On Studying Imagination

By |2023-05-21T11:30:30-05:00January 30th, 2018|Categories: Aristotle, E.B., Eva Brann, Featured, Great Books, Imagination, John Milton, Plato, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Is memory deceptively transformative? Is the original imagination an organ for lying fictions, for deception, or a conduit for revelatory illumination? And so, more generally, how do we explain those images that are apparently not imitations, don’t have an origin in verifiable originals, be they stored in human memory or laid up with the Muses [...]

Is the United States a Banana Republic?

By |2019-08-15T14:32:01-05:00January 21st, 2018|Categories: Capitalism, Culture, Democracy, Economics, Featured, George Stanciu, History, Politics, St. John's College|

In the modern world of American politics, special-interest money is displacing voters. Wealth is highly concentrated in a few hands, with corporations wielding enormous power. More and more families patch together two or more paychecks to meet the widening income, healthcare, and pension gaps that are threatening the middle class… After a disastrous defeat in [...]

Competition vs. Illumination in Learning

By |2023-05-21T11:30:31-05:00January 17th, 2018|Categories: E.B., Education, Eva Brann, Featured, Liberal Learning, Quotation, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

"That brings me to the protection of the exchanges that are the life of learning from dangers both within and without the classroom. Of these there are many, of which I’ll mention only one: the corruption of conversation into debate, into argument, and even into discussion, into all the modes of human communication in which [...]

Not One of Us: Immigration, Equality, & the Common Good

By |2023-08-04T21:06:54-05:00January 16th, 2018|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, American Founding, Christianity, Conservatism, Democracy, Equality, Freedom of Religion, George Stanciu, History, St. John's College|

God unequally bestows gifts to us that are to be used for the common good. The wise can guide others; the well-organized can administer businesses that provide employment; the strong can protect the weak. With such an understanding, equality and a hierarchical social structure are not incompatible, but complement each other. My three children grew [...]

Wonder and Love: How Scientists Neglect God and Man

By |2020-06-22T16:43:44-05:00November 26th, 2017|Categories: Christianity, Culture, George Stanciu, Liberal Learning, Religion, Science, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

If scientists were to look inward with the same seriousness with which they look outward, they would be forced to reflect upon the interior life, upon the creature who seeks truth, desires to know everything, delights in beauty, experiences joy when the truth is encountered, and wonders about why nature can be known at all. [...]

Who Are We? The Mystery of “The Self”

By |2019-07-10T23:22:52-05:00October 5th, 2017|Categories: Culture, Family, George Stanciu, Nature, Philosophy, Religion, St. John's College|

Every person we meet in ordinary, daily affairs is part human and part divine, a storytelling self, often confused, dislikable, and in pain, but always transient; and a mysterious self, deathless, an image of God, worthy of unconditional love… The Buddha, at the age of thirty-five, preached his first sermon to five ascetics, his old [...]

Lincoln’s Leadership in Factious Times

By |2022-02-23T08:25:29-06:00August 10th, 2017|Categories: Abraham Lincoln, American Republic, Civil War, Constitution, Essential, History, St. John's College|

Abraham Lincoln did all that he could to preserve constitutional rule by trying to teach his fellow citizens what it means to be an American. The paradox of Abraham Lincoln’s appearance in the United States’ sectional conflict becomes manifest if one considers a passage written by James Madison in Federalist No. 10. In that paper, [...]

What Is Unique About St. John’s College?

By |2019-06-10T15:45:29-05:00July 27th, 2017|Categories: Christopher B. Nelson, Classical Education, Great Books, Liberal Learning, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Join The Imaginative Conservative's Winston Elliott as he talks with Christopher Nelson, president of St. John's College, about his service at St John’s, and about the unique kind of liberal arts education offered there. President Nelson discusses the mission of St. John's College, the role of the Great Books in their classes, and explains the [...]

Jacob Klein: A Great Scholar, An Even Greater Man

By |2023-05-21T11:30:32-05:00July 15th, 2017|Categories: E.B., Eva Brann, Jacob Klein, Meno, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

Jacob Klein was, first and last, every inch a teacher, a teacher who stymied discipleship in the very effort to induce learning. He did, indeed, have some teachings to convey—a few, though those were powerful and of large consequence. Editor’s Note: This essay was read as a tribute to philosopher and long-time tutor of St. [...]

On Music and Metaphysics

By |2022-10-19T16:45:44-05:00July 11th, 2017|Categories: Beauty, Classical Education, Featured, Hope, Liberal Learning, Music, Peter Kalkavage, St. John's College|

Please join Peter Kalkavage as he discusses the metaphysics of music: music's role in the liberal arts, the paradox in the union of rational and irrational, order and feeling in its composition, and music's connection and reflection of the deeper order of the natural world, of being. Introduction: In this podcast, we hear from Peter [...]

The Divine Element Within

By |2021-05-18T12:15:03-05:00June 26th, 2017|Categories: Art, Existence of God, Featured, George Stanciu, Intelligence, Music, Poetry, Reason, Religion, Science, St. John's College, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

In Modernity, the capacity for effortless knowing is denied, ignored, or misunderstood. As a result, the origin of all knowledge is taken as unaided human effort and activity. The Two Modes of the Mind If we lack a word for an experience, we obviously cannot talk to others about it, and the experience, no matter [...]

A Liberal Education

By |2021-05-18T12:24:13-05:00June 18th, 2017|Categories: Great Books, Iliad, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

Liberal arts, taught correctly, are essential in a liberal democratic republic. A liberal arts education can prepare citizens for life in a republic that cherishes its liberty. This June, I spent a week reading and listening to many conversations about Homer’s Iliad at St. John’s College, Annapolis. The rules of a Summer Classics Seminar are simple, explained [...]

The Best Moments of Human Life

By |2021-05-18T12:48:02-05:00May 30th, 2017|Categories: Culture, Family, Featured, George Stanciu, Philosophy, St. John's College, Time|

We find joy when we lose the self in activity, in those good things that are outside ourselves: making art, doing science, playing sports, educating the young, or caring for the old and disabled. Joy is nature’s way of telling us that we are fulfilling our nature. Even a cursory glance at the interior life [...]

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