Continuing the debate over fertility and decadence that Matthew Schmitz has mentioned on this blog, Samuel Goldman suggests that underlying the low birth rates of wealthy nations is not just selfishness but a very high estimation of the requirements of parenting. The occasion for his . . . . Continue Reading »
I’ve learned much about logic in the week and a half since my previous post here . In that little missive, I wrote about a Peter Kreeft essay that I had trouble making sense of. Kreeft argued that symbolic logic “has serious social, moral, and even sexual implications, . . . . Continue Reading »
Not long after the shooting in Newtown, I happened to be reading a biography of Neal Cassady, who was muse to both Jack Kerouac in On the Road and Visions of Cody and several poems by Allen Ginsberg. The book tells one story of Cassady and Ginsberg visiting writer William Burroughs at his . . . . Continue Reading »
George Weigel on Christmas as a cure for cynicism and irony : There is neither cynicism nor irony in Marys reception of the angel Gabriel and her acceptance of the divine invitation to become the Theotokos , the God-bearer or Mother of God. There was a . . . . Continue Reading »
Some years ago I published a piece at Catholic Thing about the conversion of Robert Bork to the Catholic Church. I recall on that day, which I was honored to attend, Father C. J. McCloskey said Bork had run almost the entire gamut of sacraments; baptism, first confession, first communion, . . . . Continue Reading »
Reuters photographer Sheng Li reports on “death experience therapy” at Ruoshui Mental Health Clinic in Shenyang, China: Then I met 42-year-old Mr. Yang, who had booked his therapy appointment for that day. During the psychological preparation talk, I learned that Yang had lost his . . . . Continue Reading »
I’m inhabiting a particularly unpleasant circle of grading hell at the moment, but a series of student papers has given me the opportunity to escape for a moment of throughtful reflection. The assignment—given to sophomores in a core course—required students to connect the . . . . Continue Reading »
The word is commonly but inaccurately spelled forego, but those are really two separate and unrelated verbs. The fore in forego means first or before, so that a foregone conclusion is a conclusion that comes before any . . . . Continue Reading »
Robert H. Bork, lion of a legal minority that thought the judiciary should show due deference to the will of the popular majority, is dead at eighty-five years of age. Bork was a frequent contributor to these pages, never more famously than in ” The End of Democracy: Our Judicial Oligarchy . . . . Continue Reading »
More on Woodrow Wilson and Calvinism Matthew J. Tuininga, Patheos Newtown: A Very American Tragedy Alex Massie, Prospect Thomas Cromwell: Brewer’s Boy Made Good Derek Wilson, History Today Christians and Radicals in China Jillian Kay Melchior, The Corner Another HHS Loss in Court The Becket . . . . Continue Reading »