Columbia’s Crumbling Core
by David AcevedoThe Great Books will live on one way or another, but if recent trends are any indication, there will be no Core Bicentennial to celebrate. Continue Reading »
The Great Books will live on one way or another, but if recent trends are any indication, there will be no Core Bicentennial to celebrate. Continue Reading »
The monstrous regiment of administrators in modern universities could learn a thing or two from medieval models of university governance. Continue Reading »
A controversy at my university opened my eyes to how many of my colleagues have been indoctrinated into woke dogma. Continue Reading »
The life of the mind can be a precious, beautiful thing, but divorced from the physical, it leads inexorably to corruption. Continue Reading »
The silencing of conservative voices in political science is an assault on free inquiry into the nature of just governance. Continue Reading »
The goal of today’s academy is an authoritarian state of intellectual conformity in which the conquerors alone rule. Continue Reading »
We sit halfway between academia and the public square, trying to merge the best of both. With your help, we can continue. Continue Reading »
If a work of literary art tells a unique and critical truth, then it is good—worth giving oneself to—and its beauty has not misled us. Continue Reading »
Emma Maggie Solberg's The Virgin Whore spends far too much time taking bad jokes and strained wordplay too seriously, and too little time taking basic theology seriously enough. Continue Reading »
If Baker and Bilbro succeed, students and professors will emerge believing that the goal is not to obtain a “good job” far away but to become a rooted, whole person. Continue Reading »