Philanthropy and Citizenship
Genuine citizenship involves active participation in that vast realm of human affairs known as civil society.
Read MoreMichael Joyce | May 1993
Genuine citizenship involves active participation in that vast realm of human affairs known as civil society.
Read MoreGeorge Nash | April 1992
Seventy-three years ago, the First World War ended in Europe. The armistice took effect at eleven o’clock in the morning—the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month: a symbolic acknowledgement that European civilization had come close to irreversible ruin.
Read MoreK.E. Grubbs, Jr. | March 1991
The New York Times Magazine recently alerted us to a “return to religion” among intellectuals. It struck me as odd and perhaps even alarming
Read MoreWarren T. Brookes | April 1990
In the last few months, Americans, especially those of Eastern European national descent, watched with both awe and elation as democracy and freedom reared their hesitant heads above the ebbing tides of Marxist socialism in the Warsaw Pact nations.
Read MoreJean-Francois Revel | April 1988
A crisis is regarded as the result of instability, but that instability offers us the opportunity to eliminate some elements and strengthen others.
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