Themes of Beauty in the Word (III)

By |2016-02-14T16:01:08-06:00September 9th, 2012|Categories: Beauty, Books, Communio, Education, Liberal Learning, Stratford Caldecott|

The Spiral Curriculum. The liberal arts, of course, are not everything. They were not the whole of ancient education either. For Plato a rounded education would begin with “gymnastics”, meaning physical education and training in various kinds of skills, and “music”, meaning all kinds of mental and artistic training. In the Laws (795e) he describes these as physical [...]

Themes of Beauty in the Word (I)

By |2018-12-21T15:13:15-06:00August 8th, 2012|Categories: Beauty, Books, Communio, Education, Featured, Liberal Learning, Stratford Caldecott|

My recent book, Beauty in the Word, a sequel to Beauty for Truth’s Sake, is quite dense and complicated, so I thought it would be helpful to readers if I produced a “study guide”. So, in a series of occasional posts, I intend to look at some of the key themes and ideas in the book. [...]

Dark Knight Rises: The World on a Bad Day

By |2016-02-14T16:01:08-06:00July 29th, 2012|Categories: Art, Communio, Culture, Film, Moral Imagination, Stratford Caldecott|

  The massacre at a cinema in Colorado where audiences were enjoying The Dark Knight Rises—the culmination of Christopher Nolan’s Batman movie trilogy—seems to have provoked only a feeble discussion of gun control that is going nowhere, and very little on the showing of extreme violence in movies. The contrast with an earlier superhero film [...]

Rights in Islam

By |2016-02-14T16:01:08-06:00June 22nd, 2012|Categories: Communio, Islam, Rights, Stratford Caldecott|

In its modern sense, the concept of human rights could be said to be alien to the Islamic tradition. That is because the modern doctrine of rights is an invention of the European Enlightenment. It was an attempt to base the humane social order on reason rather than revelation. Unfortunately the secular foundations of the [...]

Comic Book Superheroes

By |2016-02-14T16:01:08-06:00May 25th, 2012|Categories: Christianity, Communio, Culture, Fiction, Film, Heroism, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: |

…Stand up and keep your childishness: Read all the pedants’ screeds and strictures; But don’t believe in anything That can’t be told in coloured pictures. Chesterton would not have liked many of the stories told in coloured pictures by American comic books, which these days tend to dystopia and sado-eroticism—an all-too predictable reflection of the [...]

Beauty in the Word: Retrieving the Liberal Arts

By |2016-07-17T10:01:39-05:00May 11th, 2012|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Communio, Featured, Liberal Learning, Stratford Caldecott|

The sequel to Beauty for Truth’s Sake has been published by Angelico Press. Called Beauty in the Word, it completes the retrieval of the seven liberal arts begun in the earlier book by examining the first three, the “Trivium”, which Dorothy L. Sayers made the basis of Classical Education in her famous essay, “The Lost Tools of [...]

Conservative?

By |2016-07-17T10:01:43-05:00May 8th, 2012|Categories: Christianity, Communio, Conservatism, Featured, G.K. Chesterton, Stratford Caldecott|

G.K. Chesterton was once described as a “Conservative” thinker. He responded as follows: Because I want almost anything that doesn’t yet exist; because I want to turn a silent people into a singing people; because I would rejoice if a wineless country could be a wine-growing country; because I would change a world of wage-slaves [...]

The Corporation and the Market

By |2016-07-17T10:01:46-05:00April 13th, 2012|Categories: Communio, Economics, Featured, Political Economy, Stratford Caldecott|

In a recent series of articles Michael Black argued that the Corporation can only be understood theologically – further, that the modern economic crisis is a crisis of the Corporation. But what about the “Market”, which is the other big player in the economic game, along with the State and the Corporation? In economic theory the corporation [...]

Rediscovering Christopher Dawson | An Interview with Dr. Bradley J. Birzer

By |2023-05-12T10:52:08-05:00March 28th, 2012|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Communio, Pope Benedict XVI|Tags: , |

In the mid-twentieth century, English historian Christopher Dawson (1889-1970) was widely considered to be one of the finest Catholic scholars in the English-speaking world. Today his name and work is largely unknown, even among Catholics. But that is beginning to change as Dawson is being discovered and recovered by a number of writers and historians. One [...]

The Religion of Money

By |2019-01-08T02:07:05-06:00March 26th, 2012|Categories: Caritas in Veritate, Christianity, Communio, Economics, Featured, Political Economy, Stratford Caldecott|

Modern society is based on the idea of economic growth, a continually expanding cycle of expectation (which supplies the motivation to drive the economy forward), trade leading to income, income leading to consumption and investment. This expansion is made possible by improvements in technology making possible cheaper production (machines replacing slaves and eventually workers) and [...]

Charity in Truth and The Rise of the Machines

By |2016-02-14T16:01:09-06:00March 15th, 2012|Categories: Caritas in Veritate, Communio, Economics, Political Economy, Stratford Caldecott, Technology|

We seem to be haunted by the fear of our machinery and what it is doing to us, or what might happen when it goes wrong. According to landmarks of popular culture such as the Terminator and Matrix movies and Battlestar Galactica, sooner or later the machines will turn upon us. They will use us [...]

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