Irving Babbitt: Moral Imagination & Progressive Education

By |2024-08-01T15:38:46-05:00August 1st, 2024|Categories: Education, Featured, Glenn Davis, Imagination, Irving Babbitt, Liberal Learning, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

Throughout his works, Irving Babbitt addressed the continuing decline of the humanistic imagination, humanism constituting a tradition that had produced a leadership class of ladies and gentlemen. His educational theory was aimed at producing an elite, humanistic aristocracy that would lead responsibly and ethically. When Literature and the American College, Irving Babbitt’s critique of the [...]

Hope or Despair? Roger Kimball & the Future of Culture

By |2024-08-01T07:57:15-05:00July 31st, 2024|Categories: Books, Culture, Jacques Barzun, St. John's College, Timeless Essays, Wilfred McClay|Tags: , , |

Our civilization has danced on the edge of the volcano for so many years now, recklessly testing its footing in ever more vulgar and precarious ways, defying the moral interdictions of the past and gradually losing a sense of its own fragility and vulnerability, that it is hard to imagine that we will survive our [...]

The Pursuit of Happiness

By |2024-07-31T08:47:01-05:00July 30th, 2024|Categories: Classical Education, Featured, Happiness, Liberal Learning, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

A free mind is necessary for our personal happiness, for living a good life, the life suited to our nature. Fifty years ago I shook the hand of our president, signed the College Register, and sat where you freshmen are sitting today, awaiting the happy start of a four-year adventure into the books and conversation [...]

Five Movies for the Twilight of Western Civilization

By |2024-07-30T11:51:34-05:00July 29th, 2024|Categories: Art, Audio/Video, Featured, Film, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

As Western Civilization proceeds from "dawn to decadence," here are five movies that may help viewers ponder what went wrong and what they should do at "the end of all things." 1. The Mosquito Coast (1986) Allie Fox (Harrison Ford in one of his best performances) is an eccentric inventor who is disgusted by the crassness [...]

Tocqueville and a New Science of Politics

By |2024-07-28T13:58:09-05:00July 28th, 2024|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Democracy, Democracy in America, Politics, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

According to Tocqueville, a new political science must account for both the immediate and the universal, the moment and the eternal. When we fail to understand the choice that God has given us with democracy—that is, a science to guide, attenuate, and hone democracy—the baser instincts will rise to the fore. Tocqueville breaks his own [...]

Eyes to See & Ears to Hear in Dark Times

By |2024-07-27T18:10:10-05:00July 27th, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, David Deavel, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Even in the midst of circumstances we consider less than ideal—a degraded and hostile culture, broken families—the Spirit of the Lord works so that we are not alone. He raises up children of the Father who want to be conformed to the Son in their own lives and to witness to the truth. They are [...]

Reflections on Hilaire Belloc’s “Essay on the Restoration of Property”

By |2024-07-27T17:42:56-05:00July 26th, 2024|Categories: Distributism, Economics, Hilaire Belloc, John Creech, Political Economy, Timeless Essays|

While Hilaire Belloc often describes the type of economy he is advocating as “distributist,” he also refers to it as “proprietary,” due to the idea that a truly free economy requires the widest distribution of private property as possible. The recent esays on distributism and the many comments in response raised a number of interesting [...]

Richard Wagner, the Nazis, and Christianity

By |2024-07-26T12:12:45-05:00July 25th, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Music, Richard Wagner, StAR, Timeless Essays|

Richard Wagner’s legacy has been overshadowed, and some would say permanently marred, by the manner in which he became the poster child of Hitler’s grotesque Third Reich. Yet should we condemn his music for this reason? Nice to see your music selections. But Wagner, your favorite composer! Say it ain’t so, Joe! The above-quoted words [...]

The Tory Interpretation of History

By |2024-07-24T17:57:58-05:00July 24th, 2024|Categories: History, Michael J. Connolly, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

In Whig narratives, the art of history becomes therapy, telling readers that they are good, everything works out in the end, God is on their side, and all moral and material progress leads to them. Tory history, however, tells a different story. For Tories, life is complex, chaotic, often contrary, sometimes ends badly, and demands [...]

The War of the Gods and Demons

By |2025-11-17T18:43:28-06:00July 23rd, 2024|Categories: Aeneas, Aeneid, Culture, Fiction, Literature, Louis Markos, Religion, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Virgil|

Playwright David Lane has graced the Christian community with a formal, blank-verse play that takes up the war of gods and demons. “Dido: The Tragedy of a Woman” retells the tragic tale of the “Aeneid,” but with some dramatic plot twists that allow it to function both as a timeless meditation on the universal issues of [...]

Technological Servitude & Marshall McLuhan’s Proposal for Liberation

By |2024-07-20T17:46:02-05:00July 20th, 2024|Categories: Christopher Morrissey, Culture, Featured, Nature, Technology, Timeless Essays|

“At the Council of Trent, nobody noticed that it was Gutenberg who made all the problems,” said Marshall McLuhan, “and at Vatican II, nobody mentioned the hidden ground of electric information which has created all the moral and theological problems of our time.” Marshall McLuhan identified our time of postmodernity as the “ecological age” in which [...]

Hungry Souls & Brave Hearts: Heroism, History, & Myth

By |2024-07-19T21:31:26-05:00July 19th, 2024|Categories: Heroism, Myth, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

The cynicism of modern-day youth presents us with a great teachable moment. We must tell history as a great myth, for myths are often the best way of expressing truths. They are also the lifeblood of civilizations. “History is marble, and remains forever cold, even under the most artistic hand, unless life is breathed into [...]

The Truth of Beauty: Educating the Moral Imagination

By |2024-07-19T21:33:44-05:00July 19th, 2024|Categories: Beauty, Benjamin Lockerd, C.S. Lewis, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays, Truth|

The answers to the errors of modern times need to be given in philosophy and theology, but it is essential that we also experience the truth imaginatively. Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. —Keats, “Ode on a Grecian Urn” These famous lines of Keats [...]

Eric Hoffer: The Longshoreman Philosopher’s Thought & Work

By |2024-07-18T15:32:34-05:00July 18th, 2024|Categories: Communism, Freedom, Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays|

In a time of social and political radicalization, Eric Hoffer remained a free and independent thinker and identified the threat that Marxism posed for citizens. He reflects on human nature, individuality, and the responsibility and duty of thoughtful and informed citizens to upkeep open, democratic societies. Eric Hoffer The American philosopher, Eric Hoffer [...]

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