Give to help Chris make Truce!\nNathan Leopold and Richard Loeb were wealthy young men in the early 1920s. They lived in big homes in Chicago and had world-class educations. They were both pushed hard academically, and Richard was sexually abused as a child. Both graduated early from high school and college. The two were an odd pairing. Nathan was quiet and awkward, not particularly handsome. Richard was gregarious and outgoing, good-looking... and a psychopath.\nNathan loved Richard, and the two sometimes had sex with each other. Richard realized he could control Nathan by trading intimacy for criminal activity. They started with typical juvenile delinquent behavior. Soon, though, Richard wanted more. He considered himself a master criminal, someone too smart to get caught. He and Nathan were exposed to the ideas of Friedrich Nietzsche. Nietzsche wrote that the ultimate purpose of humanity was to evolve into what he called the ubermensch or superman. Leopold and Loeb thought they were that evolved human. Therefore, they should be able to plot and execute the murder of a young boy without ever getting caught.\nOnly, they were so bad at it that it took very little time to pin it on them. Only the brilliance of Clarence Darrow, the country's most prominent defense attorney, could save their lives.\nIn this episode, we're joined by Candace Fleming. She's the author of the book Murder Among Friends about the crime.\n\nThe version of Also Sprach Zarathustra used in this episode is courtesy of the Creative Commons License and was produced by Kevin MacLeod.\nSources:\n\n\nMurder Among Friends by Candace Fleming\n\n\nHelpful article on the Houston Symphony's website about Also Sprach Zarathustra\n\n\n\nArticle about what Nietzsche meant by "God is dead"\n\n\nFull text of Also Sprach Zarathustra\n\n\n\nHelpful video about Nietzsche's work\n\n\nSmithsonian article about Leopold and Loeb\n\nWilliam Jennings Bryan's closing arguments of the Scopes trial\n\nClarence Darrow's closing arguments of the Leopold and Loeb trial\n\n\nDiscussion Questions:\n\nNow that you know what the song Also Sprach Zarathustra is about, does it change your opinion of the piece?\n\nDo you think Nietzsche was right to worry about what would happen after Christianity took a back seat to world events? What should have been our response?\n\nWith this little bit we covered about Nietzsche today, what do you think of his work? Can you see why it makes Chris nervous just to mention it in an episode?\n\nDo you see the connection between evolution and superman?\n\nWere people like Darrow and Bryan right to be concerned about young people learning Nietzsche's philosophy?\n\n\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices