Wheat and Tares, Saints and Frauds
by Raymond J. de SouzaGood and evil are so intertwined that sometimes it is hard to recognize which is which. Continue Reading »
Good and evil are so intertwined that sometimes it is hard to recognize which is which. Continue Reading »
The report from the Commission on Unalienable Rights is a call for thought, reflection, debate—and action toward making the human rights field as relevant as it once was. Continue Reading »
Bostock struck at the very root of the law in denying the necessary way in which human beings by nature must be constituted. Continue Reading »
In a regime of automation, the spirited man comes to seem dangerous, “maladaptive,” “a bug in the system.” Continue Reading »
Hagia Sophia should no more be a mosque than the Parthenon should be restored to the worship of Athena. Continue Reading »
If critical theory in its demolition of the past can often degenerate into an ideological justification of ingratitude, then Marcuse was both its pioneer and its poster boy. Continue Reading »
The feeling of peace and irresponsibility that spreads through me as the train heaves itself out of the station is a special joy. Continue Reading »
This Term, both progressives and the traditionally religious can claim victories in the debate over sexuality, gender, and equality. Continue Reading »
The Catholicism with a future is the Catholicism of the Second Vatican Council. Continue Reading »