Tolerance or Respect?

By |2023-05-21T11:30:00-05:00December 31st, 2018|Categories: Books, Culture, E.B., Eva Brann, Quotation, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Respect is (1) an alternative to tolerance and (2) the better one. It is an alternative because it concerns the same issue: how to live with fellow humans who appear to be identically constituted in their need to formulate opinions and to assert them in speech (not always in that order) but disparately developed in [...]

The Logos of Heraclitus

By |2023-05-21T11:30:01-05:00December 25th, 2018|Categories: Books, E.B., Eva Brann, Heraclitus, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Philosophy, Senior Contributors|

http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/traffic.libsyn.com/partiallyexaminedlife/PEL_ep_079_6-22-13.mp3 In the above podcast, Eva Brann discusses her book The Logos of Heraclitus (2011). What is the world like, and how can we understand it? Heraclitus thinks that the answer to both questions is found in “the logos,” which is a Greek word with multiple meanings: it can be an explanation, a word [...]

Reflections on Imaginative Conservatism

By |2023-05-21T11:30:02-05:00December 17th, 2018|Categories: Conservatism, E.B., Eva Brann, Imagination, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Virtue|

Author's Note: I wish to dedicate this essay to a writer of books whose greatness is at once utterly at home in America and quite without spatio-temporal boundaries, Marilynne Robinson, who produces in reality the images I only analyze, and thereby not only saves but augments the tradition I love–the aboriginal imaginative conservative, one who [...]

Talking, Reading, Writing, Listening

By |2023-05-21T11:30:03-05:00December 10th, 2018|Categories: Classics, E.B., Eva Brann, Great Books, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Liberal Learning, Plato, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

I imagine that on Parents’ Weekend there might be some parents attending this once weekly occasion when the college assembles to hear a lecture. By its very name, a lecture is read—but read out loud, delivered in the writer’s voice. Thus, the sequence goes: I thought, I wrote, I read, I speak. Although this is the principal way of [...]

Inner and Outer Freedom

By |2023-05-21T11:30:04-05:00December 3rd, 2018|Categories: Culture, E.B., Eva Brann, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Liberal Learning, Religion, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Vast topics are notoriously easy to avoid, and those who undertake to wrestle with them in public owe their audience some concrete reason for their choice. Let me begin with mine. First, this summer I had occasion to study Supreme Court decisions bearing on freedom of religion and the public schools. The graduate students with [...]

Can We Be Friends? Spirit, Duty, & Our Canine Companions

By |2023-05-21T11:30:05-05:00November 26th, 2018|Categories: Aristotle, Books, Classics, E.B., Eva Brann, Friendship, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

If people and dogs have common ground of a higher order than animal needs, it must be in the territory of the spirit. Spirit is, just as Aristotle says, where friendship is at home. Now among us humans, this capability of the spirit is both an accomplishment and a work in progress, and so it [...]

A Tiny Essay on Taking Offense

By |2023-05-21T11:30:06-05:00November 19th, 2018|Categories: Character, Civil Society, E.B., Eva Brann, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Senior Contributors|

I love midnight movies, the Golden Oldies; they are the silver-lining of insomnia. Recently I caught part of an old black-and-white movie—Pressure Point—of the days when African-Americans were still called Negroes. Sidney Poitier plays a black prison psychiatrist. At one point his white patron says something about not expecting a Negro to be a successful [...]

The Empires of the Sun and the West

By |2025-02-09T16:37:37-06:00November 5th, 2018|Categories: Culture, E.B., Eva Brann, History, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Religion, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

We must come to grips with the actual expansiveness of the West and consider candidly its possible superiority—superiority, that is, in the scope it gives to individual human nature by the universality of its conceptions. I shall begin with two sets of facts and dates. On or about August 8 of 1519 Hernán Cortés, a [...]

Higher Gossip: Eva Brann on the Good Life

By |2023-05-21T11:30:10-05:00October 24th, 2018|Categories: Audio/Video, Books, Eva Brann, Freedom, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Publisher's Note: In this episode of a documentary series on St. John's College's most beloved tutors, Senior Contributor Dr. Eva Brann recounts how she escaped Nazi Germany and ended up at the College; her relationships with such philosophic luminaries as Jacob Klein, Seth Benardete, and Leo Strauss; and her vision of the good life. —Video by [...]

Letter to a Young Essayist

By |2023-05-21T11:30:11-05:00October 15th, 2018|Categories: E.B., Eva Brann, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

You needn’t bring on yourself a dark night of the soul over your essay deadline, since you’ve already got what it takes to be an essayist, and certainly an essay-writer. Instead of agonizing, start early and savor the sweet freedom, the lovely leisure, to be fully at work, essaying yourself and the world... Dear— The [...]

Yin and Yang: “Dualisms”

By |2023-05-21T11:30:13-05:00October 1st, 2018|Categories: Books, E.B., Eva Brann, Liberal Learning, Philosophy, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Dualisms: The Agons of the Modern World, by Ricardo J. Quinones (472 pages, University of Toronto Press, 2007) Dualisms stand at the very beginning of Western ways of viewing the world. Aristotle bears witness to this by recording in his Metaphysics the Pythagorean Table of Opposites, the contraries that are the complementary principles of all that [...]

Homeric Moments: Clues to Delight in Reading the Odyssey & the Iliad

By |2023-05-21T11:30:14-05:00September 24th, 2018|Categories: Books, E.B., Eva Brann, Great Books, Homer, Iliad, Odyssey, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Homeric Moments: Clues to Delight in Reading the Odyssey and the Iliad (326 pages, Paul Dry Books, 2002) "Reading Homer's poems is one of the purest, most inexhaustible pleasures life has to offer—a secret somewhat too well kept in our time. The aim of this book is to tell anyone who might care–first-time, second-time, or third-time [...]

Paul Scott’s “Raj Quartet”: The English “War and Peace”

By |2023-05-21T11:30:16-05:00September 9th, 2018|Categories: Books, E.B., Eva Brann, History, Literature, Senior Contributors|

The Raj Quartet is one of the longest, most successfully rendered works of nineteenth-century fiction written in the twentieth century. It has something War and Peace lacks: an evil presence of enormous pathos. The Raj Quartet by Paul Scott (1,032 pages, Everyman's Library, 2007) I want to begin with a judgment of luminous wrong-headedness. It has appeared twice [...]

Politics and the Imagination

By |2023-05-21T11:30:17-05:00September 3rd, 2018|Categories: Conservatism, E.B., Eva Brann, Great Books, Imagination, Philosophy, Politics, Senior Contributors|

Applying imagination to politics can lead to political wish-fulfillment fantasies or to the enlivening of real communities from within. The topic "Politics and the Imagination" is at once larger and more restricted than "Politics and the Arts," the theme of this Tocqueville Forum. It is more restricted because I mean to exclude the practical problem [...]

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