Description
About the Author
The Point is a Chicago-based magazine of philosophical writing on contemporary life and culture. Founded by three graduate students at the University of Chicago in 2009, it has become a nationally recognized home for today's most thought-provoking essays, criticism and intellectual journalism.
Reviews
"The Point's writers and editors receive simultaneous instruction from, on the one hand, worldly events and daily experiences, and on the other hand the great lineage of humanistic thought that dwells on reality's fundamental, unchanging truths. The humanistic magazine converses with the world, sometimes offering guidance, other times listening-but its defining aim is to contribute to public discourse. It is a bridge, in a way, between the active and contemplative lives." * Breaking Ground *
"There's very little surprise in writing today. From the first sentences of most articles, you can tell which of a rather limited collection of categories the piece will fall into: wokeism or anti-wokeism, Trumpism or Resistance, generic secularism or uncritical progressivism or defensive traditionalism. The Opening of the American Mind, a collection of essays from the first decade of The Point magazine, is a welcome exception." * Plough *
"The Point is unique among the intellectual journals of our time in its genuine openness to a range of perspectives, and its commitment to pluralism reflects a conviction that thought cuts deepest when it is permitted to find its own path. The essays in this volume are without exception lucid, striking, intelligent, and well argued; they are also idiosyncratic, surprising, and original. I don't always agree with each author, but I leave each piece having learned something new." -- Michael Clune, author of Gamelife: A Memoir
"It is no exaggeration to say that intellectual discourse in America is in a state of crisis, assaulted on both sides by the anti-intellectual and the overcorrecting. What we need is clear and rigorous public thinking capable of rendering our chaotic society and each other more legible. What we often get instead is tribal posturing, cliches of thought and language meant to signal neither openness nor generosity but conformity. This is why I am so grateful a venue as brilliantly multifaceted and fearless as The Point is celebrating its first decade of intellectual stewardship. The American mind remains open." -- Thomas Chatterton Williams, author of Self-Portrait in Black and White
Book Information
ISBN 9780226738710
Author The Point
Format Paperback
Page Count 392
Imprint University of Chicago Press
Publisher The University of Chicago Press