Ideas Have Consequences by Richard Weaver: Featured Book

By |2014-01-04T15:34:39-06:00February 25th, 2013|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Richard Weaver, TIC Featured Book|Tags: |

Ideas Have Consequences by Richard Weaver Ideas Have Consequences contributed significantly to the philosophical coherence of contemporary conservatism. Frank Meyer went so far as to say that “the publication of Ideas Have Consequences can well be considered the fons et origo (source and origin) of the contemporary American conservative movement.” For Mr. Meyer, what was adumbrated [...]

Founding Fathers-Lives of the Framers: Featured Book

By |2016-11-04T19:19:01-05:00February 20th, 2013|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Books, M. E. Bradford, Russell Kirk, TIC Featured Book, W. Winston Elliott III|Tags: |

Founding Fathers: Brief Lives of the Framers of the United States Constitution M.E. Bradford’s brief lives of the Founding Fathers, free of ideological prejudices, tell us the sort of delegates those fifty-five were: gentlemen, with few exceptions, attached to precedent and custom, prescription and “ancient constitutions.” Those colonial gentlemen, so very British, were not in [...]

Read Christopher Dawson or Russell Kirk, Not Hoffman

By |2016-02-12T15:28:29-06:00February 18th, 2013|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Russell Kirk|

A few weeks ago, I had the opportunity to review Lord Percy’s Heresy of Democracy, a book Russell Kirk considered essential for an understanding of conservatism in the 1950s. Another book he had in list that was more or less unfamiliar to me was Ross J.S. Hoffman’s The Spirit of Politics and the Future of [...]

Religion and the Rise of Western Culture: Christopher Dawson

By |2016-11-04T19:19:02-05:00February 16th, 2013|Categories: Books, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, TIC Featured Book, W. Winston Elliott III|Tags: |

  In Religion and the Rise of Western Culture, Christopher Dawson addresses two of the most pressing subjects of our day: the origin of Europe and the religious roots of Western culture. Click the link below to find this, and other books by Christopher Dawson,  in The Imaginative Conservative Bookstore! We hope you will join us [...]

Teaching in an Age of Ideology: Gerhart Niemeyer

By |2019-02-19T16:19:51-06:00February 13th, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Education, Eric Voegelin, Gerhart Niemeyer, Liberal Learning|Tags: |

Gerhart Niemeyer In my previous essays about teaching in an age of ideology, I had looked at two teachers–Eric Voegelin and Ellis Sandoz–who sought to clear the ideological rubble in the modern academia so students could study the true, the beautiful, and the good. In his accessible lectures about complicated philosophical topics, Eric [...]

The Permanent Things

By |2018-10-16T20:24:53-05:00February 9th, 2013|Categories: Permanent Things, Quotation, RAK, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot|

T.S. Eliot By “the Permanent Things” [T. S. Eliot] meant those elements in the human condition that give us our nature, without which we are as the beasts that perish. They work upon us all in the sense that both they and we are bound up in that continuity of belief and institution called the [...]

On Popular Fictions, Or How I Learned to Relax and Enjoy Downton Abbey

By |2016-02-12T15:28:30-06:00February 9th, 2013|Categories: Art, Books, Christianity, Culture, Daniel McInerny, Fiction, Film, G.K. Chesterton, T.S. Eliot|

Downton Abbey cast A friend of mine wrote on Facebook about Downton Abbey: “take away the English accents, the bucolic setting, the period costumes, and the antiquated moral code, and you’re left with Days of Our Lives. Some truth to that, I thought at first. Downton Abbey often suffers from severe melodramatic fits. [...]

Christopher Dawson: The Twofold Nature of Christian History

By |2016-08-03T10:37:18-05:00January 29th, 2013|Categories: Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Culture, Gerald Russello, History|Tags: |

Christopher Dawson Christopher Dawson wrote with two different audiences in mind. He sought both to displace the bankrupt Victorian and Edwardian liberalism of his own day and to shake the complacency of his coreligionists who preferred to bask in the quickly fading light of false medievalism. His carefully crafted prose revealed a nuanced and original understanding [...]

A Tale of Two Cités: Mediating Associations

By |2013-11-21T14:40:35-06:00January 23rd, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Barack Obama, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Politics, Robert Nisbet|Tags: , |

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. But what is “best” for some is “worst” for others, and vice-versa. Monday, President Obama was sworn in for his second term. This event was a “best” for his stalwart supporters, such as Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, and is a sign of a [...]

Original Intentions: On the Making and Ratification of the Constitution

By |2020-06-22T16:20:45-05:00January 20th, 2013|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Books, Constitution, Kevin Gutzman, M. E. Bradford|Tags: |

Driven by an imperative to remind Americans of what they once knew, and to do so before the opportunity passed, M.E. Bradford possessed a reactionary vision; he yearned for a return to America’s birthright, the Constitution of 1787. Original Intentions: On the Making and Ratification of the United States Constitution, by M. E. Bradford; foreword [...]

Remembering an Eastern Orthodox Prophet: Nicholas Berdyaev

By |2020-07-16T10:54:02-05:00January 16th, 2013|Categories: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Orthodoxy, Senior Contributors|Tags: |

Nicholas Berdyaev stressed the primacy of culture and theological issues over politics and economics as truer forms of reality. He argued that only when society has realigned itself, individual by individual and community by community, “towards divine objects” could humanity save itself. One kind of weird but enticing academic puzzle for me is discovering and [...]

The Living Edmund Burke

By |2019-12-17T19:48:37-06:00January 12th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, Edmund Burke, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

Getting up in recent months an anthology of conservative writing, The Portable Conservative Reader, I had reason to reread much of Burke. More than ever before, I was impressed with how relevant Burke’s thoughts - and, indeed, Burke’s actions - remain to our present discontents. (It is with some reluctance I employ that word “relevant,” [...]

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