Ryan R. Holston

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Ryan R. Holston

Ryan R. Holston

@ryan_holston

Professor & Jonathan M. Daniels ‘61 Chair at Virginia Military Institute. Lifelong Philly sports fan. Father/husband. Owner of an incorrigible chocolate lab.

Lexington, VA Katılım Şubat 2020
1.5K Takip Edilen445 Takipçiler
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Eric Adler
Eric Adler@ProfEricAdler·
📢Coming soon(ish): Folke Leander's philosophical analysis of the ideas of Paul Elmer More, edited and introduced by Claes G. Ryn and yours truly. Leander's book amounts to the fullest explication of the philosophy of the New Humanism ever written.
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Ferenc Hörcher
Ferenc Hörcher@HorcherF·
Beyond 500 downloads of my book An Aristotelian Philosophy of Civility. Culture and Politics, published 6 weeks ago by Springer Nature's Palgrave Macmillan.
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BaseballHistoryNut
BaseballHistoryNut@nut_history·
This throw is the reason statcast exists. Dude threw it 118 mph from right field. Beautiful tag by the catcher as well
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Ferenc Hörcher
Ferenc Hörcher@HorcherF·
There will be a chapter on Pieper, as well, in our collective volume on the Münster School, to be published by SUNY Press, coedited by @ryan_holston. Importantly, one English language edition of his book Leisure was introduced by the late Roger Scruton.
Ferenc Hörcher@HorcherF

See also by him:

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Ryan R. Holston
Ryan R. Holston@ryan_holston·
@MLB Oh, we’re celebrating Clemens now? Was this before he started juicing? Are we sure? What did the Mitchell Report say?
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MLB
MLB@MLB·
It’s been 40 years since Roger Clemens became the first pitcher to strike out 20 batters in a game 🔥 A look back … and a peek at today’s hottest hurlers. Catch a brand new “This Week in Baseball” Friday at noon ET, only on X!
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Ryan R. Holston
Ryan R. Holston@ryan_holston·
@JClarkNBCS Only slightly less concerned than about the hitting. This is starting to feel like 2012 in terms of expectations and reality.
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John Clark
John Clark@JClarkNBCS·
The Phillies starting pitchers have an ERA of 5.48. Aaron Nola got hit around again last night in Chicago. His ERA is 5.04. Jesus Luzardo has a 7.94 ERA. Taijuan Walker 9.16. How concerned are you about the Phillies starters? nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/mlb/philadelph…
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Ryan R. Holston
Ryan R. Holston@ryan_holston·
Here’s an interview I did on “With Good Reason” with host Sarah McConnell, which will air on public radio across the US this weekend. We discuss our “post-constitutional” age and cultural decadence. withgoodreasonradio.org @goodreasonradio @SUNY
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Ryan R. Holston
Ryan R. Holston@ryan_holston·
@greg_price11 Not only that, the French Revolution was the foundation of modern nationalism.
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Ryan R. Holston retweetledi
Mateus — eu/acc 🇪🇺
Mateus — eu/acc 🇪🇺@im_Mateus_·
Hans-Georg Gadamer on Augustine, Time, and the Structure of Hope Gadamer revisits one of Augustine's most radical philosophical moves: the refusal to treat time as a sequence of three equal "beings." What makes Augustine's approach unusual is not just his conclusion, it's his method. He didn't treat the problem of time as an abstract puzzle to be solved from a distance. He brought it before God, interrupting his own argument with prayer, asking for help in the very act of thinking. That intimacy between devotion and reasoning wasn't decoration, it was the point. The insight it produced is deceptively simple. Past and future don't exist as independent realms. They exist only as they press into the present as memory and anticipation held simultaneously in the mind. As Augustine puts it: "We can only think of present signs of the future as being present, and we can only see traces of the past… as being present. Only that can we truly see as 'being.'" This is what he called the distensio animi, a stretching out of the spirit. Gadamer renders it plainly: that is what we call consciousness. The German word for the present, Gegenwart, sharpens this further. Embedded in it is gewärtig sein: to be awaiting, to be open. The present is not a fixed point. It is a posture of readiness that leans forward. Time, then, is not a container you move through. It is the structure of consciousness itself. The tension between what is remembered, what is attended to now, and what is anticipated. You do not have past and future. You are the act of holding them together. From here, Gadamer makes a move that feels almost offhand but lands hard. If consciousness is inherently stretched toward what comes next, then hope isn't a disposition some people choose and others don't. It's built into the architecture of awareness itself. Ernst Bloch was right to foreground it, Gadamer says, because it isn't sentiment, it's structure. "That is why I consider every pessimist a bit insincere; they wouldn't even be here if they didn't have hope." This isn't a rebuke. It's an observation about what it means to persist. To remain conscious is already to be oriented forward whether you name that orientation hope or not. Much of modern anxiety comes from treating time as a problem of storage. Holding onto the past accurately, predicting the future correctly. Augustine and Gadamer suggest a different frame. Time is lived through presence: the traces we carry, the signs we read, the openness we maintain toward what is arriving. Consciousness is the act of stretching across all three without collapsing any of them.
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Ryan R. Holston
Ryan R. Holston@ryan_holston·
@LyybR91569 @alanigolanski I’d say it’s intimated by earlier thinkers. Tocqueville’s pluralism is less explicit, but if that counts, he’s much earlier. Oakeshott himself would likely point to Hobbes. I’d argue Oakeshott and Berlin are some of the most explicit because of 20th C. totalitarianism.
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alanigolanski.bsky.social
alanigolanski.bsky.social@alanigolanski·
The Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor favorably contrasted theories ascribing to regimes multiple, often conflicting, organizing principles (eg Isaiah Berlin, Tocqueville) to those resting on "the myth of the single, omnipotent code" (eg Rawls, Dworkin).
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Paul Krause
Paul Krause@paul_jkrause·
What book are you currently reading?
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Ryan R. Holston
Ryan R. Holston@ryan_holston·
@zenahitz Teaching her in a “Politics and Literature” class on scientism this semester. “The Lame Shall Enter First,” “A View of the Woods,” “The Partridge Festival,” and (if there’s time) “Good Country People”. She’s amazing.
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Ryan R. Holston retweetledi
Derek Duplessie
Derek Duplessie@dnduplessie·
Have you ever contacted a professor to complain after final grades were posted?
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Ryan R. Holston
Ryan R. Holston@ryan_holston·
@BBGreatMoments Look at the 10 to 0 gold gloves down at the bottom like an afterthought. Oh yeah, and that.
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American Council of Trustees and Alumni
Did you know that almost 40% of Virginia college students believe it is acceptable to shout down a campus speaker? ACTA polling revealed this and other shocking stats about the dire state of free speech at VA public universities.
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