Do You Know What an Odyssey Is?

By |2023-05-21T11:32:04-05:00May 26th, 2013|Categories: Classics, E.B., Eva Brann, Featured, Greek Epic Poetry, Homer, Liberal Learning, Odyssey, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Wisdom|

My title is a question: “Do you know what an odyssey is?” I am asking each of you to ask yourself: “Do I know what an odyssey is?” In learning as in traveling and, of course, in lovemaking, all the charm lies in not coming too quickly to the point, but in meandering around for [...]

“Poetry” as Political Concern: Aristotelian Tragedy

By |2019-11-08T16:01:20-06:00May 24th, 2013|Categories: Aristotle, Classics, Daniel McInerny, Philosophy, Tragedy|

Greek tragedy grew up and was cultivated within the context of religious festival, but these play-festivals of Dionysus, as Paul Cartledge has written in The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy, “served further as a device for defining Athenian civic identity…exploring and confirming but also questioning what it was to be a citizen of a democracy.” [...]

Our Hero: Socrates in the Underworld

By |2019-11-07T11:40:32-06:00May 23rd, 2013|Categories: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Books, Classics, Featured, Peter A. Lawler, Philosophy, Socrates|Tags: , |

It is my pleasure to be able to introduce Nalin Ranasinghe’s Socrates in the Underworld: On Plato’s Gorgias to you as one of the most able, eloquent, noble, profound, and loving books ever written on Socrates. Ranasinghe restores for us the example of a moral hero who inaugurated a moral revolution in opposition to his [...]

On Wing to Beauty, Wisdom & Goodness

By |2021-04-13T11:13:17-05:00May 7th, 2013|Categories: Classics, Plato, Quotation, Wisdom|

The wing is the corporeal element which is most akin to the divine, and which by nature tends to soar aloft and carry that which gravitates downwards into the upper region, which is the habitation of the gods. The divine is beauty, wisdom, goodness, and the like; and by these the wing of the soul [...]

Eric Voegelin on the Death of Plato

By |2020-08-12T16:26:09-05:00March 31st, 2013|Categories: Books, Christianity, Classics, Eric Voegelin, Fr. James Schall, Plato, Socrates|

Eric Voegelin was charmed by the death of Plato. Philosophy, Voegelin thought, had fled to the Academy—Plato’s Academy not ours—wherein poetry and the pleasure of music are received back no longer tainted by the polis using them for its own purposes. “But there is another sort of old age too: the tranquil and serene evening [...]

The Classics and the Traditional Liberal Arts Curriculum

By |2019-08-08T14:44:32-05:00March 21st, 2013|Categories: Christian Kopff, Classical Education, Classical Learning, Classics, Education, Featured, Liberal Learning|Tags: , |

Before I started writing this essay, I went to University of Colorado library and took out one of the best books in English on education, Albert Jay Nock’s Theory of Education in the United States (1932). It is significant for our topic that, while Nock‘s irritable tirade, Our Enemy, the State, is easily available in [...]

Liberal Learning: Got It! The Wipers Are Working!

By |2021-05-21T15:26:54-05:00February 28th, 2013|Categories: Christopher B. Nelson, Classics, Labor/Work, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Socrates, St. John's College|

I have been reminiscing lately, probably a sign of my age, but I came to recall an episode in my earlier life before I returned to St. John’s College more than 20 years ago, when my second son announced: “Dad, I’m willing to talk with you about my college choices, but I’m not going to go [...]

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

By |2023-05-21T11:32:07-05:00February 28th, 2013|Categories: Books, Classics, E.B., Eva Brann, Homer, Iliad, Odyssey, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, TIC Featured Book|

 Homeric Moments: Clues to Delight in Reading the Odyssey and the Iliad Featured Book: 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 readers or people who [...]

The Platonic Imagery of Mumford & Sons

By |2022-11-17T10:53:04-06:00February 22nd, 2013|Categories: Art, Books, Classics, Music, Plato|Tags: |

The parallels between the Mumford & Sons song “The Cave” and the Platonic story are impossible to miss. I am not someone who should ever review music, my tastes being without pattern when they exist at all. But, my students and an old friend have recently introduced me to a very intriguing band who released their second [...]

Socrates Today

By |2021-04-13T11:24:23-05:00January 2nd, 2013|Categories: Classics, Plato, Socrates, Wisdom|Tags: |

Socrates, who lived from 470 to 399 B.C., is separated from us by nearly two and one half millennia. This means that he had not in common with our progressive age the automobile, the aeroplane, the television, the computer, the telephone (whether cellular or regular), video games, virtual reality, etc. Can we, then, “relate” to [...]

Plato’s Apology and the Gorgias: Yearning for Political and Spiritual Regeneration

By |2015-05-19T23:10:18-05:00December 29th, 2012|Categories: Apology, Classics, Lee Cheek, Plato, Political Philosophy|

The purpose of this essay is to elucidate the importance of Plato’s commitment to rational discourse in the Apology and Gorgias. Both dialogues chronicle the transfer of authority from the destructive world of Athens to the philosophers. The organization of politics and society, according to Plato, is determined by the orderliness of the souls of its citizens. The central [...]

The Necessity of Stories

By |2016-10-24T10:04:43-05:00December 26th, 2012|Categories: Aeneas, Anthony Esolen, Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, Cicero, Classics, Conservatism, John Willson, Leviathan, Western Civilization, Western Tradition|Tags: |

Last week, two of my Twitter friends (and friends of The Imaginative Conservative: @hencole and @Sir_Geechie) were happily discussing the 1965 Russell Kirk piece on Malcolm X; the one Winston graciously posted. After @henrole called it a birthday gift of sorts, @Sir_Geechie replied, “You know folks want narrative not knowledge.” I have found each of [...]

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