Saturday, October 17, 2020
Ars Vitae and Lost in Thought
Amanda Patchin considers what Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn’s ARS VITAE and @zenahitz’s LOST IN THOUGHT might teach us about living well in the midst of suffering and uncertainty: https://t.co/wbaWQBMVx3 pic.twitter.com/ZnQgjBQjfX
— Front Porch Republic (@FrontPorchRepub) October 16, 2020
UND Press: Ars Vitae by Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn
Princeton University Press: Lost in Thought: The Hidden Pleasures of an Intellectual Life by Zena Hitz
Russell Hittinger
Russ Hittinger on John O'Malley on conciliar reform in @americamag.
— Bill McCormick, SJ (@BMcCSJ) October 16, 2020
It doesn't get any better than that. https://t.co/nyRmSJz654
America Magazine
An abridged version of this paper:
See also:
Reductionistic Materialism
Take away the idea of a transcendent image shared by all humans equally, and you are left with a nightmare in which grading humans by race, condemning some and exalting others because of their pigmentation, becomes a definite option. https://t.co/0csTVGfsqc @realchrisrufo
— David Klinghoffer (@d_klinghoffer) October 16, 2020
Married Priests in the Catholic Church
@AAJDeVille1's "Married Priests in the Catholic Church" (April pub) is on page 10 @UNDPress's Spring 2021 Catalog. We are so excited about sharing this #book with the world! https://t.co/bZCh95tZ5Z
— Kathryn Pitts (@pitts5ndedu) October 15, 2020