Once you have accepted that inquiry demands the presence of an interlocutor, you may wonder what exactly to inquire about.
Predictably, there have been more reactions to this column on my assertion that John the Baptist received and gave to mankind the great Revelation generally referred to as the Revelation of John.
His two early papers “What Numbers Could Not Be” (1965) and “Mathematical Truth” (1973) — the latter of which came to be called “the Benacerraf problem" — became instant classics and are discussed to ...
Her superpowers as a philosopher sprung out of the frustration at getting her thoughts and herself across to people who ...
Dog owners have been warned to avoid some beaches in north Cornwall following reports of hemlock water dropwort roots and reports of pets becoming "very unwell". Reports of dogs dying from ingestion ...
The consequences of acting and preaching and living against this reality will produce untold consequences of social, emotional, interpersonal and familial disconnect, because you cannot live according ...
Wesley Hill’s small volume about Easter is a beautiful and useful invitation to be shocked anew by the central event of our faith.
Life’s a funny thing, isn’t it? You spend your years chasing wisdom, searching for meaning, trying to put the puzzle together, and then, in the final moments, you get one last shot at summing it all ...
The Five Lessons of Life” by Carrie Kohan presents a deeply personal and transformative journey that began with two ...
Morality confronts us at every turn, from intimate relations to political considerations. When faced with moral uncertainty, ...
In “Open Socrates,” Agnes Callard argues for a way of being that sounds a lot like her own.