Francis Graham Wilson: A Theory of Public Opinion Revisited

By |2015-10-22T23:03:59-05:00October 2nd, 2012|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Economics, Lee Cheek, Political Economy, Politics|

Francis Graham Wilson Francis Graham Wilson (1901-1976), an eminent political scientist, lifelong scholar of public opinion, and a central figure in the postwar American conservative intellectual movement, was born near Junction, Texas, to Horace Ernest and Stella Jane (Graham) Wilson. He graduated from the University of Texas in 1923 and earned a master’s [...]

What’s Good About American Heresy

By |2014-01-18T14:39:11-06:00October 1st, 2012|Categories: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Peter A. Lawler, Politics|

So I don’t want to give the impression that heresies are all bad. They’re usually partly good: They highlight part of the truth that had been obscured or neglected. They’re rebellions that have a Christian point. Consider this partial affirmation of the heretical modern—or Lockean, nominalist–world by a very traditionalist and very erudite Catholic—Thaddeus Kozinski: [...]

Beauty Won’t Save the World Alone

By |2016-07-17T10:01:29-05:00September 30th, 2012|Categories: Beauty, Books, Christianity, Communio, Featured, Gregory Wolfe, Stratford Caldecott|Tags: |

The title of Gregory Wolfe’s excellent collection of essays, Beauty Will Save the World, is based on a much-quoted line from Dostoevsky’s The Idiot. In its context it appears only in indirect speech, being attributed by one of the other characters to the “Idiot” of the title, Prince Myshkin. Thus in its original context its [...]

Edmund Burke and the Politics of Empire

By |2020-01-12T13:30:50-06:00September 29th, 2012|Categories: Edmund Burke, Political Science Reviewer, Politics, William F. Byrne|

On Empire, Liberty, and Reform: Speeches and Letters of Edmund Burke, ed. David Bromwich (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000). Empire and Community: Edmund Burke’s Writings and Speeches on International Relations, ed. David P. Fidler and Jennifer M. Welsh (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1999). Edmund Burke was one of those rare figures who combined profound [...]

The Constitution is not Sacred

By |2013-12-09T17:53:22-06:00September 28th, 2012|Categories: American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Constitution, Constitutional Convention|

In one of the single most interesting moments during the constitutional convention of 1787, a discussion arose—really for the first time with any great seriousness—about the issue of slavery in the West. How the republic might expand would, of course, help define the republic itself. The admission of slaves was a most grating circumstance to [...]

Obamanomics Has Had Plenty of Time, but Delivers -0.3% Growth Instead

By |2014-01-13T15:46:43-06:00September 28th, 2012|Categories: Brian Domitrovic, Economics, Political Economy|

Here are some words we did not hear from Sen. Barack Obama as he campaigned for the presidency back in 2008, as the Great Recession gathered: “Now, I won’t pretend the path I’m offering is quick or easy. I never have….[T]he truth is it will take more than a few years for us to solve [...]

A NeoCon Night at the Opera

By |2014-01-21T13:34:05-06:00September 27th, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, Film, Leo Strauss, Music, Neoconservatism, Politics, Stephen Masty|

(WARNING: Contains Neo-Conservatism and saucy language) Well, here’s a big buon giorno to our National Public Radio audience, because it’s time for Impariamo Opera and I’m your co-host, Angela Tedioso. And I’m Hans-Dieter Langweilig. But today we stray from the shores of sunny Italy to the magical, musical world of Strauss. […]

Clement of Alexandria: The Virtue of Liberal Learning

By |2014-01-24T20:32:54-06:00September 27th, 2012|Categories: Christianity, Liberal Learning, Philosophy, Robert M. Woods|

Clement calls for his readers to meet Jesus as the “Word” and “Educator” that “forcibly” compels people from the “worldly way of life and educates them to the only true salvation: faith in God.” The Educator is the one “who leads the way” to “improve the soul” not just in knowledge but to guide in [...]

Use of Poetry: One Man’s Life

By |2015-12-11T15:25:55-06:00September 26th, 2012|Categories: Quotation, T.S. Eliot|

To do the useful thing, to say the courageous thing, to contemplate the beautiful thing: that is enough for one man’s life. Few men have known better than he* how to give just place to the claims of the public and of the private life; few men have had better opportunity, few of those having the [...]

Still Questing for Community

By |2019-09-10T17:04:54-05:00September 26th, 2012|Categories: Books, Community, Conservatism, Robert Nisbet, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

In the retrospect of forty years I can see my book, The Quest for Community (first published by Oxford University Press in 1953), as one of the harbingers of what would become by the end of the 1950s a full-fledged renascence of conservatism. There had been authentic and forthright individual conservatives before the 50s; among [...]

Involvement in the Middle East: Time to Come Home?

By |2014-01-09T20:06:14-06:00September 26th, 2012|Categories: Foreign Affairs, Islam, Middle East, Pat Buchanan, War|

Is it not long past time to do a cost-benefit analysis of our involvement in the Middle and Near East? In this brief century alone, we have fought the two longest wars in our history there, put our full moral authority behind an “Arab Spring” that brought down allies in Tunisia, Egypt and Yemen, and [...]

Lawless America: What Happened to the Rule of Law

By |2014-12-30T18:07:26-06:00September 25th, 2012|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Culture, Rule of Law|Tags: |

Though it has been obvious to discerning observers for a con­siderable period that the United States is moving at an acceler­ating pace from constitutionalism toward arbitrary power, the vast majority of Americans have been slow to recognize that a crisis of governance exists. Much of the reason, I think, is that entire structures of understanding [...]

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