I found the following pamphlet, called “How To Live One Day at a Time” in a dusty old library. I later discovered that the book was out of print, in the public domain, and worth the short amount of typing.
First Things published a piece by Archbishop Chaput of Philadelphia (found here), wherein he describes the importance of Veritatis Splendor, an encyclical written by St. John Paul II on the importance of philosophy in our time. As you might expect, this
Bishop Conley is the Bishop of Lincoln, Neb. A version of these remarks was offered at the Institute for Catholic Liberal Education’s Regional Catholic Classical Schools Conference on July 5, 2017, in Denver, Colo.
Fifty years ago this month, in July
As someone who tends towards over-intellectualizing things, I’ve found that what Padre Peregrino says in this post, the Over-Intellectualization of the Catholic Faith, is true. Here is a relevant exerpted quote:
“The challenge becomes more difficult because one of the peculiarities of
Two years ago I posted that I would be leaving Chicago for Houston to attend this program. Now the broader university to which it belongs wants to close North America’s only center for Thomistic studies, basically because it wants to spend
Congratulations to the eternal city, sanctified by the blood of many martyrs, and many to come!
The well known and eminent scholar Fr. James V. Schall, American Jesuit Roman Catholic priest, teacher, writer and philosopher, spoke earlier this semester at the University of St. Thomas.  The talk was entitled, âIs Intelligence Impractical? â Reflections of a âRigidâ
EUROPE
June 6–12 Schola Latina Corcagiensis (Cork, Irland)
June 10–July 16 Living Latin in Rome (Rome, Italy)
June 26–August 20 Academia Vivarium Novum (Rome, Italy)
July 2–16 Scholae Aestivae in Italia (Montella, Italy)
July 3–7 Colloquia Latina IV (Barcelona, Spain)
July 3–21 Polis Latin (Rome, Italy)
July 7–13 L.V.P.A. Seminarium Latinum
So far in the book, Aristotle has established that there is one end that we all share and are directed towards by our very being: happiness. Happiness is that for the sake of which all else is done: it is
Chapter 1 – Since only voluntary actions receive praise or blame, how do they differ from involuntary actions?
Compulsion – any case where the course of action lies in a thing outside agent and he contributes nothing.
Various examples of mixed