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In the preface to Inferno (1976), co-authored with Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle described himself as “a 14th-century liberal.” The phrase, seemingly paradoxical, reflected his Catholic faith and conservative worldview, deeply rooted in the moral and political sensibilities of medieval Christendom, particularly the era of Dante Alighieri, while deliberately distancing himself from the modern liberalism of …

Introduction The proposed research aims to explore the concept of "fragmented knowledge", which is that the notion that knowledge, as it is received, interpreted, and reconstructed over time, is inherently fragmented and distorted. This fragmentation often results in various epistemological fallacies that can affect the development and understanding of new concepts. This study seeks to …

Few nations in Western Europe demonstrate with such clarity that political progressivism and civilizational continuity need not be mutually exclusive. Walk through the labyrinthine alleys of Lisbon’s Alfama during the São João festival, watch Porto’s Ribeira district come alive with the rhythms of Fado, or step into the austere halls of Alcobaça Monastery, and one …

Modernity, as it developed in the West, is largely characterized by a desacralized vision of the world and of time, which leads human beings to lose contact with the fundamental dimensions of existence, namely with the anthropological structure that, until then, had always defined man as a religious being. This rupture is not limited to …

The Failures of Earth’s Globalist-Corporate Order Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars Trilogy stands out in science fiction for its detailed and coherent political philosophy. Unlike many novels in the genre that focus on technology or adventure, Robinson constructs a vision of society deeply concerned with political and ecological transformation. The trilogy examines the failures of Earth’s …

Max Weber's 1919 lecture Politics as a Vocation (Politik als Beruf) stands as a cornerstone of modern political sociology, dissecting the essence of political action amid the upheavals of post-World War I Germany. Delivered in Munich to aspiring politicians and intellectuals, Weber's address grapples with the disenchantment of modernity, where the rationalization of society—epitomized by …

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