Revisiting Robert Nisbet’s Conservative Classic

By |2024-09-30T14:34:50-05:00September 29th, 2024|Categories: Community, Conservatism, Freedom, Modernity, Robert Nisbet, Timeless Essays|

In his analysis of alienation in the modern world, Robert Nisbet recognized an important truth about the human person, which makes “The Quest for Community” timely even today: The individual cannot be understood except in relationship to other individuals in time and space. The abstract, autonomous individual does not exist nor can he ever exist. [...]

Harry Jaffa and the Demise of the Old Republic

By |2024-09-26T14:29:39-05:00September 26th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Conservatism, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Edmund Burke, Featured, Foreign Affairs, History, Political Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

Harry Jaffa’s constitutional history of America’s late-eighteenth-century is not credible nor, in keeping with many of his own pronouncements, is it conservative. The writing of history, as we have learned from authors as diverse as Thucydides, Voltaire, Nietzsche, Butterfield, Collingwood, and Oakeshott can and has been done in strikingly different ways while serving radically different [...]

Solitude and the Conservative Temperament

By |2024-09-19T13:53:25-05:00September 19th, 2024|Categories: Conservatism, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors|

It seems to me that solitude is the natural habitat of the philosophical and imaginative conservative today. He is essentially one who is “unfit for the modern world,” an antiquated being devoted to impossible ideals like Don Quixote. In order for him to remain himself, he must enter into communion with like-minded souls—or, failing that, [...]

The Emergence of Political Consciousness: A Week at Boys State, 1964

By |2024-09-13T14:23:42-05:00September 13th, 2024|Categories: Conservatism, Politics|

I suspect that my true “political consciousness” began around the months surrounding mid-1963 to mid-1964 and for reasons you, my patient reader, I hope can understand and share. Can my awareness of what came across the airwaves and was broadcast in black and white on our family television be likened to an emerging “political consciousness?” [...]

Clyde Wilson’s “Jeffersonian Conservative Tradition” Revisited

By |2024-09-04T16:19:55-05:00September 4th, 2024|Categories: Clyde Wilson, Conservatism, History, South, Thomas Jefferson|

For Clyde Wilson, the Jeffersonian conservative tradition was never a stale embrace of the past for its own sake. It conserves only to produce something better. In 1969 the late Mel Bradford recommended to Modern Age’s second editor, Eugene Davidson, that he should publish a groundbreaking article by a young historian named Clyde Wilson. The [...]

The Ten Points of Tolkien’s Politics

By |2024-08-28T16:26:05-05:00August 28th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Conservatism, J.R.R. Tolkien, Timeless Essays|

As a person who has read and written about J.R.R. Tolkien for decades, I am often asked about his political views. In a sense, this is a funny question, as Tolkien really despised most politics. In fact, he really thought of himself as very anti-political. His few statements on the matter reveal just how unpolitical [...]

Albert Jay Nock: A Return to the Liberal Arts?

By |2024-08-18T15:25:38-05:00August 18th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Liberal Learning, Timeless Essays, Traditional Conservatives and Libertarians|Tags: , |

Was Albert Jay Nock correct in saying that the educated man is a superfluous man in modern society? One of the greatest intellectual pleasures of my summer has been the discovery of the writings of Albert Jay Nock. Well, really, the re-discovery. I had twice read Nock’s Our Enemy, the State, but I’d never found [...]

Conservative Humanism & the Challenge of the Post-Humanist Age

By |2024-08-10T14:53:31-05:00August 10th, 2024|Categories: Christian Humanism, Conservatism, Humanism and Conservatism, Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays|

Since humanism has been the core of the Western tradition through the centuries, the emergence of anti-humanism and post-humanism represents an inflection point of our civilizational crisis. In confronting this crisis, conservative humanism aims not to erase the positive achievements of modern humanism, but to graft them back onto their roots where they can draw [...]

Remembering Donald S. Lutz, Pirate Scholar

By |2024-07-22T19:33:37-05:00July 22nd, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Senior Contributors|

I was deeply saddened to learn of the death of the greatest of "pirate scholars," Donald S. Lutz. As it turns out, he had actually passed away back in January of this year, but I only found out about it a week or so ago. I’ve loved the man’s work for a long time, and [...]

Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative

By |2024-07-17T19:16:06-05:00July 17th, 2024|Categories: Books, Conservatism|

Despite coming close to ruining his life on more than a few occasions, Glenn Loury, Professor of the Social Sciences and Economics at Brown University, has always managed to remain a "Player," both as a professor and as a public intellectual. That dual accomplishment is a testimony to his drive and determination, as well as [...]

What Exactly Is Conservatism?

By |2024-07-11T21:13:47-05:00July 11th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

If conservatism is true, it is true for all times, all places, and all persons. It might take on a Christian character here, or a Jewish character there, or a Stoic character way over there, but it remains universally tied to certain humane principles, whatever its local manifestations. It is imagination, perhaps our highest faculty [...]

William F. Buckley: “God and Man at Yale”

By |2024-06-29T16:54:06-05:00June 29th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Conservatism, Education, Featured, Freedom, Liberal Learning, Permanent Things, Timeless Essays|

William F. Buckley did not resist the ideas of collectivism as successfully as he thought. Instead, he chose to aim for winning a contemporary battle rather than defending the Permanent Things. Conservatives today would do well to guard against falling into the same trap. William F. Buckley’s God and Man at Yale is one of [...]

Eric Voegelin, Leo Strauss, & American Conservatism

By |2024-06-26T19:34:16-05:00June 26th, 2024|Categories: Conservatism, Eric Voegelin, Featured, Leo Strauss, Timeless Essays|

Conservatives are people who defend certain traditional goods, because they know they’re worth defending. Political philosophy, by contrast, is animated by concerns quite different from political battles or external goods. It’s fundamentally a quest for insight, not influence. Eric Voegelin and Leo Strauss were essentially philosophers, not conservatives. For more than fifty years, American conservatives [...]

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