About Bruce Frohnen

Bruce P. Frohnen is Professor of Law at Ohio Northern University College of Law and the author of Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism: The Legacy of Burke and Tocqueville, The New Communitarians and The Crisis of Modern Liberalism and editor (with George Carey) of Community and Tradition: Conservative Perspectives on the American Experience. His latest book is Constitutional Morality and the Rise of Quasi-Law (written with the late George Carey).

What is the Role of Faith in the Public Square?

By |2018-11-30T14:08:29-06:00May 2nd, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Ethics, Featured, Homosexual Unions, Politics, Religion|

The Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, dictating that all states issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, was handed down less than a year ago. Already, though, most Americans have accepted this judicial dictate as the law of the land. More importantly, they seem to have accepted the story that it is a mere [...]

Dietrich Bonhoeffer on Faith, Works, & Grace

By |2023-08-26T10:59:38-05:00April 29th, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Catholicism, Christianity, Faith, Religion|

Moral norms, often disparaged by Dietrich Bonhoeffer despite his own highly ethical upbringing and its clear impact on his virtuous life choices, are important for salvation because they orient us toward the good. Good works help develop within us habits that enable us to distinguish between good and evil. Dietrich Bonhoeffer Christian ecumenism [...]

Can Civility Be Restored to Our Campuses?

By |2016-05-22T13:28:49-05:00April 17th, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Civil Society, Civilization, Featured, Liberalism, Liberty, Ordered Liberty|

Critics have taken to calling the leftist agitators who are running roughshod over university campuses hypocrites. The reasoning is that these self-described social-justice warriors, by shouting down speakers, silencing dissent on social media, and forcing resignations from those they accuse of “injustice,” are betraying the very toleration that allows them to speak freely. Unfortunately, the [...]

Edmund Burke & the American Revolution: The Whole Story

By |2024-05-04T15:17:02-05:00April 10th, 2016|Categories: American Founding, Bruce Frohnen, Cluny, Edmund Burke, Featured, Republicanism, Revolution|

You would not know it from the discussion on campus or in our high schools, but the best analysis of the American War for Independence was provided while it was still unfolding. The character of the Americans, the designs of the British Parliament, and the policies that brought these two into conflict were brilliantly analyzed [...]

The Little Sisters’ Last Stand for Religious Liberty

By |2016-05-05T10:13:47-05:00April 3rd, 2016|Categories: Abortion, Bruce Frohnen, Catholicism, Featured, Religion, Supreme Court|

The Supreme Court recently heard oral arguments in the case of Little Sisters of the Poor v. Burwell. This is a case in which a small order of nuns is seeking exemption from an Obama Administration requirement that they help distribute free contraceptives and abortifacients (drugs that cause abortions) through their government-mandated healthcare plan. Why [...]

Terrorism: It’s All Your Fault!

By |2016-03-21T00:30:32-05:00March 21st, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Foreign Affairs, Ideology, Politics, Terrorism, Virtue|

Did you know that terrorism was your fault? Mine too, of course. In fact, if one pays attention to the writings of academic philosophers (always dangerous, I know) one would get the impression that terrorism is everyone’s fault—except for the academic philosophers (and the terrorists, of course). Two examples taken from academic works on the [...]

The West’s War on Children

By |2019-08-15T11:49:05-05:00March 13th, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Culture, Family, Featured, Social Institutions|

The world has now seen several decades of something quite new: explicitly anti-child policies. By this one might think I am referring to the “one-child” policy in China. And to a certain extent I am. Fines and the withholding of education and other services, not to mention forced abortions, rather comfortably fit within any definition [...]

The State: From God, or the Devil?

By |2018-11-30T15:04:09-06:00March 6th, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Edmund Burke, Government|

A casual observer might be excused for believing that conservatives have a rather confused and conflicted view of the state. Albert J. Nock, a giant of early-twentieth-century conservatism, wrote a book titled Our Enemy the State. Yet Edmund Burke, the founder of modern conservatism, observed that “he who gave our nature to be perfected by [...]

Understanding Antonin Scalia’s Jurisprudence

By |2016-03-07T12:31:43-06:00February 23rd, 2016|Categories: American Republic, Constitution, Featured, Supreme Court|

Antonin Scalia’s defense of the Constitution was rooted in a determination to let the law speak for itself. His “textualism” took its motive force from the simple idea that a judge’s job is to apply the law (or adjudicate under the law) rather than to change it to mean what it “should” mean, or what [...]

Should Christians Apologize for the Crusades?

By |2023-07-08T12:40:52-05:00February 19th, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Christendom, Christianity, Culture, Culture War, History|

Our current refusal to stand for the right and the just, and to defend Christians suffering martyrdom on a regular basis, is a stain on our character—and one that the Crusaders never bore. One of the more ignorant bits of political correctness subverting our cultural memory is the movement to ban the Crusader mascot from [...]

Is the Republican Party Splitting Apart?

By |2016-02-14T22:49:46-06:00February 14th, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Democracy, Ideology, Immigration, Politics, Republicans|

Edmund Burke Now that the presidential primary season has begun in earnest, it seems a good time to reconsider just what a political party is—what its purpose and essential nature are, and how we may recognize whether one is healthy or in a state of disorder and potential breakdown. As with most things [...]

What Should a Moral Man Do in Desperate Times?

By |2016-02-08T22:37:01-06:00February 8th, 2016|Categories: Books, Bruce Frohnen, Character, Claes Ryn|

A Desperate Man: A Novel, by Claes Ryn (Athena Books, 2014) What ought a man be willing to do to save his country from corruption and ruin? Die? Subvert the ruling order? Kill? Participate in killing on a significant scale? On one level these deep moral questions are at the center of political philosopher Claes Ryn’s [...]

Is Populism Replacing Conservatism?

By |2016-03-11T10:34:10-06:00January 31st, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Featured, Liberalism, Politics, Presidency, Republicans, Tradition|

An avowed socialist is running for the presidential nomination of one of the two dominant political parties. Same-sex marriage has been proclaimed the law of the land. Levels of church attendance and religious belief have dropped significantly. And political correctness has run amok on campus, on the net, and in the entertainment industry. One could [...]

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