From websites promoting help with Monday morning atheism, to an ever present ‘TGIF,’ a place of honor toward work seems to do nothing but diminish within our culture. The mere suggestion that work is not a curse of the fall is unfortunately quite foreign in many circles. Continue Reading...
The newest edition of the Journal of Markets & Morality is now available online to subscribers.
This issue of the journal (14.2) is actually a theme issue on Modern Christian Social Thought. Continue Reading...
How much is a homemaker worth? Financial service company Investopedia recently added up what it would cost to hire someone to do cooking, cleaning, child care, driving, laundry, and lawn service equivalent to a full-time homemaker. Continue Reading...
On Thursday, March 1 at 7pm, Acton Institute president Rev. Robert Sirico will speak about the implications of the recent mandate for religious organizations handed down by the Health and Human Services Department of the federal government under the Affordable Care Act of 2010. Continue Reading...
Indivisible, a new book co-written by former Acton research fellow Jay Richards, has become a best-seller. From the book’s description: Continue Reading...
Matthew Schmitz over on First Thoughts posted a great article by Peter Berger sharing Peter’s thoughts on the recent HHS controversy. Peter gets at what is really the heart issue here. Continue Reading...
After 50-plus years of social unraveling, many reformers still see the “therapeutic model” as a cure for what ails American society. Or would a return to the classical virtues, as a means of healing first the person and then the culture, be the way of renewal? Continue Reading...
[Note: This is the second in an occasional series on gleaner technology.]
The Global Village Construction Set is a collection of 40 machines needed to “create a small civilization with modern-day comforts…like a life-size Lego set.” Continue Reading...
One of the conclusions from last week’s commentary was that the government shouldn’t be in the business of promoting a particular vision of the good life in America. That’s not to say that the government doesn’t have some role in promoting the common good or making some normative judgments about the good life. Continue Reading...