Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Bellamy—Looking Backward

Of late 18th century American novels only Uncle Tom's Cabin outsold and out paced in significance Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward, the story of Julian West, who falls asleep in 1887 amidst the chaos of late capitalism and awakes to the socialist utopia of the year 2000.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

The Essex Result

Too often we are inclined to attribute our Constitution and its subsequent success — we should not forget that its 236 year continuing legitimacy is one of the great accomplishments of the modern world

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

America's Founding

This series concerns itself with our American heritage, and in particular to make contemporary readers more appreciative of the “blessings of liberty” that have been vouchsafed to us.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Horace Mann and Public Education

America is facing demographic decline. Whether it rises to the level of a crisis is open to debate (although you can put me squarely in the “uh oh” camp, and not only because I’m in my 60’s and devoid of grandchildren, which, in historical terms, is an anomaly of a high order).

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

How Many Is Too Many?

Our Heritage series typically focuses on American writers, but every now and then I am reminded of something from the non-American past that I think interesting.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Annapolis Convention

Most of our readers will know about the Philadelphia Convention in the summer of 1787 and assume that it had to replace the ineffectual Articles of Confederation.

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Heritage Kirstin Anderson Birkhaug Heritage Kirstin Anderson Birkhaug

Gouverneur Morris

That there are “forgotten Founders” is a truth universally acknowledged among students of the American Founding.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Empathy

In this nearly ten-year old essay, the philosopher Paul Bloom makes an argument against empathy (he subsequently published a book by the same title, but I’ve not read it).

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