Crisis – “Love your Enemy, But Know Him Too”
In the mid-1990s the philosopher Norman Geras published a short book on the 鈥渦ngroundable liberalism鈥 of Richard Rorty.
Program and Major List
Institutes and Centers
Resources
Study Abroad in Austria
Tuition & Financial Aid
International Students
Living Your Faith
Housing & Dining
Student Opportunities
Student Resources
Resources
News & Events
In the mid-1990s the philosopher Norman Geras published a short book on the 鈥渦ngroundable liberalism鈥 of Richard Rorty.
Among the many confusions in our modern-secular culture is the fundamentally incoherent idea鈥攚hich is also a promise, a hope, and a dream鈥攖hat true happiness is possible without truth, but instead can be had with more freedom and more power.
Cardinal Robert Sarah proposes that the Church recover a piece of its tradition.
Like all modern tyrants, Karl Marx hated religion, Christianity in particular, because he understood that it was going to be very difficult if not impossible to get men to follow him so long as they continued to follow Jesus Christ, and so the first thing an aspiring tyrant in the middle of Christian Europe needed to do was to uproot and destroy Christianity.
While the practices of body-part harvesting at Planned Parenthood are horrific, the role of federally funded medical researchers at some of the country鈥檚 most prestigious universities and hospitals must also be investigated by Congress.
Even if a definitive connection is made between the virus and birth defects such as microcephaly, contraception isn鈥檛 an effective or moral solution.
According to the German Catholic philosopher Josef Pieper, the 鈥渨isdom of the West鈥 expresses the sum total of what man 鈥渙ught to鈥 be.
In the twenty years since the publication of Deal Hudson鈥檚 marvelous book Happiness and the Limits of Satisfaction, the eclipse of Greek and Christian ideas about happiness by the pursuit of pleasure, of 鈥渨ell-feeling鈥 rather than 鈥渨ell-being,鈥 has only advanced.
With the New Year and the Year of Mercy begun, last year鈥檚 Synod of the Family seems like old news.
Once it became clear that I was returning to the Church (a story for another time), I set out to study the Catechism, along with as much Catholic theology and philosophy as I could get.