Henry Adams & Modernity: A Philosophy of History for Our Times

By |2025-02-04T08:16:26-06:00February 3rd, 2025|Categories: Civilization, Education, History, Timeless Essays|

As happened with Henry Adams, a robust study of history is enough to prove the indispensable role that Christianity has played in true human progress, and it might just be enough to spark an interest in seeking an alternate, unified, form of meaning in our modern age, moving us back to God. Studies in the [...]

How Much Exactly Do I Have to Render Unto Caesar?

By |2025-02-02T19:42:04-06:00February 2nd, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Christian Living, Christianity, David Deavel, Economics, Senior Contributors, Taxes, Timeless Essays|

While there is a good deal of cant about how paying higher taxes is “patriotic,” most people instinctively recoil from taxes and don’t hesitate to avoid paying any more than they have to. So, is taxation moral? Income tax season is mostly over. For our family it just ended a week ago when the IRS [...]

Faith, Civil Society, and the American Founding

By |2025-01-31T11:03:46-06:00January 31st, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Barbara J. Elliott, Community, Religion, Timeless Essays|

We have increasingly placed our faith in the power of government to provide solutions for human misery. What was once a strong level of responsibility and autonomy at the city, county, and state level has shifted toward a massive concentration at the federal level. When Alexis de Tocqueville visited America in the 1830s, he marveled [...]

Schubert’s Seductive “Death and the Maiden”

By |2025-01-30T15:30:31-06:00January 30th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Franz Schubert, Music, Timeless Essays|

Franz Schubert composed his “Death and the Maiden” quartet—one of the most compelling, soulful, profound, irresistible pieces of classical music—while battling syphilis and depression. It’s not just the maiden that Death is after in the music. It’s Schubert. I don’t consider myself to be someone easily seduced, much less by Death, but Franz Schubert’s “Death [...]

The Forgotten American System

By |2025-01-28T17:34:20-06:00January 28th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Economic History, Economics, Free Trade, History, Politics, Republicanism, Timeless Essays|

President William McKinley championed the American System: “We lead all nations in agriculture; we lead all nations in mining; we lead all nations in manufacturing. These are the trophies which we bring after twenty-nine years of a protective tariff.” A return to the American System would be a major step toward increasing prosperity and restoring [...]

On Nature and Grace: The Role of Reason in the Life of Faith

By |2025-01-27T12:36:40-06:00January 27th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Essential, Faith, Nature, Peter Kalkavage, St. John's College, St. Thomas Aquinas, Timeless Essays|

We may say that the world for Thomas Aquinas does not merely have but is blessed with intelligibility, just as man is blessed with reason. Nature’s beauty is not confined to the senses but extends to the mind. “Ever since the creation of the world his invisible nature, namely, his eternal power and deity, has [...]

Mozart: Mirth & Freedom in “The Magic Flute”

By |2025-01-27T09:15:05-06:00January 26th, 2025|Categories: Culture, Music, Quotation, Timeless Essays, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|Tags: |

Indeed no words can better be used to describe Mozart’s music than “sublime” and “natural.” Beethoven is heroic, tragic—although at the end, he too can be sublime, with the autumnal serenity of a warrior turned contemplative; Bach erects his marvelously ornate cathedrals of sound—and occasionally he too passes into a timeless realm which could be [...]

Saving Classical Music: A Return to Tradition

By |2025-01-25T18:00:47-06:00January 24th, 2025|Categories: Andrew Balio, Conservatism, Music, Timeless Essays|

Classical music is born of the accumulating wisdom of the ages, with a canon that represents, like all canons, the mind of a civilization. And yet we have not learned to articulate our own defense. Or rather, like our compatriots, we have forgotten how to articulate it. I founded the Foundation for the Future of [...]

Memory & Hope: Restoring the Teaching of American History

By |2025-01-23T18:32:32-06:00January 23rd, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Conservatism, Education, History, Hope, Liberalism, Progressivism, Timeless Essays|

The currently pervading approach to American history presents America in the worst possible light, distorting the full truth of our past and damaging our political health. Our K-12 schools need a restoration of temporal continuity, the key to revitalizing history and civics education that forms young people who both appreciate the gifts of the past [...]

The Duty to Bear Arms

By |2025-01-22T18:21:08-06:00January 22nd, 2025|Categories: 2nd Amendment, American Founding, Bradley J. Birzer, Rights, Timeless Essays|

Americans historically have not just believed in the “right” to bear arms, but they have, more importantly, claimed an actual republican duty of all Americans to bear arms. Every two years at Hillsdale College, I have the immense privilege of teaching three of our upper-level U.S. survey courses: American Founding (1753-1806); Democratic America (1807-1848); and [...]

Faith and the American Founding

By |2025-01-21T19:57:11-06:00January 21st, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Barbara J. Elliott, Freedom of Religion, Religion, Timeless Essays|

An increasingly heated debate is taking place in America to redefine the role of faith in the public square. Faith has been a part of the American experience since the earliest days of the founding. As the nation now considers the relationship of the sacred and the secular, it may be helpful to reconsider our roots. [...]

Liberal Learning, Great Books, & Paideia

By |2025-01-20T19:58:42-06:00January 20th, 2025|Categories: E.B., Education, Eva Brann, Featured, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

First, I want to say how honored I feel at receiving this prize named after Russell Kirk, an admirable writer, and Paideia, a noble practice. Even those of you who have not studied Greek may recognize what paideia means. It is the same word you can hear in “pediatrics,” the medical care of children, or [...]

Reflections on American Order

By |2025-06-11T08:29:57-05:00January 19th, 2025|Categories: Essential, Order, Ordered Liberty, RAK, Roots of American Order, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

Order is the first need of all. One finds happiness in restoring and improving the order of the soul and the order of the republic—not in acts of devastation that make a desert of spirit and of society. Imagine a man travelling through the night, without a guide, thinking continually of the direction he wishes [...]

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