Beyond the Text: The Intellectual Historian's Podcast

Beyond the Text: Edmund Burke and the Moral Imagination

• Samuel Woodall

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đź’­ Can feeling and imagination preserve what reason alone cannot? In this episode, Jack Thomson explores the political vision of Edmund Burke and the enduring power of moral imagination.

Through Reflections on the Revolution in France, we trace Burke’s defence of order, tradition, and inherited wisdom — the idea that society is not constructed by abstract reason alone, but shaped by custom, sentiment, and historical continuity. This episode examines how Burke articulates a vision of politics grounded in prudence, prejudice (in its proper sense), and the accumulated experience of generations.

🎧 In this episode:

  •  Burke’s Reflections and the politics of moral imagination 
  •  The defence of tradition against abstract rationalism 
  •  Society as a living inheritance rather than a constructed system 
  •  The moral and emotional foundations of political order 

This is part of our Heritage Series, tracing the evolution of conservative and traditionalist thought — from Plato and Augustine of Hippo to Joseph de Maistre and beyond — exploring how ideas shape the foundations of Western civilisation.

📚 Hosted by the History of Ideas Reading Club (University of Buckingham)
 đźŽ™ď¸Ź Produced by Beyond the Text: The Intellectual Historian’s Podcast
🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts & all major platforms

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