A new documentary recounts the history of religious freedom in our country from colonial times until today.
Dune: Part Two contains conservative truths about human nature and the fate of political faiths.
Among many unfair attacks on Mormons in the nineteenth century, slavery apologist George Fitzhugh’s was distinctive.
How can we defend free speech to those who show little interest in preserving an unfettered "marketplace of ideas"?
The only way to change the university’s direction is strong leadership from the top, and that doesn’t appear likely.
Person of Interest foresaw the future of AI and the potential problems of privacy, democracy, and human nature.
Zeitz offers a penetrating and sympathetic account of the American religious environment that influenced Lincoln’s spiritual thinking.
In the Lone Star State, a long-running legal challenge to “release time” in public-employee union contracts approaches its finale.
As the impending Chevron reckoning shows, journalists have distorted the way citizens think about the Court, the Constitution, and political power.
Jeffrey Rosen fails to address the differences between the Founders’ understanding of virtues and the ancients’.
Constitutional perfectionism is the belief that a constitutional text guided by a rationalist blueprint can create a perfect society.
He showed us the philosophical core of Graeco-Roman culture, and persuaded countless leaders to perpetuate the tradition.
William Howard Taft’s reflections on the old convention system remind us that things don’t have to be this way.
The limits of David Hume’s politics of utility are evident in America’s current political polarization and heighten political discourse.