Tracking the Tridentine mass

A Good Source tells me that everyone at the Vatican is in a tizzy over the rumored document liberalizing availability of the Tridentine (traditional Latin) mass. Everyone think’s it’s a big deal, but no one (except I suppose the Pope) has any idea what’s going to happen or when.

So much for inside gossip. In … More ...

Tradish links

Here’s a list of links relating to issues regarding tradition and Catholicism we’ve dealt with at Turnabout. Inclusions and exclusions tend to be arbitrary, personal and happenstance, and don’t show whether I agree or disagree with something. They are also largely based on ignorance of what’s out there, so suggestions would be welcome—links don’t … More ...

Thoughts on ‘gay marriage’

Some thoughts provoked by the imposition of “gay marriage” on the people of New Jersey by the state supreme court, on the grounds that no substantial government purpose is served by limiting marriage to man and woman:

  • The move treats marriage as a creation of positive law that can be freely defined to be whatever
More ...

Liberalism as simply a tradition?

A friend wrote to ask what I thought of various academic attempts to try to avoid objections to liberalism that are based on the liberal tendency, now out of fashion, to claim that liberalism should rule because it’s based on universally valid rational principles of some sort. My response:

The attempts you mention basically claim

More ...

Equality, and man made God

A correspondent asks what metaphysical liberalism, as “the denial of the Good as a self-sufficient entity which exists independent of any individual’s personal preferences,” has to do with “the modern Left’s hysterical denial of differences between (and in some cases among) different racial sexual and myriad other groups.”

My response:

To my mind, the craziness

More ...

Skepticism and dogmatism (snippet from book-to-be)

The fundamental question of political legitimacy is the nature and purpose of authority, and thus the nature of man, the world, moral obligation, and the human good—in other words, which religion is correct. Liberalism cannot get by without answering that question, but it answers it indirectly, by claiming moral ignorance. We do not know what … More ...