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January-February Issue: Education for Truth and Life

January-February Issue: Education for Truth and Life

Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample Article Meeting Socrates: Educating Modern Philosophers Have any of you...
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November-December issue: Europe and the Culture of Christendom
September-October Issue: Shamrock, Thistle, Daffodil and Rose: The Cultures of the British Isles

C. S. Lewis Goes to Mars

Out of the Silent Planet invites us to see the way that each of the three main characters grasps, or fails...
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An Old Poet’s Advice to the Pope

What might the Holy Father learn from the Father of English Poetry? An Old Poet's Advice to the Pope -...
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Literature and Manhood

Joseph Pearce joins Joe and Joe to discuss authentic manhood and great literature... Literature and Manhood - Joseph Pearce
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The St. Austin Review

The St. Austin Review (StAR) is an international journal of Catholic culture, literature, and ideas. In its pages, printed every two months, some of the brightest and most vigorous minds around meet to explore the people, ideas, movements, and events that shape and misshape our world.

Education for Truth and Life

Sample Article: Meeting Socrates: Educating Modern Philosophers

Have any of you faithful readers of Peter Kreeft’s many, many books ever wondered what it would be like to attend his philosophy

course at Boston College? Save yourself ninety grand in freshman fees, and cough up instead a hundred bucks, plus or minus (Word on Fire lists it now at ninety-seven on their website), for his eight-volume inquisition of modern thought.

Reprinting the original Socrates Meets series from Ignatius Press (and St. Augustine’s), Word on Fire packs together Kreeft’s fanciful critique of post-classical philosophy into a handsome white, red, and gold box that will stretch only five and three-quarters inches (fourteen centimeters on the Continent) across your Greats shelf. Since Socrates is the main character in these dialogues, the conceit takes the last four hundred years of big brains back two millennia. The result is a leisurely cram-course, sprightly but pointed, illuminating, and a little annoying, like the gadfly himself: Kreeft imagining Socrates in dialogue with Machiavelli, Descartes, Hume, Kant, Kierkegaard, Marx, Freud, and Sartre. Get ready for terse definitions and close reasoning, with enthymemes here in place of the much longer syllogisms (and minus Kreeft’s self-described bad puns).

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To be truly effective, we need the help from clergy and laity everywhere. Help us help the next generation of Catholics to grow up educated in Catholic truth, beauty, and goodness. Please consider a one-time or continuing, tax-deductible gift to StAR!
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