Join a small group discussion about freedom and responsibility, one in a series of round table conversations in connection with the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
New Yorkers live amid a tangle of crises that test both imagination and resolve: trust has frayed, civic faith is waning, attention is scattered, and loneliness runs deep. Freedom and Its Futures begins from this reality. We’ll ask what it takes to keep freedom alive when its foundations feel uncertain—and what tools, technologies, and practices might sustain the liberal arts and liberal democracy in the years ahead.
This is the second of four conversations that offer space to reflect on freedom’s many meanings, to listen across difference, and to imagine what might come next. Each session invites open, thoughtful dialogue—without judgment, jargon, or the friction that too often replaces genuine exchange. Using short readings and images from the past and present, participants consider how trust, empathy, and imagination can be renewed through conversation. These aren’t lectures but shared inquiries, where curiosity replaces certainty and understanding begins with listening.
At a moment when public life can feel brittle, Freedom and Its Futures offers something both timely and enduring: a chance to practice the habits of democracy. As the nation enters its 250th year, the series reminds us that the humanities are not just about books or history—they are the beating heart of a free society, where reflection, reason, and moral imagination still matter.
This session will consider "Ressentiment and the Crisis of Trust."
Ressentiment—deeper than resentment—arises when powerlessness turns frustration inward, breeding suspicion and grievance. This conversation explores how that mood shapes civic life today and how empathy, recognition, and shared truth might restore trust across a divided society.
Registrants will receive the short reading by email should they want to read it ahead of the program.