A Divine Comedy We Can Feel in the Pulse
by Jason M. BaxterWe need to realize that Dante is constantly code-switching from a classical in-the-head way of speaking to one that is more in-the-blood and in-the-nerves. Continue Reading »
We need to realize that Dante is constantly code-switching from a classical in-the-head way of speaking to one that is more in-the-blood and in-the-nerves. Continue Reading »
Nominalism has won, and politics has thus become preoccupied with language. Continue Reading »
To speak well of God, we must not conform ourselves to the rapidly changing fashions of the woke world, nor should we project those fashions onto God lest we fall into idolatry. Continue Reading »
The battle over pronouns on social media and in public spaces, as trivial as it seems, is actually of great importance. Continue Reading »
In recent decades, one of the most popular terms of political abuse has been “fascist.” Continue Reading »
We have no “constitutional crisis.” We have no “normative crisis.” One could, however, make the case that we have a “credibility crisis.” Continue Reading »
Murray’s poems pack an impossible amount of meaning into short lines. Continue Reading »
If we can’t find a word to describe our situation, we have scarcely begun to understand it. Continue Reading »
The unfinished memoirs of Dietrich von Hildebrand and Sebastian Haffner should be a warning to us not to make any thoughtless Nazi comparisons. Continue Reading »
The sooner parents and teachers coach their charges out of the “like” disease, the more their charges will grow and prosper. Continue Reading »