CGI Apocalypse: The Veiling of Nature

By |2016-02-14T16:01:03-06:00October 7th, 2013|Categories: Communio, Culture, Nature, Stratford Caldecott, Technology|

Will the world end with a bang, or just a whimper, as T.S. Eliot predicted? Or will nobody notice at all? An eerie silence, as everyone listens to an endless stream of digital music on their iPods. Gradually, step by step, with the advance of computer technology, real things are being replaced by images of [...]

Male and Female Souls

By |2019-07-16T07:55:07-05:00September 28th, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Communio, Marriage, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: |

To what extent are the differences between man and woman rooted in the soul, rather than just the body? If the soul is the “form” of the body, one might assume that masculinity and femininity are characteristics of the soul before they are of the body. Yet the tradition of patristic and medieval commentary on [...]

Beauty of Numbers

By |2019-08-08T12:56:48-05:00September 21st, 2013|Categories: Books, Communio, Film, Liberal Learning, Mathematics, Stratford Caldecott|

Michael S. Schneider’s wonderful work A Beginner’s Guide to Constructing the Universe, which I recommended in Beauty for Truth’s Sake, is linked to a lot of classroom teaching that Michael has done over the years. This has now been captured in his superb DVD called Constructing the Universe, which could be an important resource for teachers and parents [...]

Gerard Manley Hopkins & J.R.R. Tolkien on the Devil’s First Sin

By |2023-07-27T22:55:13-05:00September 1st, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Communio, Featured, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Heaven, J.R.R. Tolkien, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: |

The Devil’s first sin was not the temptation of Eve, but preceded the creation of the Garden. He “tried to destroy by violence before he succeeded in ruining by fraud.” You might like to compare Tolkien’s “Ainulindale” (the Elvish account of the creation of the world through music, in The Silmarillion), with the following meditation on the Exercises [...]

G.K. Chesterton and the Dandelion: The Romance of Receptiveness

By |2016-07-17T10:00:08-05:00August 16th, 2013|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Communio, Featured, G.K. Chesterton, Sainthood, Stratford Caldecott|

G.K. Chesterton And at this I cursed them and kicked at them and made an exhibition of myself; having made myself the champion of the Lion’s Tooth, with a dandelion rampant on my crest. Gilbert Keith Chesterton (d. 1936), who wrote these words, was an English “man of letters” – a novelist, journalist, [...]

A Truly Human Economy

By |2019-09-02T09:53:40-05:00August 6th, 2013|Categories: Books, Communio, Economics, Featured, Labor/Work, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: , |

Around the turn of the century, England lost its only Catholic college dedicated to the exploration of social thought, economics, and politics (Plater College in Oxford). It seems remarkable not only that it was allowed to close, but that it had been the only institution of its kind. In the U.S., fortunately, there are several [...]

The Power of the Ring – New Expanded Edition

By |2019-09-28T09:23:39-05:00July 27th, 2013|Categories: Books, Christianity, Communio, Featured, J.R.R. Tolkien, Stratford Caldecott|

Some years ago I wrote a book about Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings. It was called Secret Fire by the publisher DLT, and The Power of the Ring in the USA (Crossroad didn’t like the UK title). This year, with financial troubles at DLT, it went out of print (in both versions) and I was asked by Crossroad [...]

Essence of Beauty

By |2016-07-17T10:00:15-05:00July 22nd, 2013|Categories: Beauty, Communio, Featured, Stratford Caldecott, Truth|

Stars in the Water, by Rosie Caldecott Traditionally, truth, goodness and beauty are properties of all being, of everything that exists, in one degree or another. Truth is being as known­­– the correspondence and coherence of the idea and the reality. Goodness is being as willed–acting in accordance with the fullness of that [...]

Ainulindale: Music of Creation in Tolkien

By |2023-04-06T11:27:30-05:00July 17th, 2013|Categories: Christianity, Communio, Featured, J.R.R. Tolkien, Music, Myth, Stratford Caldecott|

J.R.R. Tolkien composed a whole “Elvish Book of Genesis,” describing the creation of the world by the One God (Illuvatar). In that mythological account—which he believed to be compatible with the creation story in Genesis—God first proposes the world as a musical theme. “There’s a divinity that shapes our ends, Rough-hew them how we will.” [...]

The Truth About Political Correctness

By |2019-07-15T16:16:55-05:00July 12th, 2013|Categories: Communio, Equality, Featured, Reason, Stratford Caldecott, Truth|Tags: |

Political correctness identifies a syndrome we all recognize, but is hard to define. It can be best described as a set of attitudes rather than an ideology, since viewed philosophically it is completely incoherent. It can perhaps be traced back to the French Revolution, in the aftermath of which various slogans became fashionable—mostly involving “Liberty” [...]

The Question of Purpose

By |2016-02-14T16:01:05-06:00July 7th, 2013|Categories: Classical Education, Communio, Education, Featured, Liberal Learning, Stratford Caldecott, Western Civilization|

Our society, indeed what remains of Western civilization, seems to many people to be falling apart. The economic crisis, the moral crisis, the ecological crisis, and the political crisis combine to create a “perfect storm”. But they all stem from one fundamental error. As a society, we have abandoned a sense of cosmic and moral [...]

Prince Charles: Imaginative Conservative

By |2023-07-05T00:33:59-05:00July 4th, 2013|Categories: Communio, England, Featured, Monarchy, Stratford Caldecott, Timeless Essays|

Charles claims he does not want to return to the past, but simply to learn from it. He thinks we should “accept that there are such things as timeless principles, operate on a human scale, look firmly to the long-term, respect local conditions and traditions, and be profoundly sceptical of people who suggest that everything [...]

Simplexity

By |2016-07-17T10:00:39-05:00July 3rd, 2013|Categories: Beauty, Communio, Featured, Order, Stratford Caldecott|

Frost Fractal The world as a whole is complex, but it is also a unity. It is “simplex”, founded on simple principles. Poets, painters, scientists and mathematicians are all searching for simplexity in their own way. Aesthetic pleasure is very largely the delight we feel in seeing order, meaning and relationship—the beauty that [...]

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