From the motion picture Kiss Me Kate (1953), performed by Keenan Wynn (Lippy) and James Whitmore (Slug).
See Shakespeare, Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volumes 26-27, (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volumes 24-25.
From the motion picture Kiss Me Kate (1953), performed by Keenan Wynn (Lippy) and James Whitmore (Slug).
See Shakespeare, Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volumes 26-27, (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volumes 24-25.
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Philosophy & Theology In Medieval Europe: Events, at Richard C. Taylor
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Mayfair on ice: When the Wauwatosa shopping mall had an indoor ice-skating rink, by Chris Foranm, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Felix Bineman at Commonplace.
See Sophocles, Plays, Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volume 5, (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volume 4.
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A Theory of Natural Culture and Cultural Nature: On reading Nathan Lyons’ Signs in the Dust, by Luigi Russi, Lyceum Institute, at Reality Journal
NB BY J.C., "a collection of James Campbell’s best columns from the TLS, is a guide to the literary pleasures and absurdities of the past two decades." at Paul Dry Books.
Winter Wishlist and Gift Guide 2023-2024, American Library Association and Editions Neal-Schuman
The 10 Best Episodes From Mystery Science Theater 3000, Ranked, by Jake Dee, MovieWeb
Mortimer J. Adler, Ph.D., 1n The Saturday Review of Literature (via Stevenson College.
"Confusion about what it means to "own" a book leads people to a false reverence for paper, binding, and type -- a respect for the physical thing -- the craft of the printer rather than the genius of the author. They forget that it is possible for a man to acquire the idea, to possess the beauty, which a great book contains, without staking his claim by pasting his bookplate inside the cover. Having a fine library doesn't prove that its owner has a mind enriched by books; it proves nothing more than that he, his father, or his wife, was rich enough to buy them."
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Use This Three-Step Method to Read More Critically, by Lindsey Ellefson, lifehacker. "The structure-proposition-evaluation technique has been around since 1940, when philosopher and educator Mortimer Adler included it in his How to Read a Book: The Art of Getting a Liberal Education."
'Best-Selling Professor Allen Bloom on the Chicago Intellectuals', by James Atlas, The New York Times.
"In 1946, Allan Bloom entered the University of Chicago.
"Founded in 1891 with an initial gift of $600,000 from John D. Rockefeller, the University of Chicago was determined from the beginning to model itself upon Oxford, Cambridge and the great German universities - and to do so, noted a later president, Edward Levi, 'in a most unlikely geographical place.' Even Bloom can't entirely suppress his skepticism about the look of his alma mater, the 'fake Gothic buildings' surrounded by slums. 'But they pointed toward a road of learning that leads to the meeting place of the greats.'
"These aren't just words. Under the stewardship of Robert Maynard Hutchins, who began his legendary tenure as president of the university in 1929, Chicago became famous as an institution devoted to the higher learning. Mortimer Adler, recruited by Hutchins to serve as a resident intellectual guide, introduced a program devoted to the classics of Western literature, and, by the mid-1930's, what had begun as a course (General Honors 110) defined a milieu. Adler is much derided today - Bloom puts him down as a kind of equal opportunity intellectual. But for a precocious Midwestern boy like Bloom, Hyde Park was the Promised Land."
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Dr. Daniel Wagner, Associate Professor, Director of Catholic Studies, and Chair of Philosophy as Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, MI, and Faculty Fellow at Lyceum Institute, on Reason, nature, and the human good in this Acton Line podcast via the Acton Institute, at YouTube.
How to Clean and Restore a Weathered Deck, by Ron Hazelton, deck board straightener, popping nails or drift punchded, wash and brightener using garden sprayer and light scrubbing with long-handled brush, rinse with presser washer, sealer using garden sprayer
Alexandra Baro at Commonplace.
In addition to ongoing reading groups and tutorials, the Catherine Project periodically hosts single seminars on short works. These two-hour conversations are a way to get a taste of our approach to group study with minimal commitment. The following essay was inspired by a Fall 2022 seminar on Montaigne’s essay "Of Pedantry".See Montaigne, Essays, at Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volume 25, and Great Books of the Western World (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volume 23.
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How to Listen and How to Speak, by Peter Redpath, review by Jason Morgan, The Review of Metaphysics, at Project Muse (in part)
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(Noted on the shelves: Antaeus 21/22 Spring/Summer, 1976 "Special Essay Issue")
Antaeus, 1970-1994, Dreamers Rise
Antaeus Magazine, by J. D. O'Hara, The New York Times
Ted Widmer reviews Lincoln’s God: How Faith Transformed a President and a Nation, by Joshua Zeitz, at The New York Times.
As a young man, Lincoln was barely a Christian in the conventional sense. ...
"But a different Lincoln occupied the White House. If not a doctrinaire believer (he never joined a church), he clearly felt a deep connection to the Bible, which he read carefully. ..."
See Lincoln, "The Gettysburg Address", Gateway to the Great Books (10 Vol., 1963) volume 6.
See:
Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 54 Vol., 1952)
"Readers who are startled to find the Bible omitted from the set will be reassured to learn that this was done only because Bibles are already widely distributed, and it was felt unnecessary to bring another, by way of this set, into homes that had several already. References to the Bible are, however, included in both the King James and the Douai versions under the appropriate topics in the Syntopicon." (The Great Conversation, by Robert M. Hutchinsmm, volume 1, p. xvii). [Syntopicon is the title of the extensive topical index to the entire set.]Great Books of the Western World (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990)
"References to Bible, when present, are always placed first. The Bible is not included as part of the set, since there is no definitive version acceptable to everyone." Introduction to The Syntopicon (vol. 1, p. xiv),
A Reply to Cheryl Abbate, by Larry Arnhart, at Darwinian Conservatism.
"Aristotle's statement that 'man is by nature a political animal' is famous. But it is often falsely assumed to mean that human beings are by nature the only political animals."
See Darwin, Autobiography, in Gateway to the Great Books (10 Vol., 1963) volume 8, The Origin of Species and The Descent of Man, in Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volume 49, (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volume 49.
See Aristotle, Works, in Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volumes 8-9, (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volumes 7-8.
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The Simpsons Is Good Again: After 34 seasons, 750 episodes, and a decades-long funk, the show innovated its way back to popularity and relevance, by Jesse David Fox, Vulture
Man of letters, by Harry Mount, review of NB by J. C.: A Walk through the Times Literary Supplement, by James Campbell, at The New Criterion
Marcus Sher reviews Adam Smith’s America: How a Scottish Philosopher Became an Icon of American Capitalism, by Glory M. Liu, at The Independent Review
Scaling People: Tactics for Management and Company Building, by Claire Hughes Johnson, review by Carl Lee Tolbert Ph.D, The Journal of Values Based Managment
Graveside Ministry Offers Small Commitment, Big Reward, by Larry Hanson, Milwaukee Catholic Herald
Glenn Ellmers reviews Mere Natural Law: Originalism and the Anchoring Truths of the Constitution, by Hadley Arkes, at The New Criterion.
"All legitimate law, according to the founders' social-compact theory, is meant to reflect, not define, the principles of natural justice, which exist independently of human will. In other words, as Arkes pithily observes, there are 'truths that would be there even if there were no Constitution.'"
See the U.S. Constitution in American State Papers at Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volume 43, (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volume 40.
Theodore Dalrymple reviewed The Diaries of Franz Kafka, translated by ross benjamin, at First Things.
See Kafka, "The Metamorphosis", in Great Books of the Western World (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volume 60.
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"Google Has No Moat" in AI. A Fascinating Memo on the AI Market from Within Google. By Bret Kinsella, Synthedia
A Lawyer's Filing "Is Replete with Citations to Non-Existent Cases"—Thanks, ChatGPT? by Eugene Volokh, The Volokh Conspiracy
The Albemarle dynasty, by Brooke Allen, review of The Jeffersonians: The Visionary Presidencies of Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe by Kevin R. C. Gutzman, The New Crtierion
Thinking Smartly About Climate Change, by Bjorn Lomborg, Copenhagen Consensus Center, Imprimis
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Al Jaffee, iconoclastic cartooning legend of Mad Magazine fame, dies at 102, by Jessica Gelt, Staff Writer, Los Angeles Times
Orin S. Kerr, 18 The Green Bag 2d 251 (2015), at SSRN.
"In 2011, Chief Justice Roberts commented that if you 'pick up a copy of any law review that you see,' 'the first article is likely to be, you know, the influence of Immanuel Kant on evidentiary approaches in 18th-century Bulgaria, or something, which I'm sure was of great interest to the academic that wrote it, but isn't of much help to the bar.' No such article exists, of course -- until now. This short essay explains why, in all likelihood, Kant’s influence on evidentiary approaches in 18th-century Bulgaria was none."
See Kant, Perpetual Peace, in Gateway to the Great Books (10 Vol., 1963) volume 7; The Critique of Pure Reason, The Critique of Practical Reason, and The Critique of Judgement, in Great Books of the Western World (first edition, 52 Vol., 1952) volume 42, and (second edition, 60 Vol., 1990) volume 39.
Aquinas Leadership International
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Are science and religion fated to be adversaries? No, says Nicholas Spencer in Magisteria, an arresting history of their relationship, review at The Economist
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Aristotle: Politics 15. References and Further Reading Secondary literature – general works on Aristotle Adler, Mortimer. Aristotle for Everybody: Difficult Thought Made Easy. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1978.
"This is probably the easiest-to-read exposition of Aristotle available; Adler says that it is aimed at “everybody – of any age, from twelve or fourteen years upward.” Obviously the author has had to make some sacrifices in the areas of detail and complexity to accomplish this, and anyone who has spent any time at all with Aristotle will probably wish to start elsewhere. Nevertheless, the author succeeds to a very great degree in delivering on the promise of the subtitle, expressing the basics of Aristotle’s thought in simple language using common examples and straightforward descriptions."