Minimally Conscious Feel Pain

A study has found that people with serious cognitive impairments who are conscious—people who are routinely dehydrated to death in most states—feel pain. From the story: Severely brain-damaged patients in a “minimally conscious state” may still feel pain and require . . . . Continue Reading »

“What’s Faith Got to Do with It?”

No, Tina Turner isn’t coming out with a new single (as far as we know). But Msgr. Lorenzo Albacete of Communion & Liberation is giving a series of lectures at Columbia here in New York with that title. The topics and dates are as follows: FAITH AND POLITICS: Do they mix? Wed., October 15, . . . . Continue Reading »

Postmodern Conservatism and Religion, Part II

In reponse to excellent questions and insights regarding my previous post, I’ve decided to offer a sequel. While Jim is certainly right that the whole of the Enlightenment can’t be reduced to its anti-religious premises, and there are surely important thinkers who don’t fit . . . . Continue Reading »

The Arena

Speaking of Chesterton poems, “The Arena” is my favorite, and is especially appropriate for this Fall, when the “Gladiators of God” (4-1) seem to be rising again: There uprose a golden giant On the gilded house of Nero Even his far-flung flaming shadow and his image swollen . . . . Continue Reading »