On the Custom of “A Gap Year”
After twelve (or more) years of school, not all of us want to immediately sign up for an additional four years of school! Is there merit in the idea of taking a gap year?
On the Custom of “A Gap Year” Read More »
After twelve (or more) years of school, not all of us want to immediately sign up for an additional four years of school! Is there merit in the idea of taking a gap year?
On the Custom of “A Gap Year” Read More »
Archaic Greece saw the politics and culture of their society bloom, to a degree easily equalling the Late-Medieval Renaissance.
Texts in Context: The Age of the Tyrants Read More »
We pause for a moment, in our tracing of Western history, to glance at everybody else’s history.
Texts in Context: The Four Corners of the Round Earth Read More »
The slippery slope fallacy contends that a given idea, choice, or action will behave like Acme Rocket Skates.
Sorting Through Sophistries: Fallace E. Coyote Read More »
Texts in Context:A Rosy-Fingered Dawn By Gabriel Blanchard The Dark Age of the post-Bronze-Age Ægean is obscure to historians, but what happened next is far less so …
Texts in Context: A Rosy-Fingered Dawn Read More »
How do you handle a fallacy that’s right sometimes? Is it even still a fallacy?
Sorting Through Sophistries: A Drop of Poison Read More »
Texts in Context:Darkness on the Mountains By Gabriel Blanchard Here we turn from “the contemplative Sphinx” and “garden-girdled Babylon”1 to a small, enigmatic people, as few in number
Texts in Context: Darkness on the Mountains Read More »
Many fallacies are little more than failures to speak to the point; straw men exhibit this to the nth degree.
Sorting Through Sophistries: The Scarecrow and the Steel Man Read More »
The stage is now set for the Early Iron Age, much of which could be likened to a statue with a golden head, a silver chest, a bronze belly …
Texts in Context: Irons in the Fire Read More »
Sorting Through Sophistries:The Know-Nothings—Part II By Gabriel Blanchard It is said, and with truth, that numbers don’t lie. Unfortunately, this is only because numbers don’t speak: people, who
Sorting Through Sophistries: The Know-Nothings—Part II Read More »