Much has changed since Washington, Madison, Hamilton, Franklin, and the Framers met in the Pennsylvania State House in the summer of 1787 to draft the Constitution of the United States. The expanse of the country has increased substantially, the population has also grown considerably, from about 3.9 million to over 300 million; and discoveries in […]
LATEST ARTICLES
What Were the Framers’ Views on Natural Law in Constitutional Interpretation? Response to Garrett Snedeker’s “Originalism: A Hollow Core?”
Garrett Snedeker’s thoughtful review of my book, The Hollow Core of Constitutional Theory: Why We Need the Framers, concludes by requesting a follow-up essay. In particular, he asks how my call to bring the Framers’ intentions back into the core of constitutional interpretation relates to what Snedeker, Hadley Arkes, and their James Wilson Institute colleagues […]
Liberal Education and Citizenship in a Self-Governing Republic
The Art of Biography: Wisdom from the Hamilton Musical
With the long-awaited return of Broadway, audiences are once again gazing in awe at its crown jewel: Hamilton. The blockbuster musical introduced to the world, as no biography ever had, the unlikely story of the Caribbean orphan-turned-American founder. Creator Lin-Manuel Miranda takes all the artistic liberties one would expect in a theatrical rendering of the […]
Originalism: A Hollow Core?
Book Review: Drakeman, Donald, “The Hollow Core of Constitutional Theory” (Cambridge University Press, 2021) Don Drakeman’s “The Hollow Core of Constitutional Theory” arrives at a time when Originalism faces three interrelated questions. First, does the success of the originalist project hinge on a devotion to interpreting the text of the Constitution according to its original […]
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