An Interview with Dr. Daniel Kuehler

How do you see music in conversation or in relationship with the liberal arts? Is music part of the liberal arts? I would say a very emphatic yes, because it’s one of the original seven. So if we’ve got the trivium and the quadrivium, the trivium are all of the arts of the word—grammar, logic and rhetoric—and they’re geared towards knowledge of the self, and … Continue reading An Interview with Dr. Daniel Kuehler

Forgotten Heroes: The Polish Catholic Men that Shaped the American Revolution

By Frederick Woodward Heroism, by nature, tends toward a tragic dichotomy. All throughout human memory, the pattern has remained relatively fixed. A man attains popular immortality, or else he is forgotten a few generations after he dies. The two conditions are not mutually exclusive — one can precede, or follow the other. Popularized, forgotten, redeemed again — these words sum up the cycle of virtually … Continue reading Forgotten Heroes: The Polish Catholic Men that Shaped the American Revolution

Man as Homo-Adorans

By Samuel Hilgeman On the Road to Emmaus, two men walk with God: “And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself… And their eyes were opened, and they recognized Him” (Luke 24). Reason without worship leads to death. In the modern western world, the great skeptics of the human tradition seek to build … Continue reading Man as Homo-Adorans

The Crows Will Pick Clean Our Bones

By Isaiah Sasser Weathers followed the faint trail through the undergrowth. A broad bear print impressed softly upon the loam caught his eye; a left paw, pointing north. Four claw marks scored the earth. The claw second from the left was missing. Weathers nodded to himself. His breath quickened and his pace increased. The lever-action rifle strapped around his shoulder jostled with the forceful, deliberate … Continue reading The Crows Will Pick Clean Our Bones

Letter from the Editor | Issue #51

Dear Reader, I find it ironic how winter, a season of apparent stillness and silence, is often the busiest time of year for students. I’d like to encourage you (through what hopefully is not too cheesy of a letter from the editor) to imitate the season and practice intentional stillness in your days as we approach the end of the semester.  As academics, we spend … Continue reading Letter from the Editor | Issue #51