
This issue of
Audition features commentary by
MARS HILL AUDIO host Ken Myers about recent on-line essays by political theorist
Patrick Deneen. The four essays discussed were posted on Deneen's blog,
What I Saw in America, and they each offered perspective on our current economic crisis gleaned from classical political philosophy. The essays were titled: "
Abstraction," "
Political Philosophy in the Details," "
Whack a Mole," and "
Democracy in America." Also referenced in
Myers's comments is the 1976 book by sociologist Daniel Bell,
The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism. Patrick Deneen, associate professor of government at Georgetown University, was also a guest on
Volume 91 of the
MARS HILL AUDIO Journal; a portion of that interview may be heard
here. In this interview, Deneen and Myers discuss the thought of Wendell Berry, whom Deneen describes as a "Kentucky Aristotelian."
Ken Myers also
comments on an article from the May 2008 issue of
Harper's by Wendell Berry. Berry's article, "
Faustian Economics: Hell Hath No Limits," identifies the destructive (yet perennially attractive)
Gnostic tendency to assume that limits are bad and always in need of breaking, a tendency implicated in many forms of cultural disorder.
Finally, Myers previews a new audiobook published by
MARS HILL AUDIO, called
The Passionate Intellect: Incarnational Humanism and the Future of University Education, by Norman Klassen and Jens Zimmermann.
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