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Nature exhibits finality and purpose in its various activities, and chance is not, indeed cannot be, an explanation for this activity.
Poetry establishes the polis, the ordered community, because poetry teaches men their “actual desires,” the desires that must be accommodated in any lasting and beneficial order. The second in a two-part series.
The conditions that inspired "The Scarlet Letter" highlight the gap between public employment and civic motives.
The tenure system sustains many of the problems in contemporary higher ed.
In order to curtail human sex trafficking successfully, we must take seriously that street gangs are a large part of the problem.
In a new bestseller, David Brooks contends that the “new sciences” point to the incredible reality and importance of old-fashioned things like education, character formation, and virtue.
With extremism losing momentum, there is hope that the Muslim Middle East is beginning once again to embrace the liberalism of early 20th-century Islam.
Public recognition of unions contrary to human flourishing will hurt, not help, the happiness of those who participate in them.
What exceptionless moral norms are we willing to discard for the sake of a good cause?
We need a healthcare law that is not only pro-life but that also addresses our healthcare system’s persistent problems and looming challenges.
We shouldn’t worry about America becoming an empire—a new book explains that it has been one for a long, long time.
Re-examining the essential characteristics of marriage.
Can Thomistic art theory provide an alternative to postmodern “Neutralism”?
Promoting a sexually permissive pop-culture in the Muslim world gets the true foundations of ordered liberty wrong. In defining our ideals by rejecting our enemy’s, we go from one extreme to another, and miss the virtuous mean.
A recent series by James Matthew Wilson highlights the connection between conservatism and beauty.
Why we shouldn't listen to calls to get rid of the filibuster.
The choice the country faces in health-care reform is a stark one with profound ramifications: What process will best deliver affordable quality health-care to all Americans, a government-driven or market-driven one?
In the wake of the financial crisis, market reform will require moral reform.
It is no simple matter to care for aging parents. But in the face of an uncertain future, concrete steps can be taken to make an unusual option more attractive.
Popular music shapes us and our culture, but not only through its lyrics.
The Constitution’s no-establishment rule does protect the liberty of religious conscience, but not in the way, or ways, that we usually think.
Recent calls for the widespread use of cognitive enhancements are based on a narrow, mechanistic view of what it means to be human.
With political realities preventing Obama from satisfying his left-wing base on economic and foreign policy questions, look for Obama to give the left the barn on social issues. And expect him to do so in significant measure through the courts.
If opposition to abortion is not necessarily tied to a religious worldview, pro-life advocates may see victory in the culture wars.