Charles Lindbergh’s Philosophy of Vital Instinct

By |2025-05-20T13:07:04-05:00May 20th, 2025|Categories: Civilization, History, Philosophy, Science, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization, Western Tradition|

The heightened pace of life in industrial societies, Charles Lindbergh realized, necessitated reflection on what type of life is best suited for man. Which of the two, reason or vital instinct, constitutes the best function of human beings? Which of the two contributes best to man’s happiness and lasting well-being? Charles Lindbergh begins his Autobiography [...]

John Stuart Mill Reconsidered

By |2025-05-19T14:20:24-05:00May 19th, 2025|Categories: Books, Conservatism, John Stuart Mill, Liberalism, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

John Stuart Mill may well serve as an invaluable ally in searching out the roots of our ancient Anglo-American order that guarantee liberty as it coexists with order, neither at the other’s expense. He has a great deal of compassion and insight we could benefit from immensely, and it would be to our own disadvantage [...]

The Family at the Heart of a Culture of Life

By |2025-05-13T14:09:39-05:00May 12th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Communio, Culture, Essential, Family, Featured, Stratford Caldecott, Timeless Essays|

The bonds among the Church, the Holy Family, and the “domestic church” founded on the sacrament of marriage are intimate and profound. In a host of formal and informal pronouncements and teachings, Pope John Paul II consistently underlined the central importance of the family as the basic cell of human society, and sacramental marriage as the sole foundation [...]

Machiavelli’s “Prince” & Tomasi di Lampedusa’s “The Leopard”

By |2025-05-11T23:07:21-05:00May 11th, 2025|Categories: Books, Government, History, Imagination, Revolution, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

Tomasi di Lampedusa’s “The Leopard” provides invaluable insight into 19th-century Italian history while creating a compelling story, allowing readers to relive an unfamiliar age of revolution and a fading nobility. Time under quarantine has been an excuse to revisit a personal favorite book and to explore its history, controversy, and literary value. I can think [...]

Benedict’s Lesson

By |2025-05-08T22:11:23-05:00May 8th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Pope Benedict XVI, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

Benedict XVI left us with countless theological insights. But he also left us with an important lesson about the very foundations of democratic society and culture that we often take for granted. The recent death of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI reminds us of an essential and historic connection between religion and Western civilization. Religious belief and [...]

Pope Pius X vs. Modernism

By |2025-05-08T22:12:39-05:00May 8th, 2025|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Culture War, History, Modernity, Timeless Essays, Worldview|

The Ancient Serpent had oft-times crawled into the sacred precincts of Holy Church since his first entry. However, this time his havoc would strike a thousand blows to the Mystical Body of Christ. St. Pope Pius X named the serpent: Modernism. At the beginning of time a snake slithered into a Garden called Eden. He entered [...]

The “Wild and Terrible” Mozart

By |2025-05-02T10:04:46-05:00May 2nd, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Featured, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

"Too wild and terrible" is what Ludwig van Beethoven is reported to have said about Mozart's famous Requiem. And despite the popularity of this great, unfinished work, the "wild and terrible" side of Mozart has generally been obscured in the public mind, in favor of his seemingly "lighter" works: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, the overture to [...]

Kant on History & Culture as a Means to Ethical Evolution

By |2025-04-29T16:46:43-05:00April 29th, 2025|Categories: Immanuel Kant, Lee Cheek, Philosophy, Timeless Essays|

Culture, for Immanuel Kant, should be understood not as an aesthetic pursuit of the transcendentals, but as overarching basis for the moral improvement of all humans. The “Conjectural Beginning of Human History”[1] is Kant’s attempt to recast the creation story of Genesis. The procreative act of Yahweh is cooperative in the sense heaven and earth are [...]

Russell Kirk & Pope St. John Paul II on the Redemption of Man

By |2025-04-28T16:48:05-05:00April 28th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Conservatism, Faith, Featured, Hope, Imagination, Russell Kirk, St. John Paul II, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays, Truth|

Pope St. John Paul II and Russell Kirk defended freedom within the limits of truth and its authentic or right use. They knew it was crucial to distinguish license and liberty. But they have different approaches to truth. As we discussed the work of Russell Kirk, written in 1954, revised in 1962 and 1988, I [...]

Should Christians Watch “The Young Pope”?

By |2025-04-27T15:37:29-05:00April 27th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Culture, Film, Timeless Essays|

"The Young Pope" is unexpectedly different, painting a picture of the Vatican that is at once repulsive and frightening, yet also beautiful, mysterious, and at times even holy. Hollywood’s brush tends to paint the Vatican in colors dark and foreboding, a lavishly decorated place of simony and secret sexual sins. The papal throne is made [...]

Homage to Shakespeare

By |2025-04-23T09:34:00-05:00April 22nd, 2025|Categories: Glenn Arbery, Imagination, Literature, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, William Shakespeare, Wyoming Catholic College|

The first spark of genuine engagement with great writers most often comes from a teacher, and the ever-fresh immortality of the great work has its ironic contrast in the aging and death of those who made the introduction. So it is for me with Shakespeare, who was first truly impressed upon my imagination during my [...]

Reading With a Second Friend: Pope Francis on Literature

By |2025-04-21T14:01:44-05:00April 21st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, David Deavel, Literature, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

“On the Role of Literature in Formation" is perhaps Pope Francis’s best document of his pontificate. Short, sweet, and full of good lines quoted and written. And yet he remains a "second friend" to many of his flock because they see their own world in some fundamentally different ways than he does. Pope Francis’s pontificate [...]

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