And it was an attempt as a professor at the university of chicago i came back from the meeting piaster i had been and i told him that i had been called by hayek to try to bring together some believers in free and open in society to have them to have interchange with one another. He said reading of the veterans of the wars of the 20th century. [laughter] i thought that was wonderful and we were fostering is essentially the same set of ideas. The road to serfdom published 50 years ago, was really an amazing event when it came out. It is hard to remember now what the attitude was 1944. The Movement Toward centralization, planning, it also started with a society late 19th century with George Bernard shaw. And so on. But the war itself you have to have government control. But after the war you needed a rational plan and, organized society that was the atmosphere. Those of us who did not agree with 19th century liberalism works for quite a number of us. But for the rest of the world they wer
In Particular, His & Other Fathers' and Luther's and Calvin's Views on Church Infallibility & Indefectibility Jason Engwer is a I debate and document several points about St. Irenaeus' view on Church infallibility and indefectibility with evangelical anti-Catholic apologist Jason Engwer.
The late Steve Hays made a response to me on 14 January 2010 entitled "Up from the acorn." It mostly had to do with the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15) and I reply to various objections to the Catholic and "episcopal" interpretation of the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15) made by the late anti-Catholic Calvinist Steve Hays.
"Faith in Rome"; "Robber Council" (449); Bishops; "Intimidation Tactics"; 1 Tim 3:15; Catholicism & Non-Believers; Augustine & Aquinas & The late Steve Hays was a Calvinist and anti-Catholic writer and apologist. This is one of my many critiques of Hays’ “Catholicism”: a 695-page self-published volume.
Visible Church; Apostolic Succession; Protestant "Dogmatism"; Ever-Changing Rome?; Vatican II "Conciliarism"?; Doctrinal Development; Mary's Assumption in The late Steve Hays was a Calvinist and anti-Catholic writer and apologist. This is one of my many critiques of Hays’ “Catholicism”: a 695-page self-published volume.