Virtues Project for a Youngster

By |2026-01-14T06:17:48-06:00January 13th, 2026|Categories: Education, Virtue|

Here I share a project that my daughter undertook and fulfilled weekly, over 20 weeks, when she was 12 years old. To: Rebecca Stern From: Daniel Klein RE: VIRTUES PROJECT Each Wednesday, by 20:00, email me your written thoughts on the virtue of the week. Your written thoughts should include answers to the following questions. [...]

Walter McDougall’s “Gems of American History”

By |2026-01-13T21:19:19-06:00January 12th, 2026|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Books, History|

Historian Walter McDougall is that rare "twofer": a wonderful writer of history and a wonderful lecturer. In this book, he combines essential tips for the writer with a series of uniformly sparkling essays that range from the era of the American Revolution to the present day. Gems of American History: The Lecturer’s Art, by Walter [...]

No Character

By |2026-01-12T15:51:31-06:00January 12th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Labor/Work, Nature of Man, New Polity, Technology|

By doing a certain thing, by perfecting a certain skill, by learning a certain trade, a man becomes specific, becomes particular. Today, however, labor no longer helps us become who we are, and so trivial things, like taste in music, rush in to fill the gap. The most tiresome part of living in a faux [...]

Philip Lawler’s “Ghost Runner”

By |2026-01-11T14:06:28-06:00January 11th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Literature, Senior Contributors|

Philip Lawler rightly observes that the core problem in the Catholic Church, and at the heart of American Christianity in general, is a loss of faith. In his novel "Ghost Runner," he takes us into the corridors of power both in diocese and D.C., reminding us how venality, vanity, corruption, immorality, and lack of faith [...]

Burke on Monstrous Revolution and Regicide Peace

By |2026-01-11T20:36:13-06:00January 11th, 2026|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Edmund Burke, Europe, Government, History, Justice, Politics, Revolution, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Edmund Burke contended that, far from creating peace, the French Revolution had generated the greatest despotism the world had yet seen, politicizing all things and enslaving the vast majority of the population. Of Edmund Burke’s (1729-1797) four Letters on a Regicide Peace—his final work, written while he rested on his deathbed—the fourth is, by far, [...]

Logotherapy: Man’s Search for Meaning

By |2026-01-11T13:23:30-06:00January 10th, 2026|Categories: Classical Education, Education, Goodness, Liberal Learning, Literature, Philosophy, Socrates, Truth|

Now we’ve always been a happiness oriented culture. “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” and so forth. Right? But it’s taken a particularly interesting turn: the topic of “meaning” and “meaning in life” is coming to the fore. People, more and more, are talking about not just sheer contentedness, but what it is for [...]

Paintings and Beauty

By |2026-01-10T13:25:21-06:00January 10th, 2026|Categories: Art, Beauty, Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Culture|

To enter a universe peopled with objects whose function is to give pleasure is also to establish contact with the order of pure beauty. The words “beauty” and “beautiful” have become unfashionable, not indeed with artists, who use them quite freely even in our own day, but rather with the school of those aestheticians who [...]

Saint Charles Borromeo, the Colossus of Lago Maggiore

By |2026-01-10T12:41:40-06:00January 9th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Holiness, Sainthood, Virtue|

The purity of a soul adorned with virtues—this, then, is the deepest motivation behind the discipline, asceticism, and mortifications practiced by the saints of all ages. This purity, which signifies the imitation of the thrice-holy God, represents the very core of Saint Charles’s moral life. I am convinced that no one who is aware of [...]

C.S. Lewis Goes to Mars

By |2026-01-24T15:10:53-06:00January 9th, 2026|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Science fiction, Senior Contributors|

"Out of the Silent Planet" invites us to see the way that each of the three main characters grasps, or fails to grasp, the radical new perspectives offered by the encounter with alien species in a physically strange place and a metaphysically stranger “space”; ultimately, it invites us to judge the philosophies which inform or [...]

The Problem of the Young, White Males

By |2026-01-08T12:05:49-06:00January 8th, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, John Horvat, Liberalism, Senior Contributors, Virtue|

The leftist man fears the Christian ideal of manhood. He trembles in the face of its purity. He is terrified by its chivalry. He is afraid of its manly prayer. He even fears its compassion. Far from the meek caricature of the Nietzsche world, with the help of supernatural grace, the virtuous Christian man can [...]

The Idea Machine: How Books Built Our World and Shape Our Future

By |2026-01-06T21:34:27-06:00January 6th, 2026|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, History, Imagination, Literature, Senior Contributors, Technology|

Joel J. Miller is as much a movement as a man. Of everything his new book "The Idea Machine" has to offer, I most appreciate his argument that books not only reflect our humanity, but they also, in dialogue with one another, teach us to be more humane. Joel J. Miller, The Idea Machine: How [...]

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