EPPC was pleased to host a free public showing of Witness to Hope, the 2001 documentary based on the definitive…
Events
American Culture and Democracy Fall 2004 Lecture Series The Ethics and Public Policy Center is pleased to announce its Fall…
American Culture and the Presidency George W. Bush’s Evangelical Conservatism: Or, How the Republicans Became Red February 23, 2005…
The Bioethics Debate and the American Character A Lecture by Eric Cohen, with comments from Leon Kass Wednesday, October 20,…
The War Against Terrorism Remarks by George Weigel and Bill Kristol Wednesday, October 13, 2004 AUDIO RECORDING OF THIS EVENT…
The Question of Marriage A Lecture by Hadley Arkes Friday, October 8, 2004 In this lecture, Professor Hadley Arkes explained…
Justice Antonin Scalia Launches EPPC Lecture Series Supreme Court Justice speaks on “The Courts and Democracy” Monday, September 20, 2004…
Tertio Millennio Seminar on the Free Society Kraków, Poland June 30- July 17, 2014 The Tertio Millennio Seminar on the…
Tertio Millennio Seminar on the Free Society Kraków, Poland July 2013 The Tertio Millennio Seminar on the Free Society was founded…
Tertio Millennio Seminar on the Free Society Kraków, Poland July 2011 The Tertio Millennio Seminar on the Free Society was founded…
World War I was a civilizational cataclysm and its effects are much among us. In his thirteenth annual William E. Simon Lecture, EPPC Distinguished Senior Fellow George Weigel explores both the perennial question of why the Great War happened and the typically unexplored, but perhaps more urgent, question of why World War I continued—and what the answers to that second question disclose about the state of western civilization today.
Articles, Events
“America’s Prospects: Promise and Peril” Economic, political, and demographic trend-lines in American life In the bustle of daily politics, it…