We all sighed and shook our heads at Pat Robertson’s ridiculous assertion that the Haiti earthquake was caused because the brave slaves who rebelled against France back in the 19th Century had “made a pact with the devil.” But we should be just as dismissive of Danny Glover, . . . . Continue Reading »
Over on the Evangel blog, Kevin DeYoung has one of the most offensive posts I’ve ever read: Offendedness is just about the last shared moral currency in our country. And, Im sorry, but its really annoying. We dont discuss ideas or debate arguments, we try to figure out who . . . . Continue Reading »
In the Chronicles of Higher Education , Michael Roth, a humanities professor at Wesleyan University, explains how the notion of critical thinking has devolved into the game of just being critical of whatever someone says: A common way to show that one has sharpened one's . . . . Continue Reading »
First, the good news: According to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Americans, at least as a group, may have reached their peak of obesity. Now the bad news: The plateau might just suggest that weve reached a biological limit to how obese people could get. . . . . Continue Reading »
Tens of thousands of Haitians have already died in the wake of the devastating earthquake on Tuesday, and tens of thousands more are threatened by disease and a lack of food and clean water. We thought this would be an appropriate moment to revisit David B. Hart’s essay from the March 2005 . . . . Continue Reading »
The Supreme Court blocks the Prop. 8 trial from being aired , and Professor Orin Kerr offers some interesting thoughts on the decision here . Professor Matthew J. Franck on the health care reform bill and conservative “judicial activism.” The Supremes may know the law, but the NFL? . . . . Continue Reading »
So here we have Mr. Smith responding to Mr. Anderson. All of a sudden I feel like I should say, “Missster ANDersssson ,” in that strange diction of Hugo Weaving as Agent Smith in The Matrix. (I’m pulling off my mirrored shades as I do so.) But we have more . . . . Continue Reading »
Wow. It isn’t too often that the Chronicle of Higher Education echoes SHS, but an article on environmentalism becoming a religion comes very close. From the article “Green Guilt” by Stephen T Asma (my emphasis):Instead of religious sins plaguing our conscience, we now have . . . . Continue Reading »
The place of ethics as informing law is quite controversial. But ahead of that is the search for common language about on the subject. For instance, the principle of pragmatism can be quite confusing. For instance, Jason Kuznicki provides a useful decision tree on the subject of . . . . Continue Reading »