Mapping the Doctrine of Discovery Podcast Por The Doctrine of Discovery Project arte de portada

Mapping the Doctrine of Discovery

Mapping the Doctrine of Discovery

De: The Doctrine of Discovery Project
Escúchala gratis

The Mapping the Doctrine of Discovery podcast, hosted by Philip P. Arnold and Sandy Bigtree (Mohawk Nation), critically examines the historical and ongoing impacts of the Doctrine of Christian Discovery. Rooted in 15th-century papal edicts, this doctrine provided theological and legal justification for European colonialism, the seizure of Indigenous lands, and the subjugation of non-Christian peoples. The podcast explores how these principles became codified in U.S. law, from Johnson v. M’Intosh (1823) to Sherrill v. Oneida (2005), and continue to underpin contemporary legal, religious, and corporate frameworks. Featuring discussions with scholars, legal experts, and Indigenous leaders, the series sheds light on how this doctrine fuels environmental destruction, economic exploitation, and cultural genocide while also highlighting Indigenous resistance and calls for justice, land restoration, and the repudiation of these colonial structures.


This podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en.


Learn more: podcast.doctrineofdiscovery.org.

© 2026 Mapping the Doctrine of Discovery Podcast presented by Indigenous Values Initiative and American Indian Law Alliance
Educación Espiritualidad Mundial
Episodios
  • Remembering The Teacher: Charles H. Long (Part 1)
    Feb 23 2026

    The story begins with a mentor called simply “the teacher.” From a first lecture on sky gods to late-night phone calls and a leather coat the color of memory, we trace how Charles H. Long shaped minds through myth, method, and a rare musicality of thought. We share how he taught us to start with a text, a myth, a story—and then keep going until we hit the pre-logos ground where creation actually happens.

    We unpack three core lessons that still unsettle and inspire. First, creation myths are not artifacts; they are tools for making new worlds. Long showed how societies encode creativity in sound and gesture, how ritual returns words to silence so meaning can breathe. Second, this country is racist to the core. Drawing on Vico and Herder, we explore why “origins cue the structure,” how founding potencies persist beneath renovations, and why thinking is a form of action that disrupts the clever priests of national ritual. Third, hope for a new creation myth lies with the colonized—the “colonizer watchers” who know the resources born in the tragic encounter and can turn them toward a future for everyone.

    You’ll step with us into the residue of a life: yellow legal pads, nicotine-stained spines, file cabinets, and a shed that feels like an eschatological portal. We talk about improvisation as a scholarly ethic, Long as a bricoleur who arranged books by living adjacency, not rigid taxonomy. We hear tributes from Mexico and remember the laughter, the smoke, and the sly looks that signified more than footnotes ever could. We ask who gets to decide what counts as East and West and why a theology that listens—to screams, moans, chants, and jazz—can break the back of words and set new language free.

    If you’re drawn to religious studies, decolonial thought, Black hermeneutics, or theopoetics, this journey offers a rigorous and human portrait of a thinker who kept thought alive. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves big ideas, and leave a review with the lesson that stayed with you most.

    Support the show

    View the transcript and show notes at podcast.doctrineofdiscovery.org. Learn more about the Doctrine of Discovery on our site DoctrineofDiscovery.org.

    Más Menos
    40 m
  • Inside The Seven Mountains Mandate And The Rise Of Turning Point USA
    Feb 16 2026

    Power rarely announces itself as a plan. Here, it does. We dive into the Seven Mountains mandate with Matthew Boedy, tracing how Turning Point USA evolved from a campus brand into a nationwide movement designed to seize cultural institutions—education, government, religion, family, business, media, and entertainment. Instead of winning hearts one by one, the strategy aims to install a committed minority atop the systems that shape everyday life.

    We unpack the tactics: a tight messaging playbook that turns complex theology into viral lines, prosperity narratives that double as fundraising engines, and a pipeline that starts in high school chapters and extends into church networks. Bodie breaks down the budgets, donor ecosystems, and conference circuits that blend worship with political training, alongside the professor watch lists and school board campaigns that frame universities and the humanities as corrupting forces rather than civic goods.

    From our perspective, the doctrine of discovery offers a crucial lens: centuries ago, Christian power targeted Indigenous identity, family, and land to rewire society from the top down. The same drive to control institutions resurfaces now under a new banner. We connect these threads to the UK’s Revolution 250 project and the overlooked influence of Haudenosaunee governance on democratic thought, arguing that honest history isn’t a luxury—it’s a civic defense.

    Where does this leave us? With a long game. Defending democracy means building majority movements grounded in free speech, pluralism, and resilient institutions. It means teaching democracy across disciplines, protecting spaces of inquiry, and telling fuller stories that expand our shared civic imagination. If you care about universities, local school boards, independent media, or the simple right to disagree in public without fear, this conversation offers tools and urgency in equal measure.

    If this resonated, subscribe, share it with a friend who cares about democracy, and leave a review to help more people find the show. Your voice helps strengthen the institutions we all depend on.

    Support the show

    View the transcript and show notes at podcast.doctrineofdiscovery.org. Learn more about the Doctrine of Discovery on our site DoctrineofDiscovery.org.

    Más Menos
    57 m
  • S06E06: Sacred Waters: Trauma of the Erie Canal
    Feb 12 2026

    A celebrated waterway can also be a wound. We open the Erie Canal’s familiar legend and find the story most of us never learned: how a triumph of engineering cut a dam through Haudenosaunee homelands, accelerated dispossession, and rewrote law, faith, and landscape in its wake. With Haudenosaunee leaders and scholars, we move from a condensed Thanksgiving Address into original instructions about water, winds, and the seven generations ethic, then confront the doctrine of Christian discovery—from papal bulls to Johnson v. M’Intosh—still echoing through U.S. property law.

    Along the towpath, we trace the canal’s hidden cargo: land speculation, conflicts of interest, alcohol and other “mind changers,” and the quiet burial of treaty promises like Canandaigua’s “forever.” We connect those ruptures to the burned-over district, where new American religions—Latter-day Saints, Millerites, spiritualists, Shakers—flared as migrants grappled with dislocation and meaning. The canal didn’t just move grain; it moved imaginations, laws, and borders, often at the expense of communities who had long practiced diplomacy through the Great Law of Peace and the Two Row Wampum’s commitment to travel side by side without interference.

    We also spotlight the Skä·noñh—Great Law of Peace Center’s work to flip the narrative on unceded Onondaga Nation territory, centering Indigenous values and living governance rather than artifacts. This is not nostalgia; it’s a practical invitation to measure progress by future faces, to see water as kin, and to treat treaties as living commitments. Press play to rethink what the Erie Canal made—and unmade—and to imagine a path from commemoration to repair. If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find these stories.

    Support the show

    View the transcript and show notes at podcast.doctrineofdiscovery.org. Learn more about the Doctrine of Discovery on our site DoctrineofDiscovery.org.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 36 m
Todas las estrellas
Más relevante
The Doctrine of Discovery is an extremely important but convoluted part of the History of not only the United States, but any people group that was touched by European Conquest and the "Age of Discovery"! The Information in this podcast is at the 30,000 ft level, so I am excited to get deeper into the series to uncover the depths and the Unsettling Nature of the Doctrine and all the Ideas that have roots in the Doctrine. Conquest, Manifest Destiny, Westward Expansion, Eurocentrism, White Supremacy, and now Christian Nationalism are all byproducts of the Doctrine and all have deep ties to the Doctrine of Discovery! The US Founding Documents (Declaration of Independence and the Constitution) all have certain elements of Christian Discovery and are full of the byproducts of this distorted worldview. The biggest challenge in all of this is that once you are familiar with the elements of Discovery you see how embedded it is and how interwoven throughout Western Culture, Socially, Politically, Physiologically, and even Religiously, and until you are acquainted with The Subtle Elements, you are completely blind and ignorant of the real world impact it has on most Indigenous and Minority Communities to this day! Thank You For This Podcast!

This Information Needs To Hit the Mainstream Media

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.

This Podacast is EXTRAORDINARY for how it opens our souls and minds to the importance of the understanding the Doctrine of Discovery. Carrasco and Long taught us to have Great Regard for those who Eliade called on us to unite with in a Movement towards a New Humanism. This Podcast changes my life because it clarifies who I am as a person who left Academia to enable the Maya to teach me who they are as a People, a Nation of Indigenous Americans. This conversation should be listened all those who study all of us who live in this struggle to re-form and re-shape the True Story of the Conquest, Colonization, and continued Settlement of Native American lands. This is a vital conversation as are all of these life transfor.ing podcasts of Sandy Bigtree and Phil Arnold on the Doctrine of Christian Discovery and the brutal aftermath we all continue to live in these Américas. The wisdom and genius of Davíd Carrasco is unparalleled in their being articulated in straightforward human ways. I am grateful for this work you are bringing for through these conversation. I hope they will be listened to by many others.

Great Regard for Davíd Carrasco and Charles Long

Se ha producido un error. Vuelve a intentarlo dentro de unos minutos.