The first step is resisting simplistic dichotomies.| Modern Age
A classic essay from 1960: libertarians and traditionalists share much in common.| Modern Age
During autumn, Swiss farmers return their herds from the high-altitude pastures. Here is a list of all the alpine cow parades in 2025.| Newly Swissed Online Magazine
“Well, then,” his father replied flatly, “you’d better learn medicine—or you’re going to go hungry.”| American Essence
I think it is a given that the multiplicity of human languages, traditions, practices, etc. diversify and enrich our ways of being in the world; this multiplicity is a good thing. The post Nation Statism and the Jewish Tradition: William Cavanaugh Interviews Yaacov Yadgar appeared first on Contending Modernities.| Contending Modernities
Does This Really Belong to Us? We talk a lot about appropriation… and we should because our medicines, ceremonies, and teachings have been stolen, watered down, and sold back to us in wellness kits…| Oz Wisdoms and Lessons
"Rabbit rabbit" is a quirky tradition that many people say for good luck each month. But where did it come from and why ...| Farmers' Almanac - Plan Your Day. Grow Your Life.
Jedes Jahr am 21. März findet das kurdische Newroz-Fest statt. Die Wahrscheinlichkeit ist groß, dass Blut fließen wird – wieder einmal.| taz.de
See also: GK Chesterton on HG Wells and the function of an open mindFools’ Money (2): Counter ArgumentChesterton’s Fence (at Farnham Street)| Driverless Crocodile
Kangli Li is waiting for the rain to stop. It should have stopped a month ago. She needs to rebuild the mud floor of her farm’s water cellar, damaged by consecutive droughts the years before. Without the mud, the cellar can’t store water. Without the cellar, Li can’t water her fruit tree farm in Yunnan province, in southwestern China. Li had a new well dug recently and it didn’t hit water until 140 meters (460 feet), so she extended it an additional 70 meters (229.6 feet) to prepare f...| Scienceline
Walking along a trail at eleven-years-old, my grandpa stops at yet another plant to take a photo. I usually love flowers, but it is February, I am cold, and it seems we haven’t gotten ten feet along the path without an extensive informational session about a plant and why it exists. I look...| a magazine
Curious why the giant Zurich snowman is burned? Discover the Böögg’s secrets and how to catch Sechseläuten live in 2025...| Newly Swissed Online Magazine
Make a big batch of this tonic with pungent roots & herbs to take charge of your health and enjoy the benefits of fire cider during the cold & flu season!| Nitty Gritty Life
Reading through the gospels, we find interesting moments when Jesus was challenged by the ones who claimed to be servants of God and His Law. In Mark 7, we see that the Pharisees and scribes wanted to know why the disciples of Jesus failed to wash their hands before eating bread. This wasn’t so much […]| GGWO Church Baltimore
By choosing Trump (again), Americans chose to return to our heritage and its vision of who we are, how we live, and what we cherish.| The American Mind
You’ve experienced that just-right feeling of finding “the one!” You may even have your eye on the perfect dress. Now, for one of the most important details–the venue! Ready to…| Stone Manor
If you step back in time to Roman Corinium in the month of December, you might just find that some things seem very familiar December is here and| Corinium Museum
Fish and dairy can make for a delicious mix, despite popular belief.| Atlas Obscura
Since the early thirteenth century, ‘grief’ in the English language has referred to “suffering, pain, or bodily affliction,” coming from grever “afflict, burden, oppress” and the Latin gravare, “make heavy” or gravis, meaning “weighty”. In its modern context, grief is perhaps best understood as mental pain or sorrow for the death of a loved one, […]| The Confucian Weekly Bulletin
Revolution has been the slogan and banner for generations of creative idealists. But they seem more concerned with a love of transgression than of life.| The Foundation for the Future of Classical Music
Counterpoint in music is like rhyme in poetry: it holds disparate things together in a unity, and at the same time it shows that unity is not simple but composed.| The Foundation for the Future of Classical Music
Since Easter is coming up at the end of this month, we wanted to share with you some Scandinavian Easter food staples!| Skandibaking
Tonight at 9 p.m. Eastern, Ancient Faith Radio will host its “first special edition of Ancient Faith Today Live” in which Fr. Tom Soroka and John Maddex will “take a deep dive int…| Dissident Mama
A simple, inexpensive Christmas family tradition. A sock dance party! Get matching socks, put the lights on the floor, and dance like nobody's watching!| Girl Loves Glam - Beauty for real women, from the inside out. Self love, easy...
Want to escape the crowds and experience the unique charms of rural Japan? Discover your perfect farmstay in Miyazaki, Mie or Yamagata.| WAttention.com
Christmas celebrations in Latvia are rich in tradition with a sprinkling of superstition. Although now Christmas has been tamed down to a quiet family celebration, it used to be a three-day celebration coinciding with winter solstice with tables heaving with food and many joyous activities to join.| Latvian Eats
This is part two of the 2019 Black History Month series on two important sites- the African Burial Grounds in NYC and a tiny island called St. Helena. In this second part, I’ll discuss the bu…| The Rockstar Anthropologist
“[T]he work of Jung constitutes the inauguration of a new method in the domain of psychology. It is the method of exploration of psychic layers in succession – corresponding to the layers of archae…| Casual Histrionics
As promised, I wanted to upload the presentation notes that I read during the first Episode of Vocatio. Most of these notes are meant for voice formatting so a lot of my references are not included…| Casual Histrionics