The Genealogies of Modernity Journal
Las Casas and the Primacy of Truth
[T]here is something of enduring significance in the fact that Las Casas’ protest was rooted in his return to the scholastic tradition of Christian reason, and particularly in the work of Thomas Aquinas.
Euan Grant responds to the Genealogies of Modernity podcast
Is Mutualism Possible?
How can we help locally, but in a way that works economically?
An interview with Sara Horowitz
Picturing Race in Colonial Mexico
Episode 2.5 of the Genealogies of Modernity podcast is live!
Jamestown and the Myth of the Sovereign Family
Episode 2.4 of the Genealogies of Modernity podcast is live!
How Beautiful Are Numbers?
How is mathematics a liberal art? How can being good at math translate into virtue?
An interview with Francis Su
Climbing the Mountains of Modernity
Episode 2.1 of the Genealogies of Modernity podcast is live!
Announcing the Genealogies of Modernity Podcast
What does it mean to be modern? And what is modernity anyway? Find out on the Genealogies of Modernity podcast.
Teaching Happiness
How successful are the liberal arts in teaching students how to be happy?
An interview with Tal Ben-Shahar
Will There Be Computers in Heaven?
What does Silicon Valley have to do with Jerusalem?
An interview with Derek Shuurman
Series Announcement: Theological Genealogies of Modernity
In the coming months, Genealogies of Modernity will be publishing a series of response pieces to articles from Theological Genealogies of Modernity, a special issue of Modern Theology edited by Darren Sarisky, Pui-Him Ip, and Austin Stevenson.
Can AI Reignite Our Faith?
AI gives us information. It furnishes facts. It prompts us with news headlines. But could AI also answer our religious questions?
An interview with Shanen Boettcher
Hedgehog Noontime Discussion with Ryan McDermott
The Hedgehog Review interviews Ryan McDermott
An Interview with Philip Metres: Part II
[Poetry is] the closest thing—alongside music and dance and visual art—to a transhistorical technology of human expression and contemplation.
Anthony Shoplik interviews Philip Metres