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Locke’s Nature

Joe , no doubt you’re right about Lewis, who explicitly compared modern science to demonology. However, I think you misread Locke, whose views of labor and property are deeply scriptural and well within the mainstream of historic theology—-especially the mainstream Anglicanism of the . . . . Continue Reading »

Word of the Day: Waters (proper name)

You’d expect that somebody named Waters used to live beside some waters, just as somebody named Rivers used to live beside a river. It ain’t so. Just pronounce the name Walters as if you were from Phiwadewphia: Waowters. The dark English “l” was swawwowed up in . . . . Continue Reading »

In Defense of Chesterton

Treating G.K. Chesterton as an authority whose aphorisms can be quoted for any purpose other than amusement is, as  Elliot Milco maintains , silly. One might as well treat Edward Lear as an authority. (Though an exception should be made for literary matters, an area where he wrote with . . . . Continue Reading »

First Links — 12.20.12

Klaus Obenauer on the SSPX Situation Pater Edmund, Sancrucensis The “Blog Mob” and Journalism Joseph Rago, The New Criterion Continuing to Argue Against Abortion Roberta Bayer, Front Porch Republic Augustine, the Pelagians, and the Free Market [video] William T. Cavanaugh, Victoria . . . . Continue Reading »

The Significance of the Bork Battle

Twenty-five years ago, on July 1, 1987, President Reagan nominated Robert Bork to the U.S. Supreme Court, to replace the retiring Justice Lewis Powell. One hundred fourteen days later, on October 23, 1987, the U.S. Senate declined to give its consent to his appointment, by a vote of forty-two . . . . Continue Reading »

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