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- Keynesian thought is utopian
- The Don gets his phone calls returned
- The Mullah’s go mum
- Digital mediums & the wrought return of the nation state
- Nawaz Sharif’s dynasty in Pakistan halted
- Lenin: storm chaser
- How to read the Mexican election
- The African continent & the state of capitalism
- Trump & Iran: presage to permanent emnity
- The Moral, Strategic Bankruptcy of Arafat
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Tag Archives: Cicero
The Swerve: Modernity & The Creation Of Contemporary Life
Just as contemporary historians and philosophers are finally beginning to ride astride the findings of Catholic theologians on distinguishing variable modes of the Enlightenment (Hans Urs von Balthasar, John Courtney Murray, Henri De Lubac and Gertrud Himmelfarb) all come to … Continue reading
Posted in Antiquity, Hans Urs von Balthasar, John Paul II, Philosophy, Shakespeare, Theology
Tagged 14th Century, Augustine, austerity, Cicero, Gerturd Himmelfarb, Hans Urs von Balthasar, hedonism, Henri De Lubac, Henry VIII, John Courtney Murray, John Fisher, Levant, Lucretius, Poggio Bracciolini, Positivism, Quintillian, Reformers, relativity, Steven Greenblatt, Tertullian, Thomas More, Vitruvius
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How The Secular World Began
Just as contemporary historians and philosophers are finally beginning to ride astride the findings of Catholic theologians on distinguishing variable modes of the Enlightenment (Hans Urs von Balthasar, John Courtney Murray, Henri De Lubac and Gertrud Himmelfard) all come to … Continue reading
Posted in Antiquity, Identity Development
Tagged Cicero, Latin Writers, Secular World Began
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What Has Athens To Do With Jerusalem?
The North African Catholic Church throughout the last remaining centuries before the fall of Rome was the most fertile intellectual region before the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787. I don’t say that in a cavalier way, for the Church … Continue reading
Posted in Alex Tocqueville, Antiquity, Arab Spring, Conservatism, Constitution, Ethics, Harry Jaffa, Identity Development, International Relations, Islam, Morality, Politics, Theology
Tagged Abstractions, Alexis de Tocqueville, Athens & Jerusalem, Bismark, Catholic Absolutism, Cicero, Code of Justinian, Edmund Burke, Enlightenment, Faith & Reason, Forum, Founding Fathers, France, Islam, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Justinian, Liberty, Locke, machiavelli, Mary Ann Glendon, Max Weber, Ratio, Reflections on Revolution in France, Reign of Terror, Roman Civil Law, Tertullian, Tower, Tribonian
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