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Why can't our opponents be reasonable? In his new book, “The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion,” social psychologist Jonathan Haidt explores the origins of morality in our rapid and automatic moral intuitions.
Shared wariness over China is the main reason the U.S. and Vietnam have embraced each other. But it shouldn’t be the only one.
I am deeply moved and honored more than I can say by this award from my esteemed colleagues and friends at AEI, and especially because of its association with the name and memory of Irving Kristol, a man for all seasons. Irving Kristol was my teacher, editor, mentor, patron, and...
Paul Kennedy's view of America's power has truth to it, but it lacks any moral component and is overly dismissive of the sources of both domestic power and global stability.
Leon R. Kass, M.D., of AEI and the University of Chicago delivered the fifth of the 2008-2009 Bradley Lectures on January 12, 2009.
Arab commentators' acknowledgement, however shyly articulated, of Israeli rights is an opportunity that needs to be developed.
Despite President Obama's protestations to the contrary, rationing access to medical care is carefully prescribed in the health care reform bill that is now before the Senate.
Review of One Nation, After All, by Alan Wolfe





