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Life’s fragility should remind us of the greatness of God, and the goodness of God’s creation should inspire us to respect life. Adapted from remarks made in the Princeton University Chapel for Respect Life Sunday.
From its ancient Stoic origins to its modern Kantian formulations, human dignity is an important concept for sound ethical thinking. We must distinguish dignity as attributed, dignity as intrinsic worth, and dignity as flourishing.
Modernist poetry embodies the philosophical perspective of late liberal Western society, giving form to the conception of freedom divorced from essence, the theoretical primacy of the individual, and the broad skepticism towards any notion of a rational human nature. The first in a two-part series.
Aiding the deliberate destruction of human life has no place in the doctor’s job description.
Divine legislation functions to enforce moral absolutes, not to ground them.
The eurozone’s current crisis is an opportunity for Europe to explore new monetary options that challenge the hitherto dominant vision of the European Union’s economic future.
The conditions that inspired "The Scarlet Letter" highlight the gap between public employment and civic motives.
New York Times reporter Linda Greenhouse refuses to see the truth about contraception, conscience, and religious liberty.
Political legitimization of “private” sexual and marital choices causes much public harm. We have been personally harmed by the regimes of abortion and easy divorce.
The Judiciary doesn’t have the final word on the meaning of the Constitution, and Congress could step in to protect the 14th Amendment rights of the unborn.
Slandering their fathers while energetically progressing “somewhere,” the progressive is always in a position of impiety.
A new book argues that flogging may be a more humane, efficient, and just punishment than incarceration.
In a discipline whose point is dispassionate reasoning and discourse, some would shut down debate and silence dissenters on a deep and complex moral-political issue. And the view they would anathematize, far from irrational, is more coherent and more compelling than their slippery and ill-defined 'default'.
Doctors are called to a life of compassionate service to human beings invested with intrinsic dignity. This essay is adapted from the Commencement Address Dr. Landry delivered at the St. Louis University School of Medicine.
When we debate problems of social justice, we must keep our shared principles separate from the means we advocate to recognize them. Failure to do so produces unfruitful discourse and misdirected charges.
Planned Parenthood must account for its disregard for the law if it wishes to retain state funding.
A recent Supreme Court case reveals a division amongst conservatives over the moral foundations of the law.
Those who care for the severely disabled and dependent testify to our sense that they are part of the human community.
An exploration of how war affects people, and what it does to their natural moral instincts. The second in a two-part series.
Let the sexual revolution be justified on the grounds of the common good.
Prominent bioethicists Arthur Caplan and Robert P. George on the role of bioethics in a democracy and the dangers of eugenics.
The part of the Muslim tradition usually cited in support of killing apostates has been gravely misunderstood.
We live in days of distraction.
A new book provides the most comprehensive, up-to-date, and even-handed presentation of the abortion argument.