Juliette Sellgren

The Great Antidote

Society EN ↓ 235 episodes

Adam Smith said, "Science is the great antidote to the poison of enthusiasm and superstition." So join us for interviews with the leading experts on today's biggest issues to learn more about economics, policy, and much more.

Author

Juliette Sellgren

Category

Society

Podcast website

www.adamsmithworks.org

Latest episode

Dec 19, 2025

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Episodes

The Story of The Great Antidote: A Conversation with Veronique de Rugy 19.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail In this final episode of The Great Antidote , I sit down with my mom, Veronique de Rugy (does this feel like a Mr. Big name reveal for some of you?!), to reflect on the podcast and the remarkable journey of the past five years. Together, we revisit how the show started, the ideas that shaped it, the moments that changed me, and the people whose support made everything possible. Th...

How Definitions Change Debates: Freedom, Rights, and Equality with Rebecca Lowe 05.12.2025

Send us Fan Mail Philosopher Rebecca Lowe (Mercatus Center) joins me to do an ideas-only deep dive: what freedom really is, why it matters, how it intersects with equality, and how to tell coercion from choice. We talk charitable argument (steelmanning), the social value of clear definitions, and Rebecca’s agent-focused view of freedom—plus why doing something freely can have value even when the a...

Innovation on Trial: Jack Nicastro on Empower’s Fight to Exist 21.11.2025

Send us Fan Mail Why is D.C. trying to shut down a rideshare app that pays drivers more and charges riders less? Jack Nicastro of Reason joins to unpack Empower’s battle with regulators, what “innovation vs. permission” means in real life, and how markets—not mandates—keep people safe.  Support the show Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update. Follow us on Facebook , Twitter , and Instagram .

Tech Panic, Then and Now: Judge Glock on AI, Regulation, and Real Harms 07.11.2025

Send us Fan Mail Is tech panic new—or just history on repeat? Judge Glock (Manhattan Institute) walks through what past tech scares (lead gasoline, CFCs, TV) got right and wrong, why “ externalities ” matter more than vibes, and how to think about AI regulation today—transparency mandates, liability vs. preclearance, “AI pauses,” and realistic optimism. We end with his own journey from socialism t...

Why Markets Run on Trust: Tawni Ferrarini on Honesty, Reputation, and Decentralization in the Information Age 24.10.2025

Send us Fan Mail Markets don’t work without trust. Tawni Ferrarini joins Juliette Sellgren to explore how honesty and reputation make exchange possible — from medieval trade networks to blockchain and Amazon reviews — and why decentralized trust systems matter in today’s economy of polarization, misinformation, and weak institutions. Support the show Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update. Follo...

Is China Really a Threat? Derek Scissors on China’s Economic Reality 10.10.2025

Send us Fan Mail AEI Economist Derek Scissors joins Juliette Sellgren to unpack the reality of China’s economy, U.S.–China relations, and whether China is truly a threat. From demographics to debt and political control, Scissors explains what’s really driving China’s trajectory, and why it matters for America’s future. Support the show Never miss another AdamSmithWorks update. Follow us on Faceboo...

Empowering the Next Generation: Economics Olympiad & Common Sense Economics 26.09.2025

Send us Fan Mail This week, Juliette Sellgren sits down with Martina Bacik, the 21-year-old founder of the Economics Olympiad that has grown to 120,000 students in 35+ countries, and Tawni Hunt Ferrarini, coauthor of Common Sense Economics . Together they explore why teaching economics early matters, how competitions and books ignite curiosity, and what inspiring young people can teach us about bu...

Why Freedom Matters: Tom Palmer on Authoritarianism and January 6th 12.09.2025

Send us Fan Mail Why does freedom matter? How can we defend it in an age of rising authoritarianism? In this episode, I sit down with Tom Palmer to explore the ideas, virtues, and strategies that keep liberty alive. We cover: ·       The rise of authoritarian movements and global threats to liberty ·       The morality of freedom: how to know what to fight for and when ·       January 6th as a fai...

It’s Not Goodbye, It’s See You in September with Amy Willis 23.05.2025

Send us Fan Mail In this special episode of The Great Antidote , Amy Willis of Liberty Fund takes the mic to interview Juliette Sellgren, the voice behind the show. Together, they reflect on the evolution of the podcast—from its early days to the hundreds of guests it has featured—and how Juliette herself has grown in the process. They talk about what it means to foster curiosity, how Juliette app...

The Limits of Liberty: Buchanan’s Case for Constitutional Rules with Edward Lopez 16.05.2025

Send us Fan Mail What happens when people stop trusting rules—and start rewriting them? In this episode, we are joined by economist Edward Lopez about the life and legacy of James M. Buchanan , the Nobel Prize-winning founder of public choice economics. We begin by unpacking Buchanan’s biography and intellectual roots: what shaped his worldview, who influenced his thinking, and why his work remain...

Why Some States Succeed: Mobility, Markets, and the Freedom to Flourish with Justin Callais 09.05.2025

Send us Fan Mail What makes some states thrive while others trap people in place? And what does it really mean to be free to move, grow, and flourish? In this episode, I talk with economist Justin Callais about the deep connections between personal fulfillment, economic mobility, and institutional quality. We begin with the personal: why real change starts internally, and how self-mastery and agen...

Targeted Incentives: Who Wins, Who Loses, and Why It Persists with Peter Calcagno 02.05.2025

Send us Fan Mail Remember the Amazon HQ2 frenzy? When nearly every U.S. state competed to become Amazon’s next home, offering billions in tax breaks and incentives? I do — I grew up right next door to Crystal City, Virginia, the site Amazon ultimately chose. In this episode, I talk with economist Peter Calcagno about targeted economic incentives—the controversial policy tool that fueled the Amazon...

What Monkeys Teach Us About Economics with Bart Wilson 25.04.2025

Send us Fan Mail What if modern economics has overlooked what truly makes us human? In this episode, Bart Wilson joins us to explore humanomics —an approach to economics that reintroduces meaning, culture, and moral judgment into how we understand economic behavior. We talk about how economists miss the mark by assuming too much about how rational we really are—and too little about what it means t...

The Dissident Project: Firsthand Stories of Life Without Freedom with Grace Bydalek 18.04.2025

Send us Fan Mail What is it like to grow up under a dictatorship? The speakers of The Dissident Project don’t have to wonder — they’ve lived it. And they’ve escaped. In this episode, Grace Bydalek joins us this week to discuss her work with The Dissident Project , which brings survivors of authoritarian regimes into American high schools to share their powerful, firsthand stories. From Cuba and Ve...

Ryan Streeter on the Civitas Institute and Cultural Communities 11.04.2025

Send us Fan Mail Ryan Streeter is the executive director of the Civitas Institute at the University of Texas at Austin. Today, he tells us about his time in the intersection of think tanks, government, and academic communities. We talk about cities, the importance of mobility and growth, how to foster those characteristics, skepticism of government, and living in and creating a community that fost...

Douglas Den Uyl and Douglas Rasmussen on Ayn Rand: What She Gets Right and Where She Goes Too Far 04.04.2025

Send us Fan Mail We’ve talked about objectivism before on the podcast , but that was fairly introductory. Today, for the first time ever, I host two guests on the podcast to discuss the limitations of objectivism and where it fails to depict the good life. We talk about how they got interested in Rand’s thought, how they philosophically dealt with works that were mostly fiction, and where their ph...

Daniel Hannan on Executive and Legislative Power 28.03.2025

Send us Fan Mail Join us today for a fun conversation about all things government, UK and US, with Lord Daniel Hannan of Kingsclere!  Lord Hannan is a member of the House of Lords. Today, we talk about how the U.K.’s legislative is structured, what is up with executive power, the importance of the West and cohesion on the freedom front, and the idiocy of tariffs .  Want to explore more? Yuval Levi...

Bob Ewing on Personal and Professional Success 21.03.2025

Send us Fan Mail Bob Ewing is the founder of the Ewing School and hosts a Substack called Talking Big Ideas (go check it out). He has also gifted me most of the great books that I’ve read.  Today, we talk about how he got started and how many of the great lessons in life are learned. We talk about counter-intuitive ideas, how to find the answers to them, and how to effectively communicate them. He...

Rachel Ferguson on Neighborhood Stabilization and Civil Society 14.03.2025

Send us Fan Mail We talk a lot about civil society and the importance of local, communal networks which hold us up when we’re down and inspire us to be good, striving members of society. But what does that actually look like? How do civil institutions get built, and what does it take?  Today, I’m excited to welcome Rachel Ferguson to the podcast. She is the director of the Free Enterprise Center a...

Jo Jensen on Anxiety, Audiences, and Action 07.03.2025

Send us Fan Mail Jo Jensen is the founder of MovieGoer and she’s currently the SVP of Digital and Entertainment Strategy at Touchdown Strategies, a PR firm. and is an Aspen Institute Civil Society Fellow. Since all fellows have ventures over there, she’s currently writing a book called “America Has a Girlfriend Problem.”   Today, we talk about the anxiety of my generation and how to unplug, attemp...

Peter Van Doren on Universal Basic Income 28.02.2025

Send us Fan Mail What is Universal Basic Income (UBI) and why is it so popular among economists and freedom lovers relative to other types of poverty policy solutions? What does it even mean to “solve a problem” or to “learn” in the social sciences?   Join us today to explore the answers to these two questions and many more. Today, I am excited to welcome on Peter Van Doren to talk about the histo...

Charlotte Thomas on Learning and the Liberal Arts 21.02.2025

Send us Fan Mail Welcome back. Continuing our ongoing exploration of what it means to be an individual living in a liberal society, today I am happy to host Charlotte Thomas to talk to us about what it means to learn and the importance of the liberal arts.    Join us to find out what it truly means to be “educated” and how to do it. A mix of personal, inspirational, and relatable, Professor Thomas...

Brad Wilcox on Get Married 14.02.2025

Send us Fan Mail The most common statistic cited regarding marriage and relationships in the United States is that the 50% of all marriages end in divorce. Another one that is gaining traction is that more Americans than ever before will end up unmarried and alone.  Nobody likes these statistics.  How did we get from the 60s, hairdos and stay at home moms, to a 50% divorce rate and a high probabil...

Cara Rogers Stevens on Thomas Jefferson and Slavery 07.02.2025

Send us Fan Mail Thomas Jefferson was a complicated figure. Essential to the start of our country and the university I attend, he is impossible to ignore. Yet, he held slaves, and at the same time said “all men are created equal.” What’s up with that?! Yet, we need to be able to talk about him. We also need to be able to acknowledge the contributions he has made to the world, while also acknowledg...

Douglas Irwin on Talking about Trade and Commerce 31.01.2025

Send us Fan Mail Trade is all the rage these days. Or, at least, raging about trade is. Today, we unpack what trade and free trade are, and how to talk about it. We also address the abundance of lawyers in trade policy.  Douglas Irwin is a professor of economics at Dartmouth College and the author of several books including Clashing Over Commerce and Against the Tide: An Intellectual History of Fr...

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