Debate scholarships paid for a good part of my college education. Learning to make a coherent argument, buttress it using credible research, and defend it extemporaneously have been invaluable skills over the years. But Im now wondering if my years of labor in the vineyards of logic and evidence were worthwhile… . Continue Reading»
Earlier this month, during a homily at morning Mass, Pope Francis gift for succinct but vivid instruction was on full display: I dont know why, but there is a dark joy in gossiping, he said. We slip into gossip, making the object of our chatter merchandise to be bartered. … Continue Reading»
What Does Bowdoin Teach? Thats the title of the 360-page report that my colleague Michael Toscano and I published on April 3. Coincidence gave us a nice round number of pages, but it was indeed our plan to compass Bowdoin College. We set out to create something new: a full 360-degree picture of a liberal arts education … Continue Reading»
We live in an era of unparalleled economic freedom. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, free markets have ruled without much in the way of resistance. As a consequence, for the most part our political problems now involve coming to terms with the global triumph of capitalism… . Continue Reading»
All parties in the recent debate here at First Things agree that lifelong marriage between one man and one woman is the only morally appropriate context for a sexual relationship. But while Joshua Gonnerman, Eve Tushnet, Melinda Selmys, and Wesley Hill all argue that the “gay” label can be appropriated by Christians, Daniel Mattson warns us … Continue Reading»
You cannot have poetry without form, just as you cannot have prose fiction without narrative structure or drama without dialogue or action. And what creates form in poetry, after the constraint of a central idea, event, or image, is sound. The way that sound shapes poetry has generally become less evident as poets have discarded regular meter and end rhyme … Continue Reading»
Thanks to tremendous advances in biotechnological prowess, living human bodies”or rather their constituent parts and biological functions”are increasingly being looked upon as valuable commercial commodities. Human eggs (oocytes) are a prime example. Ounce for ounce, ova are surely the most valuable product in the world … Continue Reading»
They think the way you solve things is by electing the right people. Its nice to elect the right people, but that isnt how you solve things. The way you solve things is by making it politically profitable for the wrong people to do the right thing. -Milton Friedman In the 2012 election, right-leaning super PACs spent over $290 million opposing Obama … Continue Reading»
The subtlety of the Second Vatican Councils statement in Nostra Aetate that the Catholic Church rejects nothing of what is true and holy in [other] religions has often been missed by Catholics on both sides of the ecclesial aisle. … Continue Reading»
The recent papal interregnum and conclave underscored the importance of re-forming, and reforming, the College of Cardinals. As configured on February 28 (when Benedict XVIs abdication took effect), the College was a somewhat strange electorate, albeit one that produced a striking result. … Continue Reading»