From Intercollegiate Review <[email protected]>
Subject A Primer on the Common Good Conservatism Debate
Date December 30, 2021 7:00 PM
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The best of intellectual conservative thought, every Thursday
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CATEGORY: CONSERVATISM (9 min)


** Is There Common Ground in Common-Good Conservatism? ([link removed])
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There’s a New Year’s feast for your thoughts in the New Criterion: a debate on “common-good conservatism.” Roger Kimball introduces ([link removed]) it.

On the surface, Kimball writes, this debate features a conservatism of nationalism (à la Edmund Burke) vs. one of moral renewal (think: Aquinas and Aristotle).

But dig a little deeper and you see a bigger dispute between these new strands of conservatism and what some have termed “Conservatism, Inc.”

And beyond that, Kimball writes, you’ve got the real problem. Get his thoughts
here ([link removed]) as you settle down for the feast.

Read Now » ([link removed])
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CATEGORY: POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY (8 min)


** The Folly of Historicists ([link removed])
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Consider the arrogance of the deconstructionist, Randall Smith writes ([link removed]) .

These individuals pretend to expose the historical and biographical contexts that determine an author’s work, while never subjecting their own scholarship to the same analysis.

“When we deconstruct authors in this way, reducing them to our own preconceived categories, we no longer hear their voices, we hear only the mocking echo of our own,” Smith writes.

What’s the scholarly alternative to this impoverished historicism?

Smith shares thoughts from C.S. Lewis and Pope John Paul II that are good places to start.

Get that wisdom ([link removed]) right here.


Read Now » ([link removed])
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Because our student editors and writers are bravely bringing conservative ideas to their campuses, we’re highlighting their efforts here.

The Three Faces of Washington D.C.: An Intern’s Perspective ([link removed]) via The Standard

A Timeline of Cornell’s Endemic Restrictions ([link removed]) via the Cornell Review

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CATEGORY: CULTURE (4 min)


** To Conservatives Who Want to Save Culture ([link removed])
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“Beauty will save the world.”

If you know that quotation, you probably appreciate great art and culture.

But it’s one thing to appreciate great art and culture. It’s quite another to understand what makes it and how to preserve it.

So we consulted a painter.

Creation, Not Consumption

In this week’s Intercollegiate Review essay ([link removed]) , painter Michael J. Pearce explains the conservative’s role in culture, and what conservative art can look like. Read it to learn:
1. The agreement conservatives have with past and future generations
2. The relationship between created works and those who enjoy them
3. What conservative art looks like today

If you’re a conservative who appreciates the arts and culture, this guide is for you. ([link removed])


Read Now » ([link removed])
UPCOMING OPPORTUNITIES ([link removed])


** The Weaver Fellowship, January 15, 2022 ([link removed])
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Are you considering pursuing grad school? ISI’s Weaver Fellowship ([link removed]) can help fund your academic year.

These fellowships seek to uphold the idea of academic excellence and the role of education in producing persons capable of making reasoned choices in favor of liberty.

After more than fifty years, the ISI graduate fellows program boasts some of the most distinguished figures in the academy and public life.

But hurry, the application deadline is January 15, 2022. Make sure you
apply today! ([link removed])

Apply Now » ([link removed])
“For last year's words belong to last year's language. And next year's words await another voice.”

—T.S. Eliot, Little Gidding


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** Who We Are, What We Do
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Too many college students feel isolated or attacked for questioning the ever-narrowing range of debate on campus.

We introduce you to the American tradition of liberty and to a vibrant community of students and scholars so that you get the collegiate experience you hunger for.

Get the college experience you deserve—before you graduate.

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