Morality and Power from the Individual to the Institution, with Joel Rosenthal

Feb 20, 2025 31 min listen

For the inaugural episode of the Values & Interests podcast, scholar and Carnegie Council president Joel Rosenthal unpacks the complex and often challenging relationship between morality and power in our personal lives and across geopolitics. He highlights the need to reject zero-sum thinking and confront amoral political actors in a moment when the principles of democracy, international cooperation, and humanitarianism are under assault.

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KEVIN MALONEY: Hello, everyone, and welcome to the inaugural episode of the Values & Interests podcast. I am your host, Kevin Maloney, director of communications at Carnegie Council.

Today I am thrilled to be speaking with scholar and Carnegie Council President Joel Rosenthal. In addition to his role leading the Council, Joel is editor-in-chief of Ethics & International Affairs journal and is the author of Righteous Realists: Political Realism, Responsible Power, and American Culture in the Nuclear Age, an examination of political realism and responsible power in post-World War II America.

Joel, welcome to the first episode of Values & Interests. It is an honor to have you here.

JOEL ROSENTHAL: It’s an honor to be here.

KEVIN MALONEY: For our new series titled Values & Interests it is certainly fitting that we have Joel as our first guest.

Joel, I would like to spend our time today unpacking and defining the concepts of values and interests and discussing how these ideas might impact us on a personal, political, and even international level. I am hoping this conversation can provide our listeners with a foundation to engage with future episodes as we hear directly from politicians, tech and business leaders, diplomats, etc., who have spent their careers reckoning with critical ethical questions across geopolitics.

Joel, I want to start by discussing values and interests as both individual and interrelated concepts. As I mentioned, these ideas often manifest at both the personal and then the institutional or system-wide levels, so it would be great to hear a bit about how you understand and view these concepts.

JOEL ROSENTHAL: I think it is very important that you titled the program Values & Interests, not Values or Interests because often, especially in social science or international relations, the two are seen as opposites or in some tension. I think one thing that we can accomplish in these conversations is to explore, as you suggested in the intro, a more complex interrelationship between the two.

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