Michael Psellus On The Challenge Of Being An Emperor

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Michael Psellus (1017-1078?) was a Greek cleric, historian, and advisor to a number of Byzantine emperors.  His work, known by the name Chronographia, is a series of biographical portraits of fourteen emperors occupying the throne of the Eastern Roman Empire from about 978 to 1050.  Although not a well-known work, it is a candid and intimate record of palace events that the author had first-hand knowledge of.

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The Grave Of Suleiman The Magnificent

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A news agency recently reported the discovery of the tomb of Suleiman the Magnificient, who by general consensus was the greatest of all the Ottoman sultans.  Suleiman, who lived from 1494 to 1566, is now nearly unknown in the West; but he was, in the words of one eminent historian, “the greatest and ablest ruler of his age.”

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“This We Do Not Tolerate” (Podcast)

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We discuss a moral problem that arose in Japanese prison camps in the Second World War. We discuss how the same moral issue is relevant today, and what Cicero’s response to it would have been.

What duty is owed to our fellow man?  When does the pursuit of self-interest go too far?

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Should There Be Regulations On Platform Businesses?

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“Platform businesses” have been all the rage for years now.  The general idea of a platform business is that it provides an opportunity for a buyer and a seller to meet and perform a transaction.  Airbnb, Fiverr, and Uber are examples of such businesses.

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Developing Light Machine-Gun Tactics

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Today we take for granted the fact that infantry units are equipped with all sorts of portable firepower.  Squads carrying light machine-guns are accepted as natural and part of the battlefield equation.  But it was not always so.

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Is The World Worse Today Than It Used To Be? (Podcast)

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We often get the impression that the world is in chaos, and that the proverbial sky is falling down. Yet our perceptions are distorted by factors that we often fail to appreciate. We discuss some of them.

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U.S. Grant Goes On The Offensive: The Fall Of Forts Henry And Donelson

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War brought out the bulldog in U.S. Grant.  A decent man but a failure in civilian life, he was good at one thing, and one thing only:  war.  His method was to hone in on his enemy, get in close, and figuratively grab him by the belt to keep him close.  So positioned, he would then hammer away at his opponent relentlessly.  He may not have had the panache and elan of some of his more exalted (or overrated) contemporaries, but he did have a quick mind that could grasp the military essentials of situations in ways that very few others could.

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Dreams As Memories And Endowments

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I was recently corresponding with a reader on the topic of finding inspiration for creative activity.  The conversation veered into the subject of dreams.  In what way, we wondered, do dreams inspire or retard development of the creative impulse?  And what is the source of dreams?  The subject is one of general interest, and seems to come up over and over again.

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