I mean, what's the difference? They tar in ocasa and they're grap infairness. And i think a sort of signal failure of catholicism since the sixties is not defined necessarily in the inability to recite the catechism chapter in verse. But it's more in that sort of cultural and liturgical distinctive ara rights. You go into a typical suburban catholic church, and i've been to mass and a lot of them, and then, you it can feel like a main line church with a tiny bit more formality and and a statue of mary. I do expect that to change over the next 50 years, because i think catholicism
For Ross Douthat, decadence isn’t necessarily a moral judgement, but a technical label for a state that societies tend to enter—and one that is perhaps much more normal than the dynamism Americans have come to take for granted. In his new book, he outlines the cultural, economic, political, and demographic trends that threaten to leave us to wallow in a state of civilizational stagnation for years to come, and fuel further discontent and derangement with it.
On his second appearance on Conversations with Tyler, Ross joined Tyler to discuss why he sees Kanye as a force for anti-decadence, the innovative antiquarianism of the late Sir Roger Scruton, the mediocrity of modern architecture, why it’s no coincidence that Michel Houellebecq comes from France, his predictions for the future trajectory of American decadence – and what could throw us off of it, the question of men’s role in modernity, why he feels Christianity must embrace a kind of futurist optimism, what he sees as the influence of the “Thielian ethos” on conservatism, the plausibility of ghosts and alien UFOs, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded February 25th, 2020 Other ways to connect