The Center for the Study of Statesmanship

The Catholic University of America

Toggle menu

Skip to content
  • ABOUT
    • Our Mission
    • About CUA
    • News
    • Council of Advisors
    • CSS Staff
    • Visiting Fellows
  • Resources & PUBLICATIONS
    • Epistulae
    • Humanitas
    • Ideas & Commentary
    • NHI Bulletins
    • Video & Audio
  • EVENTS
  • DONATE

Humanitas Volume XXIX, Nos. 1&2, 2016

Contents

The Intellectual Kinship of
Irving Babbitt and C. S. Lewis:
Will and Imagination in
That Hideous Strength
,  5
Luke Sheahan

The Coleridge Circle:
Virtue Ethics,
Sympathy, and Outrage
,  43
Laurence S. Lockridge

Emerson on Plato: Literary
Philosophy, Dialectic, and
the Temporality of Thought
,  79
Jesse Bailey

Conservative Pragmatism,
Pragmatic Conservatism
,  97
William F. Byrne

Sources of American
Republicanism: Ancient
Models in the U.S. Capitol
,  105
Steele Brand

Schooling for “Deep-Knowing”:
On the Education of a
Pithecanthropus Erectus
,  133
Sean Steel

The Image of an Executioner:
Princes and Decapitations in
John of Salisbury’s Policraticus
,  157
Nathan J. Ristuccia

Categories

  • No categories

ABOUT CSS

The Center for the Study of Statesmanship promotes research, teaching, and public discussion about how statesmanship can defuse conflict and foster respectful foreign and domestic relations.

CSS is affiliated with The Institute for Human Ecology at The Catholic University of America. Visit IHE here.

CONTACT US

Center for the Study of Statesmanship
The Catholic University of America

620 Michigan Avenue, N.E.
313 Caldwell Hall
Washington, DC 20064

Email: smithws@cua.edu

Site designed by Fuzati

Oops! We could not locate your form.