Short Quiz: Are You an Imaginative Conservative?

By |2022-09-18T14:40:07-05:00September 17th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, Satire, Stephen Masty, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays|

Let’s play 20 Questions! Take the following simple diagnostic test to see if you are an Imaginative Conservative or something else. Or better yet, try it on your friends so you’ll know whether to pay for the next round of drinks or hail a taxi. Answers, scored at the bottom, are the author’s interpretations and [...]

The Honorable Roger Scruton and His Enemies

By |2022-09-14T17:22:52-05:00September 14th, 2022|Categories: Books, Civil Society, Conservatism, Roger Scruton, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

I know of no more comprehensive and reflective summary of conservatism than Sir Roger Scruton's "Conservatism: An Invitation to the Great Tradition." We should not expect conservative establishmentarians on either side of the Atlantic to pay it much heed, though, for the author has now been pushed into the ranks of the untouchables. Conservatism: An [...]

On the Timelessness of the Tradition

By |2023-05-21T11:28:48-05:00September 9th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, E.B., Eva Brann, Featured, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Timeless Essays, Tradition, Western Tradition|

None of the works of the Tradition are to be considered old, except insofar as in human works—not so much in human beings—old age often brings beauty. These works are hardly ever doctrinal catechisms or operational manuals but something in-between: places where incitements to ever-active questions and treasures of attempted answers are recorded. Editor’s Note: [...]

The Queen and the Principle of Subsidiarity

By |2022-09-08T13:53:48-05:00September 8th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, England, Europe, Joseph Pearce, Politics, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Insofar as the principle of subsidiarity enunciated by the late Queen Elizabeth represents a recognition of ancient wisdom and a “most neglected subject,” we can hope that the United Kingdom might move forward rooted in reinvigorated local government and local economies. This would indeed be a momentous move in the right direction. Any reference to [...]

Restoring the Meaning of Conservatism

By |2022-08-30T13:59:19-05:00August 30th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, George A. Panichas, The Conservative Mind, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

The conservative as conservator guards against violations of our reverent traditions and legacy, and is, in fine, a preserver, a keeper, a custodian of sacred things and signs and texts. “If you don’t stand for something, you’ll get knocked down by anything.” —Anonymous It is now more than half a century since the publication of [...]

On Being Conservative

By |2022-08-23T14:48:35-05:00August 23rd, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Family, Jane Austen, Marriage, Philosophy, Robert Nisbet, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

To be a conservative is first and foremost to defend or to conserve something good: to protect family, neighborhood, local community, and region. Louis de Bonald Of the many attempts to define conservatism in recent decades, one of the most compelling is Robert Nisbet’s: “The essence of this body of ideas is the protection [...]

Ten Imaginative Conservative Questions

By |2022-07-09T17:18:01-05:00July 9th, 2022|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Senior Contributors, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

When Winston Elliott and I first started talking about what a proper online conservative journal might look like, way back in the spring and summer of 2010, we decided on a few things. Most importantly, we wanted real diversity of opinion, not the parroting of some ideological drudgeries. As such, we wanted all schools of [...]

Reflections on Imaginative Conservatism

By |2023-05-21T11:28:53-05:00July 9th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, E.B., Eva Brann, Featured, Imagination, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays|

What’s “imaginative?” What’s “conservative?” And how does the adjective modify the noun and the noun support its adjective? My first and last care is not politics but education. Education seems to me inherently conservative, being the transmission, and thus the saving, of a tradition’s treasures of fiction and thought. But education is also inherently imaginative. [...]

Russell Kirk’s “Southern Valor”

By |2022-07-02T21:16:23-05:00July 2nd, 2022|Categories: Clyde Wilson, Conservatism, John Randolph of Roanoke, Russell Kirk, South, Timeless Essays|Tags: , |

American culture and public life are in a perilously low state, but how much worse off we would be if it had not been for Russell Kirk and his valorous life in behalf of the moral imagination that is the essence of our civilization. We have no better example of resourceful defense of unchanging principle, [...]

Matthew Continetti on the Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism

By |2022-06-17T07:52:07-05:00June 14th, 2022|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Donald Trump, Politics, Republicans, Ronald Reagan|

Matthew Continetti may want a “viable” conservatism, but does he desire a winning conservatism. He seems more determined that the Republican Party and the conservative movement begin the difficult, but necessary, task of “untangling” themselves from Donald Trump rather than build a winning coalition. The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism, by Matthew Continetti [...]

The Patriotism of a Conservative

By |2022-06-13T15:38:55-05:00June 13th, 2022|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Conservatism, Patriotism, Politics, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

Particularly in dangerous times, the true patriot has a duty to resist the call to blind nationalist obedience so that he may serve his nation’s true interests, and help it to live up to its duty to obey a law higher than itself. Perhaps the most famous quotation from the great Tory lexicographer Samuel Johnson [...]

Is It the End or Awakening of Philosophical Fusionism?

By |2022-06-16T11:26:57-05:00June 12th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, George Nash, Libertarianism|

The once dominant and implicitly ecumenical philosophy of fusionism has been denounced by a chorus of right-wing critics as a "dead consensus." Fusionism, some critics assert, was perhaps a necessary contrivance during the Cold War but is now irrelevant. And so a determined quest for yet another formulation of conservatism has begun. The Fall of [...]

“The Soul of Politics”: Glenn Ellmers’ Enlightening Biography of Harry Jaffa

By |2022-04-10T14:55:23-05:00April 10th, 2022|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Leo Strauss, Neoconservatism|

Glenn Ellmers has written an enlightening biography of the late Harry Jaffa, a political theorist whose views on the American Founding have become conventional wisdom in certain conservative circles. But I find Willmoore Kendall’s views more persuasive, and his warning about the danger of the Jaffa thesis more prescient. The Soul of Politics: Harry V. [...]

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