Make Your Home in This Luminous Dark
Reformed philosopher James K. A. Smith’s new book follows a path beyond knowledge into doubt, suffering, and wonder. Review by Hayden Kvamme
Reformed philosopher James K. A. Smith’s new book follows a path beyond knowledge into doubt, suffering, and wonder. Review by Hayden Kvamme
Opening Remarks for Issue 38: On Natural Intelligence By Michael Carlowicz
(21) The Atrophied Self: How the Self Is Not an Ineradicable Feature of the Cosmos but There Might Be Ways of Keeping It Going. By Charlie Clark
Broadening our conception of intelligence beyond the cognitive will help us restore a fuller understanding of our natural intelligence and reclaim manifestations thereof that have been too widely dismissed. By Joe Vukov
"intranauts" By Christianna Soumakis
The serpent’s corrupting our posture as knowers hollows out our intelligence and through it, ourselves—three apprenticeships can restore right knowing. By Brandon McNeice
"We Are Young" By A. R. Stager
What if resisting transhumanism looks less like rejecting technologies and more like loving our neighbor as ourselves? By Joshua Rio-Ross
"After the Storm" By Jennifer Fair Stewart
Recapturing a sense of delight in thinking and learning together promises to transform our workplaces into environments that foster our intellectual curiosity. By Elle Muller
"CANIS FAMILIARIS" By Katherine Spadaro
Rather than an individual gifting, intelligence is properly understood as social—honed in community, where a ground of minds can be more than the sum of its parts. By Evan Tao