David Brooks on the Future of Conservatism

By |2016-06-29T12:16:32-05:00November 25th, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: , |

Peter Lawler on conservatism So David Brooks’s article is interesting more for its listing of various young conservatives than its actual content. I just don’t have time to comment much right now, but I thought I’d get it out there for your consideration. My talking points for now are pretty random: Pete Spiliakos [...]

Thanksgiving, the Puritans, and St. Augustine

By |2018-11-19T19:42:14-06:00November 22nd, 2012|Categories: Peter A. Lawler, St. Augustine, Thanksgiving|

Thanksgiving is the holiday that brings us all together, whether or not we’re Christians and whether or not we’re American citizens. It’s the first holiday of the Holiday Season that begins around now and lasts until New Year. We’re so sure that saying Merry Christmas is intolerant and dogmatic that we’re all about Happy Holidays—an [...]

Predicting the Meaning of the Election and the Electoral College

By |2022-11-07T16:44:35-06:00November 4th, 2012|Categories: Barack Obama, Electoral College, Mitt Romney, Peter A. Lawler, Politics|

James Ceaser, perhaps our most distinguished student of American politics on the conservative side, isn’t about predicting the outcome of elections. That’s actually hard to do. And those political scientists who predict outcomes correctly well in advance are almost always just lucky. This election, all the evidence suggests, is going to be very close and [...]

Allan Bloom and Souls Without Longing

By |2015-05-27T13:22:40-05:00October 29th, 2012|Categories: Books, Education, Featured, Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler, Relativism|Tags: |

So I’ve gotten a lot (meaning several) emails complaining that I haven’t gotten around to keeping my promise of talking about Allan Bloom’s The Closing of the American Mind. Well, sorry. Here’s one reason why. I’m actually teaching that fascinating—and flawed—book right now, and I thought you’d learn more if I waited until after I [...]

Finally, a Liberal Arts Movie?

By |2014-07-15T13:24:21-05:00October 23rd, 2012|Categories: Film, Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler|

I’ve been asked why I’ve stopped talking about movies. It’s not that I’ve stopped seeing them. The truth is that movies have gotten so much worse than the best of TV that they haven’t captured my full attention. I mean, of course, the excellent shows you can see—mainly but far from exclusively—on HBO. Let me pick [...]

What’s Good About American Heresy

By |2014-01-18T14:39:11-06:00October 1st, 2012|Categories: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Peter A. Lawler, Politics|

So I don’t want to give the impression that heresies are all bad. They’re usually partly good: They highlight part of the truth that had been obscured or neglected. They’re rebellions that have a Christian point. Consider this partial affirmation of the heretical modern—or Lockean, nominalist–world by a very traditionalist and very erudite Catholic—Thaddeus Kozinski: [...]

Conservative Liberal Education?

By |2014-02-20T11:00:06-06:00August 22nd, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, Education, Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler|

One reason I can’t buy the claim that conservative intellectual has become an oxymoron is that on our campuses it’s so often the conservatives who defend “liberal education.” I’m going to sketch out the understanding of “liberal education” or “general education” shared by me and many of my fellow professorial conservatives (a tiny and shrinking [...]

Conservatives vs. Libertarians on What Ails Higher Education: The Case of the University of Virginia

By |2014-01-27T08:54:56-06:00July 12th, 2012|Categories: Education, Liberal, Liberal Learning, Libertarians, Peter A. Lawler|

So this astute and classy article by James Patterson explains why so many conservatives wrongly took the side of the Board of Visitors against University of Virginia President Teresa Sullivan on the matter of her removal and reinstatement. Someone might say, though, that the conservatives who support the Board aren’t really conservatives. They’re more properly called [...]

A Conservative Conservationist

By |2019-04-04T11:23:07-05:00June 25th, 2012|Categories: Books, Conservation, Conservatism, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

The Greening of Conservative America, by John R. E. Bliese The first thing to say about this fine book is that it is much better than its misleading title. Professor John R. E. Bliese does not really argue that conservatives should join the Green Party or Greenpeace. While true conservatives have always been conservationists, their [...]

The Socratic Philosopher and the American Individual

By |2017-08-03T13:49:32-05:00March 6th, 2012|Categories: Books, Classics, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Liberal Learning, Peter A. Lawler, Socrates|Tags: , |

Today, Allan Bloom’s unlikely 1987 bestseller The Closing of the American Mind is in some ways truer and more moving than ever. I have just taught the book in a class (one that began by reading Tocqueville) filled mostly with very smart yet still overachieving Evangelical students. They eagerly embraced the book as evidence of [...]

Pointing God’s Pilgrims Home

By |2014-08-19T14:40:16-05:00December 23rd, 2011|Categories: Books, Peter A. Lawler|Tags: |

Aliens in America: The Strange Truth About Our Souls. By Peter Augustine Lawler. ISI Books. In Aliens in America, Peter Augustine Lawler argues convincingly, if disturbingly, that Americans, having been seduced by the latest manifestations of philosophical nominalism and by the new utopianism of biotechnology, are blindly and in dangerously large numbers opting to be [...]

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