Abraham Lincoln and the City on the Hill

By |2018-11-12T21:09:54-06:00May 1st, 2013|Categories: Abraham Lincoln, Christianity, Mark Malvasi|

Anyone who writes about Abraham Lincoln must confront the “Lincoln Myth.” To penetrate the legend that now surrounds Lincoln is a formidable task for, as M. E. Bradford noted, the events of Lincoln’s life and the circumstances of his death placed him “beyond the reach of ordinary historical inquiry and assessment.” He is, Bradford continued, [...]

Ayn Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged”: From Romantic Fallacy to Holocaustic Imagination

By |2019-12-06T03:28:24-06:00May 1st, 2013|Categories: Ayn Rand, Books, Christendom|Tags: , |

“The only authentic epochê is . . . victory over desire, victory over Promethean pride.”—René Girard[1] “When the SS torturer becomes the villain of the war film, he is turned into a sacrificial figure, a scapegoat, [he becomes the] structural equivalent of the Jud Süss in Nazi cinema.”—Eric Gans[2] No account of Ayn Rand’s (1905–1982) [...]

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