Andrew Sullivan’s Facts
by Philip JefferyThe journalist has treated empiricism as the highest political virtue. But what about idealism and love?
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The journalist has treated empiricism as the highest political virtue. But what about idealism and love?
Continue Reading »
Small, religiously-affiliated liberal arts colleges do a far better job of preparing the minds and souls of students than the Ivies. Continue Reading »
Alzheimer’s provides a glimpse into eternity, when all of our souls will stand alone before God. Continue Reading »
Being elite now means holding a particular set of ideas, not a set of virtues. Virtue is signaled, not acquired. Continue Reading »
Anna Wierzbicka joins the podcast to discuss her new book, What Christians Believe: The Story of God and People in Minimal English. Continue Reading »
Regulation of social media companies is a good idea, but the wisest, most plausible, and also most effective option is not law, but stigma. Continue Reading »
In a very real sense, we are all double or triple agents—such are the consequences of the Fall—and it is this condition that gives the best “spy fiction” such resonance. Continue Reading »
Cartesian mind–body dualism undergirds the rhetoric of abortionists. Continue Reading »
Monsignor Stephen Rossetti joins the podcast to discuss his new book, Diary of an American Exorcist: Demons, Possession, and the Modern-Day Battle Against Ancient Evil. Continue Reading »
The silencing of conservative voices in political science is an assault on free inquiry into the nature of just governance. Continue Reading »