T. S. Eliot and the crisis of meaning
The poet T. S. Eliot offers us a way of experiencing and interpreting the interplay of our personal and social worlds: ‘Understanding begins in the sensibility’.
The poet T. S. Eliot offers us a way of experiencing and interpreting the interplay of our personal and social worlds: ‘Understanding begins in the sensibility’.
This paper argues that Christianity is the most coherent form of humanism. By contrast, secular humanism is historically and philosophically dependent upon Christianity's view of the human person.
The Government’s proposal to introduce same-sex marriage seems to rest on reasons of equality, stability and convenience.
The Bible and Politics - Christian sources of British political thought by Nick Spencer
Margaret Atwood is one of the most important and influential writers alive today.
Rather than addressing fundamental moral issues around sexual freedom, this paper starts with our culture’s premise by taking a utilitarian approach and exploring the financial impacts.
The Equality Act 2010 was the last major piece of legislation to be passed under the British ‘New Labour’ Government.
The self-destructive tendency of a debt-based financial system has been highlighted previously. This lesson is being retaught with a vengeance by the current financial crisis.
Covert Power: Unmasking the world of witchcraft by Jonathan Burnside
Eschatology and Politics: the last things we want to talk about? by Geoffrey Penn