonhhWik
    @JonhhWik Před 6 lety +23

    I was hoping someone in the class was going to state/ notice the connection I saw between the enforcement of laws and taxation, but no one did so here is the connection I noticed.
    An interesting and valid argument was made by Locke for law enforced by government, and not by the individual victim. The argument states the victim would preferentially weight the crime as worse when inflicted upon himself vs upon another. This leading to severe punishments like death and the taking of life when it is not necessarily justified. Therefore the punisher could be also violating the offenders right to life. I think this idea also is applicable to enforcing taxation of those who voted against that specific taxation because an individual will preferentially be biased , even in extreme cases, to vote for a tax that benefits themselves and and against a tax that will not benefit them. This makes a great case that enforced taxation is not a violation or theft of ones unalienable right to property. Because a person may preferentially, to an extreme even, vote for taxation strictly to benefit ones self even when the outcome will harm the majority or encroach upon others unalienable rights. Therefore if one has consented to be apart of society under a government then the decision of taxation must be left up to the majority which ultimately decides what is considered a persons property and what is not i.e. taxes owed. Because the majority will unbiasedly choose the definition of property at a preferentially unbiased level selecting for the best definition of property.
    Does anyone have an opinion on this or any reasons why my idea is inaccurate?

    • @patricklayman2780
      @patricklayman2780 Před 3 lety

      Who is still watching in 2019?

    • @scarlett4484
      @scarlett4484 Před 3 lety +1

      @@patricklayman2780 How about 2021? 😁

    • @sheilabright2091
      @sheilabright2091 Před 3 lety

      @@scarlett4484 👋

    • @ancientbriton7295
      @ancientbriton7295 Před 2 měsíci

      I do favour a 'social contract' approach to understanding the relationships between rights in society/societies but I have to give way to some degree on an individual's inability to actually opt out of the society they are born into/brought up in. Bill Gates could go somewhere else if he didn't like US tax rules, but in practice many other people find that very difficult to do (as evidenced by the difficulties experienced by asylum seekers, refugees from violence and economic migrants across the world).
      The argument put by some of the students that rich people got their wealth fairly is pretty superficial and assumes a lot of facts/non-facts that they do not have. Perhaps they are assuming that anything that is legal is fair, and that it always has been so, although I think they know better than that.
      The real value in all this - aside from the hugely entertaining way in which Sandel conducts his classes - is in getting everyone to closely examine their knee-jerk reactions so that they can properly understand where they are deluding themselves, the value of the tenets underlying the opposing arguments, and to what extent we could reasonably be less certain about our own positions.
      Great stuff. 😊

  • @henryarero
    @henryarero Před rokem +1

    Right to life, right to defend your right and right to protect and Defend the right of others

  • @deepalimbu6496
    @deepalimbu6496 Před rokem +3

    I discovered the lecture 04/23 after 13 years of being uploaded. This is a very fascinating and interesting topic I have ever came across. Thank you!

  • @spacekettle2478
    @spacekettle2478 Před 5 lety +23

    @17:00 I really love how the professor guides the student away from a simple ad hominem attack to try and actually argue against Locke's argument itself.

    • @jeaninejeanine2670
      @jeaninejeanine2670 Před 3 lety +3

      Congratulations to an excellent professor for expertly guiding a room not just to memorize but to think and articulate themselves.

    • @Jozaaaa
      @Jozaaaa Před 2 lety

      52:00 Sandel agrees with the student that raised the valid point. He puts Locke’s position into its historical context and expounds on the high likeliness that Locke had ulterior motives

  • @brentturno861
    @brentturno861 Před 4 lety +20

    This is what I need during quarantine period. I’m obsessed with this discussion.

  • @firojmnalam6121
    @firojmnalam6121 Před 14 dny +1

    Cotton is obtained from cotton plants. The fruits of cotton plant are called cotton bolls. The cotton bolls are roughly spherical in shape and quite fluffy. Once the cotton bolls get matured, they burst open the seeds with cotton fibres become visible. The seeds with cotton fibres are picked removed from dried cotton bolls by hand. After picking, they are taken to a gaining plant where the fibres are separated from the seeds by combing. The process of separating cotton fibres from the seeds by combing is called ginning. Ginning was previously done by hand. Nowadays, ginning machines called cotton gins are used for this purpose. The separated seeds can be used again to grow more cotton.❤❤❤❤❤

  • @deprogramr
    @deprogramr Před 3 lety +6

    Sandel is a treasure, I'm happy to share a time period with this dude...

  • @davidhansmapa3119
    @davidhansmapa3119 Před 2 lety +5

    Just youtube recommending me this video after 12 years. But I find this very informative, and insightful. Loved that all students were listening and tried to raise their opinions. Loved also Sandel's way of teaching.

  • @user-zx9eg2fg5c
    @user-zx9eg2fg5c Před 10 měsíci +2

    I would never have missed class if this was my lecturer. The whole justice series is amazing!! .

  • @ThomasAlbright-en7uz
    @ThomasAlbright-en7uz Před 5 měsíci +1

    I have watched this series at least four times over the years, and I have learned new things each time. Watching it makes me feel young and like I was back in college and grad school majoring in cultural anthropology, as opposed to being old and retired as I am now. I have meant to make this comment many times before now, and finally, watching it yet again now in 2024, I can no longer not speak up. Dr. Sandel makes an incorrect statement/assumption in episode 4 "This Land is My Land," the subject of which is mainly John Locke's ideology. Dr. Sandel states that Native Americans were hunters and gatherers hence didn't have fenced land boundaries, whereas in fact, several Native American nations did have large, complex well-bounded cities not unlike other large cities around the world throughout history. The Aztecs, Mayans, and Incans are but a few Native American examples of this. Also, numerous Native American societies practiced agriculture, growing corn, potatoes, squash, and grapes to name just a few. Perhaps their cornfields didn't have European-style "fences" such as stone and wooden walls, but they were indeed bounded. To regard real or virtual "lines in the sand" as not to be "fencing" would be ethnocentric. If Dr. Sandel had realized this, I think he could have argued that according to Locke, the seizure of Native American land by the colonialists was outright theft and not the right thing to do (and the cocky Libertarians couldn't have explained it away). All colonialism around the entire world has been guilty of the same kind of theft justified by ethnocentrism. It is no wonder that we are still paying for these wrongs, the price of which being continuous war and conflict. "The sins of the fathers shall be visited upon the sons."

  • @BobBogaert
    @BobBogaert Před 3 lety +4

    44:20 is one of the highlights. It's fine not to pay taxes, as long as you don't use any public utilities. Roads, parks, transportation hubs, basic education, basic healthcare, etc. Can't call the police or fire brigade. Can't access the courts in case of a business dispute. This point should've been driven home properly instead of skipping to the case of conscription. If everyone is free to choose to fund only the causes they care for, we'd live in a society with tons of hungry kids and well-coiffeured poodles.

  • @linhnguyenngocphuong5875
    @linhnguyenngocphuong5875 Před 8 lety +89

    Who is watching this in 2016???
    (this professor really makes philosophy more interesting to study! It's a pity i'm only know about him now)

    • @maxi0361
      @maxi0361 Před 8 lety +1

      +Linh Nguyễn Ngọc Phương not only interesting, but have a profound value and meaning for the greater good.

    • @luxuryvn
      @luxuryvn Před 7 lety

      Linh Nguyễn Ngọc Phương I do :))

    • @linhnguyenngocphuong5875
      @linhnguyenngocphuong5875 Před 7 lety

      good for you

    • @luxuryvn
      @luxuryvn Před 7 lety

      Thanks!

    • @wisdomdaily3889
      @wisdomdaily3889 Před 7 lety

      Linh Nguyễn Ngọc Phương l also read his book "What money can't buy" several years ago.

  • @macosbyanthony896
    @macosbyanthony896 Před rokem +2

    Dead Harvard, kindly download more of these discussions. It is building me up every day.

  • @hamrazahmad850
    @hamrazahmad850 Před 3 lety +1

    After hearing students question with Patient and answer it with super logic and at the end ask student name.....Great teacher❤

  • @kartikrathore5720
    @kartikrathore5720 Před 4 lety +11

    As an Indian I'm feeling happy and proud that Supreme court of India made Right to property as Constitutional right rather than fundamental right and settled the issue once and for all.

    • @eagillum
      @eagillum Před 2 lety +2

      Interesting... What did that change?

    • @SubcontinentIndex
      @SubcontinentIndex Před rokem +1

      The SC of India didn't do crap. The socialists 5 year plan cut copy paste Nehru and his successors did that by bringing in the Ultimately, the Forty Fourth Constitutional Amendment, 1978, deprived the 'right to property' of its 'fundamental right' status. Even before that Nehru started taking away and nationalizing TATA's Air India. Imagine working hard, giving your blood & sweat to start a company, and these socialists walks around and say THANK YOU, NOW ITS MINE. There is a reason Ambedkar put "RIGHT TO PROPERTY" as a FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT. And because of these silly socialists policies, most talented Indians go to CAPITALIST countries like the WEST.

  • @annauciatawekesa1454
    @annauciatawekesa1454 Před 8 lety +60

    I really got to understand so many things

  • @thomasalbright7492
    @thomasalbright7492 Před 2 lety +1

    This is my 3rd time watching this lecture series over the years. Brilliant professor; brilliant lectures. I've learned as much or more here as in college and grad school courses in "Anthropological Culture Theory" and "Sociological Theory." I'm sure that by now, Professor Sandel knows that indigenous Native Americans weren't all hunter/gatherers; many cultivated the land; and some did both, so Locke's private property ideas aren't problematic, and therefore colonists DID steal Native lands. He SHOULD have known this. Where did he think potatoes, corn, tomatoes, tobacco and more came from! Any school child knows that much.

  • @lillianji7076
    @lillianji7076 Před 2 lety +2

    I’m a high school student learning watching this in class and it’s really engaging

  • @deanna5687
    @deanna5687 Před 5 lety +4

    So much respect and humanity in these words.

  • @usmanranjha9406
    @usmanranjha9406 Před 4 lety +62

    It's interesting how the ethnicity of students affect their leaning to a certain side of the argument.

    • @ard1805
      @ard1805 Před 4 lety

      usman ranjha
      How do you mean?

    • @jdev3002
      @jdev3002 Před 4 lety +1

      Uh...

    • @NikhilSharma-wx7kb
      @NikhilSharma-wx7kb Před 4 lety +13

      Everyone has inherited bias. The only way to let it not affect our thoughts and actions is by acknowledging it and addressing it.

    • @cyberblock7619
      @cyberblock7619 Před 3 lety

      @@NikhilSharma-wx7kb wow

    • @skyroxx
      @skyroxx Před 3 lety

      u sure about that?

  • @ToddHowes
    @ToddHowes Před 14 lety +1

    Well as he said in the video, you have a right and a power to BE YOU. No one else has that power to be you. They can try to coerce you, they can try to hurt you, or even kill you, but they can't BE YOU. It is not transferable.

  • @savitrithakur5245
    @savitrithakur5245 Před 3 lety +1

    After watching 3 videos , I finally paid heed to the date, omg these were posted 11years ago😱😱

  • @kartikeya758
    @kartikeya758 Před 3 lety +4

    Michael sandal is a great teacher.

  • @sheetsha
    @sheetsha Před 5 lety +3

    Only one word for these lectures, Excellent.

  • @nour1584
    @nour1584 Před 3 lety +2

    I'm writing my A-levels in philosophy tomorrow and binge watching these lecture is such a great way of understanding political philosophy

  • @RunningCordoroy
    @RunningCordoroy Před 11 lety +7

    This lecture is so thorough. I am very grateful for this academic exposure.

  • @CRISNCHIPS12398
    @CRISNCHIPS12398 Před 13 lety +5

    This is so deep and meaningful. The profound knowledge that this man speaks of is making my mind explode.

  • @firojmnalam6121
    @firojmnalam6121 Před 3 dny +1

    Efforts are being made by the climbers to clean the Everest. The cleaning is done during the acclimatisation period. This is a period when trekkers train to get used to the temperature and the altitude in the mountains. This period usually lasts about a month. It consists of several treks up and down parts of the mountain to allow the body to adjust to the environment.❤❤❤❤❤

  • @mandeepsingh13000
    @mandeepsingh13000 Před 3 lety +2

    Does anyone else want to be a part of this discussion. Such an intellectual gathering.

  • @lailatulqurrotaayunin8754

    When i can't sleep after 1 am i look back to mr sandel's right and justice series and its always make me sleep better😅
    Idk why, i suppose to say this is very calming but got my brain working at the same time

  • @lizgichora6472
    @lizgichora6472 Před 5 lety +8

    On Consent and it's fundamentals, quite an interesting discussion. Thank you!

  • @firojmnalam6121
    @firojmnalam6121 Před 19 dny +1

    A number of tissues working together to perform the same function make up an organ. For example, eyes are the organs of sight,lungs are the organs of respiration, and heart pumps blood to all the body parts. In multicellular organisms, cells from tissues,tissues join together to form organs and organs work together to form an organ system. Several organ systems together form an organism.❤❤❤❤❤

  • @aaronwamser3858
    @aaronwamser3858 Před 3 lety +2

    The way this man can remember names is close to intimidating. I want to learn this power

  • @dominichsweden
    @dominichsweden Před 10 lety +14

    Me too... His classes are just great!

  • @kasturimore5256
    @kasturimore5256 Před 4 lety +7

    The whole justice series is amazing!! 👏

  • @Ttime54
    @Ttime54 Před 4 měsíci

    2024, starting law journey! This is riveting

  • @ManyInfiniteComments
    @ManyInfiniteComments Před 12 lety

    We can agree that universal human truths are present in our current state of affairs. We can also agree that values are shared across a wide range of people. What we cannot say is that any of these values and truths will hold true in the future or were agree upon in the past, nor can we say that everything that we know is constant and valid. History shows that values are a product of your upbringing and these are subject to change at any moment.

  • @TheJerryw08
    @TheJerryw08 Před 12 lety +3

    My God, this man makes me feel sick. He is such a wonder teacher, he allows his student to think, I went to C.S.U.B. Where having you own opinion could get you tossed out of school. I would have loved to have Professors like him.

    • @wadegrillo9641
      @wadegrillo9641 Před 3 lety +2

      9 years later and it’s only gotten worse my friend :(

    • @sheilabright2091
      @sheilabright2091 Před 3 lety

      I was wondering if anyone had experienced that 11 years ago and you did 9 years ago. It’s horrible now!

  • @maxi0361
    @maxi0361 Před 8 lety +18

    I've learned about John Locke Natural Law when I was young and believed in it. But I was young and naive. It turns out that we are living in a hierarchy world.

    • @wade2bosh
      @wade2bosh Před 5 lety +3

      all systems form hierarchies

    • @cyberblock7619
      @cyberblock7619 Před 3 lety +1

      @@wade2bosh The most dangerous being communist hierarchy

    • @ricardosantos6721
      @ricardosantos6721 Před 2 lety

      There are no rights or laws in nature, only the law of the stronger. Is everyone 100% retarded to not see this?

    • @Maya-sv1pz
      @Maya-sv1pz Před 2 lety

      and that's why it requires maturity and and adult life experiences and life left for future consequences for someone to be viable to run governance on a society.

  • @harveerbrar6298
    @harveerbrar6298 Před 3 lety

    I m thankful to great efforts of HARWARD
    to provide such a easy asses to such great lectures.

  • @belabotum876
    @belabotum876 Před 2 lety

    Dear Harvard, my name is Anna. I am of Abraham Lincoln’s relation. My fourth grandfather was John Hanks, Nancy Hanks brother. In this I see the power of Lincoln in the spot resolutions. You touch my heart. The instructor reminds me of my Poly sci professor Mr. Bastear.

  • @michaeldubick9922
    @michaeldubick9922 Před 5 lety +13

    Even now still watching .... June 2019

  • @etsukofly
    @etsukofly Před 2 lety +3

    This is sooo good! Thank you Harvard for posting this lectire

  • @dagraunddaggad127
    @dagraunddaggad127 Před 4 lety +1

    I listen these lectures and I want to say that you have the best teachers, the best universities!

  • @firdosahmed2764
    @firdosahmed2764 Před 6 lety +2

    What a lovely professor
    His lectures are so clear

  • @canoricardo1
    @canoricardo1 Před 12 lety +3

    VERY interesting. Thank you all who made these videos possible.

  • @ViralShotGag
    @ViralShotGag Před 6 lety +204

    Who is watching in 2018????

  • @Danny_jrt
    @Danny_jrt Před 6 lety +1

    I am so honored to have watched this series. I cannot wait to be in Boston next yearrrrr!!!!!

  • @mz6367
    @mz6367 Před 2 lety +2

    I take these episodes as a series and I really enjoy on my time

  • @bmbmbmyiv
    @bmbmbmyiv Před 10 lety +88

    I'm 12 years old and this is what I watch, i'm planning to go to Harvard later on in my life, so this, in a way, is like Pre-Harvard for me!

    • @johnston336
      @johnston336 Před 10 lety +37

      This is top 5 on my list of things that didn't happen

    • @alexandeon
      @alexandeon Před 9 lety +3

      johnston336 Yeah I feel you. But the very idea that it is still on your list says something positive.

    • @jay1jayf
      @jay1jayf Před 9 lety +11

      You're in a for a surprise kid, lol.

    • @hannahg3093
      @hannahg3093 Před 7 lety +8

      You are technically 15 years old now, almost time to go to college... good luck

    • @JupiterJay
      @JupiterJay Před 7 lety

      Uber Mensch: so are you still watching this after 3 yrs?

  • @2JOfficial
    @2JOfficial Před 12 lety +5

    @orochicc002 "united states is a country with most people are just normal and follow the law ".. my point exactly, they just follow the law like sheep and don't tend to think a little bit

  • @cristinacayaomixed2591
    @cristinacayaomixed2591 Před 2 lety +1

    It’s a great professor..

  • @mmekalmashhadi5467
    @mmekalmashhadi5467 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Can someone tell me what are the books being read during this course

  • @ying6707
    @ying6707 Před 6 lety +5

    Great professor and students, I tried to imitate the way the professor teaching style and I failed horribly in China

    • @-datnerd-3125
      @-datnerd-3125 Před 5 lety

      You are Chinese?

    • @kaushalagrawal6258
      @kaushalagrawal6258 Před 3 lety

      sorry if I'm wrong, but is it maybe because the students aren't as bright?

    • @xiaoling4320
      @xiaoling4320 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kaushalagrawal6258 it's because the students aren't used to it. Schools are way different in china, its a big adjustments

    • @Guizambaldi
      @Guizambaldi Před 2 lety

      I'm assuming in China they just take notes and memorize it for the test...

  • @macosbyanthony896
    @macosbyanthony896 Před rokem

    1st November 2022 and I am watching them all over again and again...

  • @KarthikeyanRajaseker
    @KarthikeyanRajaseker Před 3 lety +5

    Watching this in 2020/1, amidst the pandemic, its so disturbing to hear so much coughing amongst the students. No wonder why classes/univs are closed.

    • @sheilabright2091
      @sheilabright2091 Před 3 lety +1

      Somebody coughed? I didn’t hear it. 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @carlosmorales2880
    @carlosmorales2880 Před 11 lety +3

    “at least where there is enough, and as good, left in common for others“ this a good locke´s argument against gates wealthy....

  • @Plockhoy
    @Plockhoy Před 3 lety +1

    If a government establishes an economic system which leads to extreme inequality and poverty for many, then it is also taking life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness from the disadvantaged.

  • @SyncopatedNightmares
    @SyncopatedNightmares Před 13 lety +1

    It takes a true Critic to sit through all these videos. Although judging from the ratio of views of said videos tells me that allot of people easily turn to skepticism. He did warn them from the beginning that it would be controversial. It takes the greatest people to know both sides of an argument.

  • @janetyao
    @janetyao Před 3 lety +3

    I also found this on 2020, wish I had known this 10 years ago :) but nevertheless very appreciated!

  • @moribundmurdoch
    @moribundmurdoch Před 3 lety +3

    These lectures are FIRE. Harvard be seeing other people doing lectures and they like "HOLD MY BEER"! HAHAHATEEHEEWHOOHOOWOO哈哈哈哈哈하하하하하ROFL-COPTER MDR!

  • @hemantneeta
    @hemantneeta Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent excellent excellent! Enjoyed every single lecture by him.

  • @darrell3752
    @darrell3752 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you CPA PD 2023

  • @Sternertime
    @Sternertime Před 11 lety +59

    Tywin Lannister, that you?

    • @amyjordan9162
      @amyjordan9162 Před 3 lety

      Congratulations to an excellent professor for expertly guiding a room not just to memorize but to think and articulate themselves.

    • @devious5348
      @devious5348 Před 3 lety +1

      every video you comment that

  • @LieslIncorporated
    @LieslIncorporated Před 10 lety +13

    Many students qualify what they say/think with: "...but that is my opinion." What do they mean exactly, I wonder. That they haven't thought it through and are unsure about it? That they don't want to disagree with others (even though they do)? That they will happily change it if it isn't acceptable in their current surroundings?

    • @Tetraglot
      @Tetraglot Před 5 lety +5

      The point of the course is to understand what certain schools of thought have to say about various issues based on critical thinking and rational arguments. So for example, when Rachel says she has an opinion that Locke might be used to defend the appropriation of Native American lands by English settlers, what she means is that she has a hunch that this is true, but she hasn't yet worked out what argument Locke would make to justify colonization.

    • @xiaoling4320
      @xiaoling4320 Před 3 lety +1

      I think they want to disagree in a polite and civil way.

    • @C3yl0
      @C3yl0 Před 2 lety

      It means that you respect what the other party states and cannot expect that your argumentation be the absolute truth. Under the laws of reasoning in arguments all premises and the conclusion must be either truth or wrong in order to have a good argument. You achieve this by providing evidence and a conclusion that supports that evidence.
      If one of them is false the entire argument is bad and becomes a fallacy. Therefore, that is why you say in my opinion or I believe that….

    • @andrewbowen2837
      @andrewbowen2837 Před 2 lety

      My professor of political theory challenged students who said that. It's a lack of confidence in an answer, it's someone not sticking to their guns, someone timid and not assertive. It's a more recent phenomenon too, he's noticed. A simple solution is to state "I think" before making the claim

  • @remediossantos9847
    @remediossantos9847 Před 3 lety +1

    I love and has been enjoying the discussion, very enriching!

  • @mateiteca1780
    @mateiteca1780 Před 2 měsíci +1

    great thanks for making this so accessible

  • @misssweethearted
    @misssweethearted Před 11 lety +4

    thank you Harvard

  • @cultureclique2173
    @cultureclique2173 Před 3 lety +7

    You wondered why Harvard is so exclusive and expensive? This is the reason 😉

  • @rosy3803
    @rosy3803 Před 2 lety

    CZcams recommended this for some reasons, and I have dived too deep in this serie. Love his humour and voice.

  • @firojmnalam6121
    @firojmnalam6121 Před 19 dny +1

    What are natural resources? Natural resources are materials found in nature that are used to make everything. People use them to meet their needs. For example,we cut down trees to get wood for many purposes such as to build homes, make paper, cook food, make furniture, etc.❤❤❤❤❤

  • @SangNguyen-jc2xg
    @SangNguyen-jc2xg Před 3 lety +3

    Students in my country need these lectures but we chosed to teach Marxism instead. What a great choice.

  • @evracer
    @evracer Před 11 lety +4

    LOVE THIS SERIES!!!!!

  • @stevemorse108
    @stevemorse108 Před 9 lety +1

    Great lecture. I have not been impressed by other Harvard Law lectures but this one was outstanding. My reservations regarding the other ones I listened to were that the works of different authors were pre-digested. I studied philosophy at St. Andrews University and law at Oxford and students were engaged in more autonomous activities; research, analysis and presentations from their firts year.

  • @piseykim3170
    @piseykim3170 Před 3 lety +2

    I have my own online class to join, but this lecture is more interesting to watch!