History’s Crisis, Europe’s Problem, Our Future
by Carl R. Trueman A new book on the writing of history helps explain the breakdown of contemporary political discourse.
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A new book on the writing of history helps explain the breakdown of contemporary political discourse.
Continue Reading »
Three-Parent Babies to be Born in Britain
Sarah Knapton, The Telegraph
Catholics Fear Campaign of Church Attacks in India
Nida Najar & Suhasini Raj, The New York Times
Whom Do You Follow?
Jeffrey J. Maciejewski, America
Terrence Malick’s Ambitious ‘Voyage of Time’ Will Be Released in Two Versions
Kate Erbland, The Dissolve
I follow both David Gibson, a reporter for Religion News Service, and Mollie Hemingway, a writer for the Federalist, on Twitter. Like many of those who do, I have noticed a pattern in which Hemingway sends out a tweet that is not addressed to Gibson to which he nonetheless replies—not to . . . . Continue Reading »
New YorkMarriage: The Poetry of Every Day February 10Rabbi Sacks, Professor of Judaic Thought at New York University and the Kressel and Eprat Family University Professor at Yeshiva University, will deliver this lecture at 7 pm at the Catholic Center at NYU. Film, the Aesthetics of Death, and the . . . . Continue Reading »
Measles is back. In recent weeks, an outbreak that originated in Southern California has spread across the nation. Public health officials seem confident the outbreak is explained, in large part, by the fact that significant numbers of parents no longer have their children vaccinated. These parents rely on exemptions that state laws, like California’s, provide for parents who object to mandatory vaccination programs. Perhaps surprisingly, the resistance is disproportionately high in wealthier, better educated, bluer neighborhoods, the sort of communities that pride themselves on their enlightened, progressive outlook. Continue Reading »
Latin Lives
Anthony Grafton, The Nation
Free Speech Ranking Find Restrictions at 80 per cent of Universities
Chris Havergal, The Times Higher Education
Christ, Simeon, and the “Sides” of History
David G. Bonagura, Jr., The Catholic Thing
I continue to ponder the discussion in First Things of the civic role of religion in America. It is a worthwhile discussion, though admittedly fraught with so many challenges that it becomes difficult to deal with them from any single viewpoint. To take but one example, one might consider Rod . . . . Continue Reading »
Political correctness is gelding liberalism, as Jonathan Chait recently observed. A punitive spirit of denunciation haunts pretty much any conversation among liberals. We’ve seen it for a generation in higher education. Continue Reading »
Yuval Noah Harari: the theatre of terror
Yuval Noah Harari, The Guardian
Teach or Perish
Jacques Berlinerblau, The Chronicle of Higher Education
Is the Distracted Life Worth Living?
Jay Tolson, The Hedgehog Review
While Stephen Sizer has shown himself ready to apologize, he has been unwilling to alter his behavior. It is past time for his church to stop allowing him to plead carelessness as his excuse.
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