About Peter Lawler

Peter Augustine Lawler (1951-2017) was a Senior Contributor to The Imaginative Conservative. He served as Dana Professor of Political Science at Berry College in Georgia. He was the editor of the quarterly journal Perspectives in Political Science and authored Postmodernism Rightly Understood: The Return to Realism in American Thought, Aliens in America: The Strange Truth about Our Souls, Modern and American Dignity: Who We Are as Persons, and What That Means for Our Future, and American Heresies and Higher Education.

America’s Sheepdogs: A Review of American Sniper

By |2015-02-16T14:17:51-06:00February 12th, 2015|Categories: Film, Peter A. Lawler, War|

I went with my wife to the early afternoon show of American Sniper in Rome, Georgia. yesterday. We were very lucky to get seats (and, for once, we were early). At the film’s end, everyone departed with the kind of hushed (I mean absolutely silent) reverence that is higher praise than applause. I had heard [...]

Remembering Jaffa and Berns

By |2016-10-30T08:08:30-05:00February 5th, 2015|Categories: Leo Strauss, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

Walter Berns and Harry Jaffa, two legendary teachers and scholars, died within hours of each other. What tied them together is that they were both students of Leo Strauss, and all of their writing was fundamentally indebted to “disruptive innovations” that Strauss introduced into our understanding of thought and politics. Jaffa (born in 1918) and [...]

Making Community College Free

By |2015-01-22T16:34:06-06:00January 22nd, 2015|Categories: Education, Government, Peter A. Lawler|

I certainly can join the chorus opposing President Barack Obama’s scheme to make the federal government the dominant partner in making community college free. That much money will be accompanied by a corresponding amount of regulation. Insofar as possible, community colleges should be community colleges, or creatures of states and localities. Not only that, community [...]

Scientific Higher Education in America

By |2021-05-20T16:18:23-05:00January 15th, 2015|Categories: Education, Peter A. Lawler, Science, St. John's College|

So it is characteristic of us professors of political philosophy to neglect what is really going in the “hard” sciences. I remember, for example, being astonished that Allan Bloom, in The Closing of the American Mind, came close to saying that the one real thing in American universities otherwise deformed by relativism was natural science. [...]

Calvary: A Movie Worthy of Love

By |2015-01-16T12:58:47-06:00January 8th, 2015|Categories: Featured, Film, Peter A. Lawler|

So why do you not write about movies anymore, one reader asks? Well, I still see them, but all the ones I have seen lately have been either annoying in their over-the-top vanity (The Gambler and Birdman, for instance) or realistically trivial (Big Eyes). One exception is the Irish movie Calvary. You should see it, [...]

Typical Tocquevillian Advice

By |2015-05-19T23:13:34-05:00December 28th, 2014|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Aristotle, Classics, Education, Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler, Plato|

So I just finished reading the most recent contributions to Postmodern Conservative. The quality is high, and the depth and breadth of insight is real. And I wish I could say something to show I am anywhere near their pay grade when it comes to classical or contemporary events. I agree with Peter Spiliakos that [...]

Does God Love Extraterrestrials?

By |2014-12-13T16:16:59-06:00December 13th, 2014|Categories: Christianity, Peter A. Lawler, Science|

Damon Linker, who is taking an existentialist Straussian line, speculates that the discovery of life elsewhere in the cosmos would take out Christian belief. That belief depends on special creation. So decisive evidence that there is nothing special about life on our planet would explode what are already our unreasonable pretensions about personal significance. Mr. [...]

Selective Nostalgia

By |2014-12-07T16:47:28-06:00December 7th, 2014|Categories: Democracy, Peter A. Lawler|

Some of you know that I have talked about “selective nostalgia” before. I have “borrowed” the term from Mark Henrie, although I think I’m more selective in my nostalgia than Mr. Henrie is. Selective nostalgia is, of course, aroused in anyone who takes seriously Tocqueville’s “things pretty much are usually getting better and worse” mode of [...]

Welcome to the Techno-Future

By |2014-12-01T16:21:58-06:00December 1st, 2014|Categories: Economics, Peter A. Lawler, Technology|

We continue to see constant progress in reducing human labor to a mechanical routine, like the script followed by workers in chain restaurants or the swiping motion that’s pretty much the only skill left in staffing the Walmart check-out line. If you think about it, the compliant behavior required by the scripted service worker is, [...]

Is the Child Tax Credit Just Redistribution?

By |2014-10-15T11:34:58-05:00October 13th, 2014|Categories: Conservatism, Peter A. Lawler, Taxes|

According to Kimberly Strassel (and this is the general line of the Wall Street Journal), conservatives are those who believe that government should do as little as possible to inhibit to the operation of the free market and as much as possible to maximize the free choice of individuals. Everyone will be better off as a result. Any deviation [...]

The Complex Universe of the Big Bang Theory

By |2014-09-29T11:54:11-05:00September 30th, 2014|Categories: Culture, Peter A. Lawler, Television|

The highly rated CBS sitcom The Big Bang Theory compensates for its lack of refinement (it has a laugh track!) with its brains. The show began with characters who were more like caricatures of four types of physical scientists: the theoretical physicist (Sheldon Cooper), the experimental physicist (Leonard Hofstadter), the astrophysicist (Raj Koothrappali), and the aerospace engineer [...]

Less Puritanical Than Ever

By |2014-09-22T17:11:28-05:00September 22nd, 2014|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Culture, Peter A. Lawler|

Marilynne Robinson Thanks to Carl Eric Scott for calling attention to the strengths and weaknesses of the moral, political, scientific, and theological views of Marilynne Robinson (perhaps our best living novelist) by highlighting Paul Seaton’s balanced and smart review of her latest book of essays. Ms. Robinson’s thought really is neo-Puritanical. Mr. Seaton and Mr. Scott, knowing, as they do, [...]

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