Citizens or Subjects?
If the Court is not to function as a “bevy of Platonic Guardians,” its self-proclaimed power of judicial supremacy must be rejected.
If the Court is not to function as a “bevy of Platonic Guardians,” its self-proclaimed power of judicial supremacy must be rejected.
Bitter factionalism is inevitable when an octopoid federal state tries aggressively to meld diverse groups of people into one common body.
The End of Solitude reveals a man disenchanted with academic life, but who still underestimates the depth of our cultural corruption.
We must approach the Constitution in the spirit that inheres in the document itself.
American civil religion is no longer part of the aural wallpaper of our common life but is now the subject of academic and public scrutiny and debate.
Horror movies compel us to accept what we do not want to believe in.
A natural-rights defense of religious liberty must take care to protect fully the freedoms of religious institutions.
Aristotle reminds us that friendship is an important political good, and a central part of a well-lived life.
For years, the University of San Diego's law school set the standard for intellectual excellence and diversity.
Nicholas Eberstadt discusses the phenomenon of workless American men with host Samuel Gregg.