The true places aren’t on any map
Clyde Kilby on C. S. Lewis’s claim that the Gospel is the greatest myth
Knowing and living our metaphysical totality
Clyde Kilby on the power of myth to bring together “the slender hints of the knowable”
Savoring the taste of Reality
C. S. Lewis on the transporting, illuminating capacity of Myth
Watching, waiting, persevering
Romano Guardini on the necessarily eschatological character of Christian living
The destructive perils of speech without a real partner
Josef Pieper and Marc Barnes on how chatbots pervert the nature of conversation
Paradoxes of “nature” and “culture”
Robert Spaemann, on the destructive consequences of a merely naturalistic understanding of nature
Machines and misanthropy
Nicholas Carr on how technology has transformed our understanding of progress (and people)
Alienation and autoamputation: the price of power
Nicholas Carr on the numbing effect of technology
In defense of peace and justice
Arthur F. Holmes summarizes the evolution of the just war tradition








