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  • The Actual ‘Sword in the Stone’?

    The Actual ‘Sword in the Stone’?0

    Even if you haven’t actually read a version of the legend of King Arthur, you’ve probably seen one of the movies or TV miniseries about it. I well remember the least serious: the 1963 animated Disney classic The Sword in the Stone, which many children from then on have also seen. We just don’t have

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  • Why are Colleges Banning ‘Any Product that Looks like a Cigarette’

    Why are Colleges Banning ‘Any Product that Looks like a Cigarette’0

    In this age of campus speech codes and safe spaces, are we really surprised that some university administrators act as moralistic tyrants over their student fiefdoms? The movement for a tobacco-free campus is no different. University officials around the United States are waging a war on the evil smoking “culture.” Consider the anti-tobacco policy of

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  • Ben Franklin on the Value of Rational Debate

    Ben Franklin on the Value of Rational Debate0

    When students in a maximum security prison education program beat out West Point cadets in a debate competition a while back, the story made headlines because of its almost man-bites-dog nature.  West Point debate coach Adam Scher recently responded to the phenomenon in an opinion piece for The Washington Post. As Scher implies, debate competitions

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  • 12 Times Calvin and Hobbes Taught Us about Philosophy & Religion

    12 Times Calvin and Hobbes Taught Us about Philosophy & Religion0

    As you may know, Calvin & Hobbes contains religious and philosophical significance in its very title. In a nod to his political science classes in college, creator Bill Watterson named Calvin after John Calvin, the 16th-century theologian and reformer, and Hobbes after the 17th-century philosopher Thomas Hobbes. Here are 12 times that philosophy and religion spilled

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  • 3 ‘Bad Loves’: When Freud and Christian Theology Actually Agree

    3 ‘Bad Loves’: When Freud and Christian Theology Actually Agree0

    Love is perhaps the greatest emotion humans can feel. It’s generally viewed as a positive concept, but philosophers, literature, and psychologists have long attempted to show that love of the wrong things in the wrong ways is a great vice. The philosopher Mortimer Adler, in his book The Great Ideas, identified three types of “bad

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  • The Woman Who Warned the World about Hitler

    The Woman Who Warned the World about Hitler0

    Some people can smell a rat a mile away. Others don’t notice even when the odor wafts right under their noses. Olfactory proficiency by itself doesn’t make you a hero. But if you’re among the first to pick up the scent and warn others, and then you put your political future on the line to

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