Popular Posts
-
Peter Wehner, a former Republican official, reviews a new book about the author of Narnia . He believes the great writer’s political views...
-
The title says it all – Mike Judge was planning to release spoof campaign ads featuring the hilarious U.S. president from the future. But...
-
A contemporary American conservative argues that John Stuart Mill’s understanding of liberty and the harm principle is a poor guide in addr...
-
This article tries to explain “why apocalyptic fiction and film haven’t caught on in the Middle Kingdom.” It makes a curious comparison to...
-
This blog post contains a curious comic illustrating Neil Postman’s fear that “Huxley, not Orwell, was right” in describing the totalitari...
-
In this essay , Stanford classicist and poli sci professor Josiah Ober tries to explain why Socrates chose to accept the verdict of the Ath...
-
Joel Klein is the in-house satirist of Time Magazine . But in this piece he is only half-joking...
-
The strapline for this article says “the Enlightenment philosopher’s attack on cosmopolitan élites now seems prophetic.” The piece also su...
-
This is a provocative piece from the English site of the German magazine Der Spiegel. At the bottom of the article, there is a link to a r...
-
In this article , Susan Faludi ( a prominent American feminist) criticizes what she sees as an unfortunate transformation of feminism. She ...
About
This is a collection of curious articles for students who have taken POS 101 - and would like to keep reading and thinking about some of the issues we discussed (plus some we missed).
Blog Archive
Powered by Blogger.
About Me
Sunday, February 21, 2016
A fun article on the uses and misuses of literature in business
education. Despite some negative examples, good literature could be truly illuminating
for those who do not just skate through the default major…
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment