Culture Critic Profile picture
Mar 4, 2023 11 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Imagine how morally depraved a society must be to demolish something like this.
You don't have to imagine it - you're living in it.

The old Penn Station, tragically demolished:

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More from @Culture_Crit

Nov 18
C.S. Lewis, one of the 20th century's top intellectuals, considered himself too smart for Christianity.

So how, at age 32, did he suddenly become one of its greatest advocates?

He was struck by a strange feeling — and something Tolkien said to him late at night… (thread) 🧵 Image
C.S. Lewis's conversion didn't begin suddenly. He first began to feel a deep longing, pointing him to seek out the most beautiful things in life: music, art, romance.

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Nov 14
To us, Ancient Greece is a distant culture of mystery and intrigue.

But the Greeks also lived in the ruins of a civilization they couldn't understand — or build themselves.

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People living in Ancient Greece were amazed by the palatial ruins of their ancestors.

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Nov 12
New analysis recently revealed the Shroud of Turin (Christ's alleged burial cloth) to be 2,000 years old.

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Nov 11
Why is university education today so broken?

In the Middle Ages, it was profoundly different — it wasn't about acquiring skills, but about thinking.

By teaching you the 7 liberal arts... (thread) 🧵Image
Ancient and medieval societies had a vastly different idea of what higher education should be.

It wasn't about readiness for work, but cultivation of the moral and intellectual virtues that free the mind... Image
From the 12th century, a standard university course consisted of 7 liberal arts: 3 humanities (the trivium) and 4 sciences (the quadrivium).

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Nov 7
The Lord of the Rings is a deeply Christian story — once you see it, you can't unsee it.

Tolkien's elves aren't just mythical beings; they're Mankind before the Fall.

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Nov 6
Reminder: this is how American cities looked 100 years ago.

Everything in this image was demolished.

Here's why — and how we can bring it back... (thread) 🧵 Image
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For example, St. Louis turned its parks into lagoons and waterways, navigated by visitors on Venetian gondolas and electric boats.

1,500 neoclassical buildings built in a few years. Image
Read 17 tweets

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