Categories: history

Who Was The “Real” Adolph Eichmann?

With Neal Bascom

Despite his trial in Jerusalem and his subsequent execution, Eichmann, who was in charge of the Holocaust of European Jewry, remains an enigmatic figure. Was he merely a bureaucrat “following orders” or was he an enthusiastic mass-murderer? One of the best book-length studies of Eichmann was by Neal Bascom. Here he is in a full discussion from 2009.

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The Descent Of Man

With Robert Martin and James Phillips

Is Homo Sapiens directly descended from some prior species? If so, it would probably be “Homo Neanderthalis.” That is the question with which this fine discussion from 2004 begins. One of the participants is a biological scientist and the other is engaged in archeological anthropology. Both have spent their careers trying to track the long geneology of our species.

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A Strange Biography Of Ronald Reagan

With Edmund Morris and Joseph Morris

“Strange” because of its fictional beginning, but full of revelations from the Pulitzer Prize-winning author, Edmund Morris. He is joined in this conversation from 1999 by Joe Morris. The two Morrises are not related except in their shared and striking competence as political historians.

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The Other Christian Gospels

With Elaine Pagels and Bart Ehrman
The four canonical gospels are not the only ones. Recent research and archeology have uncovered gospels attributed to Thomas, Mary, Judas and others. These gospel found in 1945 at Nag Hamadi in Egypt suggest that in the early centuries a great competition raged between what we now know as Christianity and an earlier and quite different form: gnostic Christianity. These matters were fully discussed with us in 2007 by two great biblical scholars, Bart Ehrman and Elaine Pagels.
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Battles That Might Have Changed History

With John Votaw, John Lynn, Paul Kern

What if the Confederacy had won at Gettysburg? That and similiar questions always arise as one ponders the mysteries of history. The Gettysburg counterfactual and others are examined here in a discussion in 2001 featuring three military historians.

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