Politics

We do not do partisan commentary. What we do is harder: we take the structural questions of political life – why democracies stagnate, why borders matter, why bureaucracies grow, why rights are never as universal as they claim — and trace them back to the thinkers who first saw these patterns. Hayek, Rousseau, Weber, Huntington. The names change. The tensions do not. Intellectual Prestige writes about the tensions.

Why the Opposite of Revolution Is Not Complacency, It Is Normalization

Why the Opposite of Revolution Is Not Complacency, It Is Normalization

Most people assume the opposite of revolution is doing nothing. Sitting on the couch. Scrolling through your phone while the world burns. Apathy. Complacency. The classic image of the citizen who just does not care enough to act. But Michel Foucault, the French philosopher who spent his career studying how power actually works, would have

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The Unpaid Moral Worker- Comte's Justification for Excluding Women from Public Life

The Unpaid Moral Worker: Comte’s Justification for Excluding Women from Public Life

Auguste Comte is often remembered as the father of sociology, the man who wanted to turn the study of human society into something as rigorous as physics. He coined the term “positivism” and dreamed of a world governed by science rather than theology or metaphysics. What gets less attention is the strange corner of his

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Why the Greatest Threat to Democracy Is Not Dictators, But Bureaucrats

Why the Greatest Threat to Democracy Is Not Dictators, But Bureaucrats

We have been trained to fear the strongman. The dictator in military dress, the demagogue at the podium, the authoritarian who suspends elections and locks up journalists. Every generation gets its cautionary tale. Hitler. Stalin. Mussolini. The lesson seems obvious: democracy dies when a tyrant seizes power. But what if the real danger is quieter

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The Most Important Lesson Aristotle Taught Alexander the Great

The Most Important Lesson Aristotle Taught Alexander the Great

Most people remember Alexander the Great for conquering the known world by the age of thirty. Fewer people remember that before he conquered anything, he spent years sitting in a garden in Macedonia, listening to a middle aged philosopher talk about plants. That philosopher was Aristotle. And the lesson he taught Alexander was not about

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