The Soundness of Reinhold Niebuhr

By |2021-05-11T09:56:54-05:00April 22nd, 2018|Categories: Books, Christianity, History, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

To many American Protestants, Reinhold Niebuhr restored an understanding of the truth of the dogma of Original Sin, as expressed in the myth of Adam’s fall. Yet in the defense of other Christian dogmata, was he indeed so strong-hearted and strong-minded as he generally is taken to have been? Niebuhr and His Age: Reinhold Niebuhr’s [...]

The Treason of the Clerks

By |2021-04-29T12:59:44-05:00April 15th, 2018|Categories: Books, Edmund Burke, History, Ideology, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Politics, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

The sorriest aspect of the twentieth century has been the rallying of the intellectuals to the arrogant banner of nationalism, which rejects universal and eternal truth for the sake of national and passing advantage… Thirty years ago, a book was published about which a great many people talk, but which few have really read: La [...]

The Necessity of Dogmas in Schooling

By |2021-04-29T13:01:39-05:00April 8th, 2018|Categories: Civil Society, Conservatism, Culture, Education, RAK, Russell Kirk, Social Order|Tags: |

As the rising generation is left ignorant of our civilization’s dogmas—or is encouraged to discard them—strange new dogmas rush in to fill the spiritual vacuum… All societies, in all times, have lived by dogmas. When dogmas are abandoned, the social bonds dissolve—swiftly or slowly; and the “open” society ceases to be a society at all, [...]

The Architecture of Servitude and Boredom

By |2020-04-20T10:47:19-05:00April 1st, 2018|Categories: Architecture, Beauty, Civil Society, Community, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

Do we descend steadily, and now somewhat speedily, toward a colossal architecture of unparalleled dreariness, and a colossal state of unparalleled uniformity? Will all of us labor under a profound depression of spirits because of the boring and servile architecture about us? And will the society now taking form in America resign itself to a [...]

Education Spending & the Nation’s Culture

By |2021-04-29T13:02:57-05:00March 25th, 2018|Categories: Books, Education, Politics, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

It is possible to bankrupt a nation’s treasury by extravagant expenditure upon alleged “education.” Worse still, it is possible to bankrupt a nation’s culture in the name of schooling… School Needs in the Decade Ahead by Roger A. Freeman (Institute for Social Science, 1958) Federal Aid to Education: Boom or Bane? by Roger A. Freeman (American Enterprise [...]

A Conscript in the Desert

By |2021-05-25T15:36:19-05:00March 18th, 2018|Categories: History, RAK, Russell Kirk, War|Tags: |

For years after his honorable discharge in 1946, Russell Kirk suffered a recurrent nightmare, to the effect that his discharge had been a clerical error; that he was summoned back to Dugway Valley; and there, beside his grim safe, stuffed with deadly secret documents, he would labor until he shuffled off this mortal coil. In [...]

Will American Caesars Arise?

By |2022-02-23T08:04:26-06:00March 11th, 2018|Categories: Essential, Featured, History, Politics, Presidency, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

The Framers had no intention of making their chief executive officer a Caesar, on the model of Augustus. Nor does any eminent politician or publicist nowadays advocate openly such concentration of power in the executive… May a time arise when the American government sinks to the condition of a plebiscitary democracy, that is, a regime [...]

A Stroll With Albert Jay Nock

By |2020-10-12T08:06:18-05:00February 22nd, 2018|Categories: Civil Society, Community, Conservatism, Culture, Education, History, Politics|Tags: , |

The trouble with our civilization, Albert Jay Nock declared, is that it makes exceedingly limited demands on the human spirit and the qualities that are distinctly and properly humane. We have been trying to live by mechanics alone, the mechanics of pedagogy, politics, industry, commerce. Instead of experiencing a change of heart, we bend our [...]

The Elements of Leadership: Might, Measure, & Meaning

By |2019-06-06T12:18:22-05:00January 17th, 2018|Categories: Eric Voegelin, Featured, Leadership, Political Philosophy|Tags: |

Not only is a leader an agent of force and something of a philosopher, but he must also be a kind of corporate prophet… The philosopher Eric Voegelin labored for many years in relative obscurity until his death in 1985. Even now his disciples are drawn largely from conservative academe, which is so marginal as [...]

Liberal Learning, Moral Worth, and Defecated Rationality

By |2019-10-10T14:56:46-05:00January 7th, 2018|Categories: Culture, Education, Featured, Humanities, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Moral Imagination, RAK, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

At best, what the typical college has offered its students, in recent decades, has been defecated rationality. By that term I mean a narrow rationalism or logicalism, purged of theology, moral philosophy, symbol and allegory, tradition, reverence, and the wisdom of our ancestors. This defecated rationality is the exalting of private judgment and hedonism at [...]

The Achievement of Russell Kirk

By |2021-05-27T12:58:09-05:00December 31st, 2017|Categories: Books, Conservatism, History, Imagination, Moral Imagination, Russell Kirk|Tags: , |

According to Russell Kirk, the moral imagination is the power of knowing man, despite his weaknesses and sinful nature, as a moral being, meant for eternity. It recognizes that human beings, after all, are created in the image of God. Russell Kirk and the Age of Ideology by W. Wesley McDonald (264 pages, University of Missouri, [...]

Winston Churchill’s Road to Victory

By |2022-02-03T17:01:35-06:00October 18th, 2017|Categories: Leadership, Modernity, Morality, War, Winston Churchill|Tags: |

Winston Churchill, who is the subject of Martin Gilbert’s book, comes out of it all a towering public figure—an inspiring wartime leader who never lost his confidence in the darkest hours of the war, a man of enormous vitality and energy, unsparing of himself, but who never lost an opportunity to enjoy what life had [...]

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