Whether Order Is the First Need of All

By |2022-12-03T15:16:37-06:00December 3rd, 2022|Categories: Order, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot|

The more genuine sources of order come not from opinion-makers but from custom, convention, and continuity. The appeal is to the three parts that make an associated sensibility: heart, imagination, and intellect, and all three are calculating and decision-making, and all three tutored by the eternal standards of what is right and what is wrong. [...]

“Vital Tension” as the Creative Spiritual Energy of History

By |2023-08-30T18:35:33-05:00November 20th, 2022|Categories: Catholicism, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Culture, Featured, Timeless Essays|

In spite of modern man’s spiritual failure, historian Christopher Dawson believed it possible to return to that vitality which for many centuries built Western culture: Christianity. Jesus Christ came to reveal to men that they have no enemies but themselves. –Pascal It is this vital tension between two worlds and two planes of reality which [...]

What Happened to Excellence?

By |2023-08-02T08:20:20-05:00September 18th, 2022|Categories: Character, Culture, Eric Voegelin, Essential, Featured, George A. Panichas, Great Books, Irving Babbitt, Modernity, Timeless Essays, Virtue|

Excellence predicates aspiration and transcendence, a quest for a higher qual­ity of attainment and, in effect, going beyond the moment. Excellence, which can be defined as the state of excelling and of surpassing merit, is now increasingly one of the lost words of the English language. And increasingly the special qualities that this word de­notes [...]

Short Quiz: Are You an Imaginative Conservative?

By |2022-09-18T14:40:07-05:00September 17th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, Satire, Stephen Masty, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays|

Let’s play 20 Questions! Take the following simple diagnostic test to see if you are an Imaginative Conservative or something else. Or better yet, try it on your friends so you’ll know whether to pay for the next round of drinks or hail a taxi. Answers, scored at the bottom, are the author’s interpretations and [...]

Education as if Truth Mattered

By |2022-08-25T12:54:22-05:00August 24th, 2022|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Education, Evelyn Waugh, Featured, G.K. Chesterton, Great Books, Joseph Pearce, StAR, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

If the twenty-first century is to produce more great men and more great books, it will have to restore a true education; and a true education is an education as if truth mattered. The title of this essay, “Education as if Truth Mattered,” is taken from the subtitle of Christopher Derrick’s book, Escape from Scepticism: [...]

On Being Conservative

By |2022-08-23T14:48:35-05:00August 23rd, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Family, Jane Austen, Marriage, Philosophy, Robert Nisbet, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

To be a conservative is first and foremost to defend or to conserve something good: to protect family, neighborhood, local community, and region. Louis de Bonald Of the many attempts to define conservatism in recent decades, one of the most compelling is Robert Nisbet’s: “The essence of this body of ideas is the protection [...]

A People Without History: T.S. Eliot’s Critique of Evolutionary History

By |2022-08-21T15:07:55-05:00August 21st, 2022|Categories: Benjamin Lockerd, G.K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, History, Poetry, Senior Contributors, T.S. Eliot, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays|

H.G. Wells sought to free humanity from the “bondage” of tradition, but T.S. Eliot saw history not as an evolutionary movement, but a return to the past. While T.S. Eliot never made any comments critical of Charles Darwin or his theory of the evolution of species, he was quite critical of various popularized versions of [...]

Revisiting Christopher Dawson on Culture

By |2022-08-04T18:39:19-05:00August 4th, 2022|Categories: Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Christopher Morrissey, Culture, Islam, Rome, Timeless Essays|

The essence of Rome, by being conscious of one’s cultural debts, is the refusal to make a definitive synthesis or mediation. Only in Rome are there Athens and Jerusalem. Only because of Rome are there “two cities because one remains silently present.” Remi Brague’s observation about the historical essence of Rome shows that “Romanity” is [...]

Irving Babbitt Against the Decaying Republic

By |2022-08-02T09:43:37-05:00August 1st, 2022|Categories: American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Culture, Featured, History, Irving Babbitt, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

Seeing himself and his allies on the losing side of the war against the modern spirit, Irving Babbitt made a fierce call to arms, advocating the need for a “remnant” to preserve all that is good, true, and beautiful. Irving Babbitt In his own day and age, Irving Babbitt’s (1865-1933) many opponents—from Ernest [...]

Irving Babbitt: The Man and His Thought

By |2023-08-02T08:21:39-05:00July 14th, 2022|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Ideology, Irving Babbitt, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Irving Babbitt was an eccentric, armed with both a brilliant mind and personality. While we ought to remember his thought, we should also remember the man. As the leader of the American humanists, Irving Babbitt (1864-1933) stood solidly and forthrightly in the American conservative tradition of John Adams and Nathaniel Hawthorne and drew upon the [...]

Ten Imaginative Conservative Questions

By |2022-07-09T17:18:01-05:00July 9th, 2022|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Senior Contributors, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

When Winston Elliott and I first started talking about what a proper online conservative journal might look like, way back in the spring and summer of 2010, we decided on a few things. Most importantly, we wanted real diversity of opinion, not the parroting of some ideological drudgeries. As such, we wanted all schools of [...]

Reflections on Imaginative Conservatism

By |2023-05-21T11:28:53-05:00July 9th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, E.B., Eva Brann, Featured, Imagination, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays|

What’s “imaginative?” What’s “conservative?” And how does the adjective modify the noun and the noun support its adjective? My first and last care is not politics but education. Education seems to me inherently conservative, being the transmission, and thus the saving, of a tradition’s treasures of fiction and thought. But education is also inherently imaginative. [...]

The Privilege of Little Words and Mighty Swords

By |2022-06-09T22:38:55-05:00June 9th, 2022|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Essential, G.K. Chesterton, History, J.R.R. Tolkien, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

Let not future generations say of us: We slept. Instead, may they remember us as those who fought the good fight for the Logos and for humanity. Let it be said that in the twenty-first century we took up either of our mythically-laden swords and wielded them with all the force imaginable. My talk today [...]

A Bridge to Somewhere: Willmoore Kendall’s Teaching on Democracy

By |2023-08-04T09:29:51-05:00April 7th, 2022|Categories: American Republic, Democracy, Eric Voegelin, History, Leo Strauss, Willmoore Kendall|

Complex and perceptive, Willmoore Kendall's ideas remain relevant as the most important intellectual defense of the American people’s right to rule itself rather than to submit to the tyranny of experts. He is the man who engineered the foundation, structure, and superstructure of a bridge to democracy with his own formidable intellect and tremendous erudition. [...]

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