Category archive: Philosophers

Education that Corrupts

Originally in American Thinker, May 8, 2011 By Chuck Rogér It is the job of educators to “change the thoughts, feelings, and actions of students.”[1]  So proclaimed psychologist Benjamin Bloom, originator of Outcome-Based Education.  The U.S. Department of Education was created in 1979, setting the stage for Bloom’s decree only two years later.  In the [...]

I was doing a little light reading last weekend: An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, by philosopher Jeremy Bentham. There’s an online version of the original 1780 work here. Something familiar struck me when I read the chapter titled, “Of Principles Averse to that of Utility.” But first, some background. Bentham was [...]

Barack Obama: pretender to brilliance

Our President views himself as smarter, wiser, and more well-intentioned than the vast majority of Americans. It was a sight to behold as Barack Obama–before and after the Midterm Election–repeatedly pontificated to audiences of all sizes, audiences which shared one main characteristic: They too are smarter, wiser, more well-intentioned than the vast majority of Americans. [...]

Oh, what tangled feel-good we weave

Imagine spending your last dollar on popcorn, watching movies on your 50-inch flat panel HDTV, and yelling at the kids to stop whining about having to raid the Whole Foods’ sample tables for meals. This would be one kind of stupid. PBS’s This Old Houseis currently chronicling the construction of a new home on the site [...]