The Incorruptible Life of Action: Human Agency at the Intersection of Time and Eternity
Hunter A. Bragg explores the political possibilities of irony, parody, and satire in relation to time and eternity.
Hunter A. Bragg explores the political possibilities of irony, parody, and satire in relation to time and eternity.
The following is a guest post by Kyle David Bennett. Kyle is a recent PhD graduate from Fuller Seminary in philosophy of religion and philosophical theology. Before moving to NYC last year he taught philosophy at Azusa Pacific University and theology and ethics at Providence Christian College. He now teaches religion at The King’s College. […]
If not for his tragic suicide back in 2008, today would have been the fifty-first birthday of award-winning writer David Foster Wallace. By nearly any account, Wallace was the greatest talent of his generation. In addition to his sparkling fiction, which included sprawling, encyclopedic novels such as Infinite Jest and beautifully crystalline short short stories […]