Edmund Burke and Leo Strauss

By |2014-01-16T16:40:08-06:00January 9th, 2014|Categories: Edmund Burke, Leo Strauss, Peter A. Lawler|

I recently attended a conference in Claremont on Strauss and Burke–or what Strauss says about Edmund Burke to close Natural Right and History. For anyone who really checks out what he says there, it’s the strangest part of a strange book. Here are some obvious points that might turn out to be wrong: Burke is an [...]

Two Case Studies on the Creepy Side of Our Creeping Libertarianism

By |2019-04-11T12:07:59-05:00November 7th, 2013|Categories: Libertarianism, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

Conservative New York Times columnist Ross Douthat explores the next stage of creeping—and sometimes creepy—American libertarianism. We Americans are still becoming less Puritanical, if by Puritanical we mean a combination of religious conservatism and liberal communitarianism, a combination that leads us to be concerned with the moral well-being of our fellow citizens and fellow creatures. Now we [...]

How to Think About the Birth Dearth

By |2014-01-16T16:49:47-06:00October 29th, 2013|Categories: Family, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

In various lectures and publications, I’ve had occasion to call attention to the problem of the “birth dearth,” the fact that the birth rate has dropped below–often well below–the rate of replacement in just about every prosperous and high-tech country. The relevant facts are laid out for our country (if hardly for the first time) [...]

Should We Be More Epicurean (and Less Futurist)?

By |2019-04-04T12:47:44-05:00October 23rd, 2013|Categories: Environmentalism, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

Don’t worry. Be happy. Live in the present. The philosopher Rousseau said that was the natural condition of man, before he was screwed up by self-consciousness, time, awareness of death, and delayed gratification. So the key to happiness is to be really, really stupid. The Epicurean philosopher says the rational person can achieve the same [...]

The Comedian vs. The Smart Phone

By |2014-01-22T12:27:01-06:00October 10th, 2013|Categories: Culture, Peter A. Lawler, Technology|Tags: |

The reason Socrates banished laughter or comedy from the poetry of the just city is that comedians, at their best, remind us of what we all know: there is an inexpressible sadness just beneath the surface of all our happy talk, and that means there are limits to how much any of us can be [...]

Teaching as Shouting

By |2022-05-28T11:14:16-05:00October 3rd, 2013|Categories: Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler|

I’ve gotten several emails about this article by Joanne Lipman in the Wall Street Journal. The bottom line is that the teachers who get the best results are all about really tough love. The best way to motivate students is to challenge them with realistic (and therefore tough) assessments of their shortcomings. It’s a good idea to shout [...]

Conservative Postmodernism, Postmodern Conservatism

By |2018-12-18T14:52:04-06:00September 5th, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Conservatism, Constitution, Modernity, Peter A. Lawler, St. Augustine|Tags: , |

Astute thinkers from Hegel onward have claimed that we live at the end of the modern world. That does not mean the modern world is about to disappear: the world, in truth, is more modern than ever. So we must contest Hegel’s assertion that the modern world is the end, the fulfillment, of history. The [...]

Meaning, Identity & Learning: Just Read It!

By |2013-12-01T22:44:49-06:00August 23rd, 2013|Categories: Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler|

Someone might say—and libertarians skeptics often do—that classes in philosophy and literature are given a quite an arbitrarily inflated value by according them credit. Do away with the credit system and give degrees based on real demonstration of measurable competencies valuable in the 21st century marketplace, and you’ll find out what studying Plato’s Republic is really worth. [...]

Religion and the Mind of the South

By |2014-01-16T18:34:49-06:00August 5th, 2013|Categories: Peter A. Lawler, Religion, South|

     Thoughts on The Mind of the South, by W. J. Cash W. J. Cash follows Mencken–and genuine Southern Stoics such as the poet William Alexander Percy–in having a very poor opinion of the uneducated individualism and raw emotion of Southern religion. It is, as Will Percy said, for “white trash” and for “Negroes” [...]

Saving Liberal Education from the “Humanities”

By |2013-12-29T17:10:13-06:00July 15th, 2013|Categories: Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler|

The report from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences about the sorry state of the humanities was utterly forgettable, and Andrew Sullivan focused sharply on what’s wrong with it. But I think a bit more should be said in the service of my conservative defense of liberal education, part of which is the defense [...]

Having Issues with “Issues”

By |2014-01-16T12:47:40-06:00July 2nd, 2013|Categories: Modernity, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

So here’s a funny article on the sheer silliness and passive-aggressive hostility of the jargon that dominates the worlds of management, consultants, marketing, and all that. That world, it seems to me, is divided between people who use that language earnestly in the belief that it is a sign of scientific precision and sophistication and those who [...]

Civic Engagement: Making Students Partisan Activists

By |2014-03-28T15:52:25-05:00June 24th, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Education, Peter A. Lawler|

As a professor of political science, I can’t help but be concerned with all the enthusiasm about “civic engagement” as some radically transformative, disruptive, “Copernican” revolution in higher education. All the literature that makes such bogus claims is rife with management-speak barely masking progressive ideology. It makes the agenda-driven proclamation that the point of higher [...]

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 [...]

Capitalism Has Won! And Conservatives Are Confused

By |2014-01-16T19:07:06-06:00May 11th, 2013|Categories: Capitalism, Peter A. Lawler, Political Economy, Politics|

R.R. Reno,  quite an astute conservative public intellectual, claims that those with eyes to see know that the big news these days is the global victory of capitalism. I’m not following Reno in every respect here, but going with what I would say in support of his position. The good news is that productivity has [...]

Go to Top