Thursday, May 27, 2010
Congrats to our own "youthful and stylishly dressed" Robby George!
John Haldane, writing in the (British) magazine Standpoint, offers an appreciative portrait of our own Robby George and his work. . . .
. . .Well-known as a scholar, lawyer and public commentator, he has acquired a new status as a leader of American intellectual conservatism, the heir to William F. Buckley Jr, Richard John Neuhaus, Irving Kristol, and Ralph McInerny, who have all died in the past two years. Indeed, if the verdict of a major profile recently published in the New York Times Magazine is to be believed, George is the leading American voice of thoughtful Christian conservatism. But any images of eccentricity or fogeyishness would be out of place: "Robby" George is youthful, stylishly dressed and fully up-to-speed with the electronic information culture. . . .
Central to his work is the task of understanding and helping others to appreciate what he describes as "the profound, inherent and equal dignity of every human being and all that follows from that about how we should lead our lives, and govern ourselves as communities". According to George, this takes us to a true humanism that identifies principles of conduct (including justice and human rights) by considering the various fundamental and irreducible aspects of human wellbeing and fulfilment.
In George's view, religious faith illuminates these principles and helps us to grasp their full meaning and significance, but they may be reasonably affirmed even apart from divine revelation: "That is what it means to say that they are principles of natural law." . . .
There's more . . .
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/05/congrats-to-our-own-youthful-and-stylishly-dressed-robby-george.html