In Our Declaration: A Reading of the Declaration of Independence in Defense of Equality, Danielle Allen provides an informative, line-by-line, sometimes word-by-word, philosophical interpretation of the founders’ document. Allen offers the case that the Declaration of Independence is a syllogism for political equality, rather than a manifesto of unlinked assertions. “Premise 1,” she writes: Continue Reading »
New YorkAngo-Catholic Modernism: Writing Religious Beauty in the Modern Era Saturday, January 17The Thomistic Institute is hosting Julia Yost for the next installment in “The Art of the Beautiful” lecture series. In Search of the Human Face January 16-18 New York Encounter is a . . . . Continue Reading »
Nuns are having a moment in the media. Lifetime television recently conducted extensive studies to identify the unmet desires of its viewers and found that what young women want ismore Christian programming. The network responded by creating the reality series The Sisterhood: Becoming Nuns to follow five surprisingly relatable young womenStacey, Claire, Christie, Eseni, and Francescain their discernment to be Catholic Carmelite nuns. Continue Reading »
The reactions to the death of Leelah Alcorn are emblematic of our age and raise many important legal, moral, and cultural questions. Continue Reading »
In his Washington Post column today, E.J. Dionne pays tribute to the late Mario Cuomo. It is right and fitting that he should do so, since what Cuomo was to politics, Dionne is to journalism: a man constantly reminding us he is Catholic while he counsels and supports the violation of central tenets of the faith, at least where one of those central tenetsthe sanctity of lifeis concerned. Continue Reading »