Getting in Line
One of the most mistaken beliefs in our culture is the idea that technology is neutral in its application.
George Washington: “First in the Hearts of his Countrymen”
George Washington died in 1799 a decade after the Constitution was ratified, and just two years after serving as the nation’s first President, elected for two full terms.
America’s Refounding in the Northwest, 1787: David McCullough’s Paean to Pioneers in the Ohio Country and Beyond
As his life neared its end, the genteel David McCullough gave a gift to the American people.
What is Justice
An essay I wrote on justice recently appeared in the journal Religion and Liberty.
Bravery Debates
After some time in the academy, I started obsessing about how certain words were being used.
Can AI Do All That It Claims?
Artificial Intelligence is in the news with a vengeance as ChatGTP released a new version of “chatbot.”
Locke Promulgation
Readers may not be aware of it, but there is a significant academic debate going on about liberalism in general, and “Lockean liberalism” in particular.
Letter From the Birmingham Jail Reflection
In their recent book on The Black Intellectual Tradition: Reading Freedom in Classical Literature, Angel Adams Parham and Annika Prather argue that black emancipation and advancement have occurred when blacks have embraced the substance of the Western intellectual tradition
Virtue in Government
David French in this essay places alongside each other two contrasting thoughts of two contrasting thinkers—first friends, then enemies, then friends again—who were central figures in our nation’s early history.
Evolutionary Psychology
I’m always interested when writers make some sort of assertion about the biological bases of moral judgments.
Vox Arendt Friendship
Politics, Aristotle wrote, is a mode of civic friendship; or, at the very least, a good polity is marked by high levels of civic friendship.