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. [...]

Do Americans Really Value Hard Work?

By |2024-09-01T15:43:30-05:00September 1st, 2024|Categories: Character, Economics, Labor/Work, Mark Malvasi, Modernity, Timeless Essays|

The tiresome cant about the work ethic notwithstanding, Americans do not celebrate, or even recognize, the dignity of labor. Although they profess to disdain both the idle rich and the idle poor, they do not at the same time esteem those who must work for a living, even as most count themselves among that number. [...]

Behold the Demon: Nietzsche as Destroyer

By |2024-08-04T10:55:33-05:00August 3rd, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Friedrich Nietzsche, History, Modernity, Philosophy, Senior Contributors, Western Civilization|

Friedrich Nietzche’s “Ecce Homo” lays waste to centuries of an ethic of inhibition and restraint. Intellectually brutalized, bloodied, and tortured, the nineteenth-century philosopher presented himself in his final and last words to a world he wanted to overthrow. Behold the man. To be more accurate, behold the demon. In his mockingly titled autobiography and final [...]

In Defense of the Freedom to Be Wrong

By |2024-06-20T17:11:14-05:00June 20th, 2024|Categories: Education, Freedom, Liberal Learning, Modernity, Philosophy, Reason, Timeless Essays|

If we fail to inspire this next generation to pursue that which is True, Good, and Beautiful, I shudder to think at the consequences. Groupthink will destroy all that we hold dear. We want our students to polish their reason and to prepare to guide and navigate their chariots along the track of life. It [...]

The Roots and Dangers of Pride and Envy

By |2024-05-31T14:48:32-05:00May 31st, 2024|Categories: Books, Christianity, Dante, Dwight Longenecker, Louis Markos, Modernity, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Together, the corrupting sins of pride and envy destroyed the democracies of ancient Athens and Rome. But what lies at the root of these two greatest of sins? And is there any remedy or antidote that can cure us, and our society, once we give way to them? Fr. Dwight Longenecker’s “Immortal Combat” offers answers. [...]

Friedrich-Georg Jünger on Technology & Prometheanism

By |2024-04-25T12:16:19-05:00April 24th, 2024|Categories: Civilization, Culture, Economics, Modernity, Philosophy, Science, Technology, Timeless Essays|

According to Friedrich-Georg Jünger, modern man’s veneration of technology reveals his distant kinship to the Titans of myth. This ‘titanic’ impulse to dominate and consume expresses itself through our technology-driven industrial economy, which now determines every aspect of life from the air we breathe to the food we eat. Ongoing debates concerning the growing power [...]

A Pair of Moles: Robert Penn Warren & William Styron

By |2024-04-23T22:20:44-05:00April 23rd, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Literature, Modernity, Poetry, Robert Cheeks, South, Timeless Essays|Tags: , , |

The literature of Robert Penn Warren and William Styron describes the decline of society, an annihilation of culture. It also projects a knowledge of the eternal struggle, forever bound by memory, and the inherent yearning for a civilization that “is the refuge of sentiments and values, of spiritual congeniality, of belief in the word, of [...]

Legalizing the Resurrection

By |2024-03-31T16:09:39-05:00March 31st, 2024|Categories: Conservatism, Easter, Glenn Arbery, Modernity, Religion, Senior Contributors, Wyoming Catholic College|

Many in our society consider religion merely an instrument of power, and they believe that the “correction” of inherited beliefs and practices can be forced upon the unwilling. But there’s an enormous difference between people who choose the real common good and people forced to submit to a state ideology. When I went into the [...]

Romano Guardini’s Diagnosis of the Modern World

By |2024-02-23T20:52:07-06:00February 20th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Civil Society, Culture, Featured, Modernity, Romano Guardini|

“To speak precisely, God lost His dwelling place; thereby man lost his proper place in existence.” Man believed he had dominion over nature, and so proceeded to act as a ruler thereof, but it is a poor ruler indeed who destroys that over which he is supposed to govern. “Where is the place of man? [...]

Charles Peguy on the Hubris of Modernism

By |2023-11-29T18:11:41-06:00November 29th, 2023|Categories: Christianity, Culture, Modernity, Philosophy, Timeless Essays|

In Western society we are so immersed in and surrounded by the philosophy of modernism, that many are hardly aware of it. Modernism may present itself in various forms. Most recently, some aspects of it seem to have appeared among clergy in the Vatican. It is, therefore, relevant to revisit Charles Peguy’s hard-hitting critique of [...]

James Joyce, John Senior, & the Illumination of the Modern World

By |2023-11-18T08:06:23-06:00November 17th, 2023|Categories: Books, Christianity, Culture, John Senior, Modernity|

Reading James Joyce and John Senior together will illuminate the modern world and point toward a path of how to thrive within it. Both represent a quest for the real: one through the symbolic mediation of literature and the other through its poetic embodiment in our daily lives. John Senior is known as a cultural [...]

The Soundminded Schizophrenic: Living in the Just-Nowness

By |2023-11-15T17:50:53-06:00November 15th, 2023|Categories: E.B., Eva Brann, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Liberal Learning, Modernity, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Time, Timeless Essays|

“Modernity” comes from Latin "modo," meaning “just-now.” Thus modernity is any generation’s own time; it is the mode of the recent, the contemporary—with a hint of time-pride: the latest is the newest, and the newest is the best. Mr. Ropoulos and I were talking in the St. John’s College Coffee Shop, and the subject of [...]

Go to Top