Free shipping on all orders over $40.
Fears of AI often involve Skynet or Colossus. But a greater, and certainly more immediate, threat may be those forms of AI that require much less in the way of brute force braininess, and that can instead take advantage of innate human characteristics. What if the easiest way to conquer the world isn’t nuclear weapons, but cuteness, or sexiness, or simply friendliness?
Crisis of the Two Constitutions details how we got to and what is at stake in our increasingly divided America, as well as what we should strive to commemorate as the nation approaches its 250th birthday.
In Where Harvard Went Wrong, one professor stands up to a whole faculty, offering arguments rather than evasions and equivocation, keeping as his lodestar the principle that education must conserve the tradition of learning as well as progress beyond the present. This book is meant for both parties—a guide for conservatives and a gentle, friendly reproach to liberals.
Though many have heralded Sullivan as a landmark ruling in defense of First Amendment freedoms, in No Liberty to Libel, Carson Holloway argues that the Supreme Court erred dangerously in its interpretation of the Constitution. Holloway contends that the Court should revisit and reject the Sullivan doctrine.
Through examining a wide range of topics from his “motherland” of California to the intellectuals at The Claremont Institute who influenced his thinking, Anton invites the reader to understand the nature of the American regime and share his burdened love for America itself.
Agatha Christie and the Metaphysics of Murder investigates the philosophy behind the Queen of Crime’s bestselling books, arriving at conclusions that will surprise readers who might dismiss them as lightweight fluff.
Through carefully selected stories and a clear, engaging writing style, Wilfred McClay invites students, teachers, and history enthusiasts alike to engage with America’s past and our ongoing quest for liberty and justice for all in Land of Hope.
Higher education is in crisis. To capture the full scope of the problem, The Heritage Foundation assembled college presidents, professors, and researchers from across the country to contribute their unique perspectives about the problems plaguing higher education and to offer solutions.
The origin of COVID-19 has sparked relentless debate since 2020. But if we follow the science, the evidence for a lab-based origin is undeniable. This book urges a collective reckoning, highlighting the critical need to rein in gain-of-function experiments that toy with viral lethality or super-charge airborne transmission.
In The Myth of Birthright Citizenship, Richard A. Epstein explains what the Constitution actually says about citizenship—and what it doesn’t.
After the death of de Gaulle in 1970, France’s new leaders launched a quiet revolution. Under the guise of leading the country into a new age, they destroyed everything that made it great. This book pulls back the veil on their project, showing how they repudiated France’s culture, heritage, institutions, and her very people.
As America approaches its 250th anniversary, questions about the purpose and future of education have never been more urgent. The Phoenix Principles offers a bold and unifying vision for how education can renew the American spirit and sustain a free and virtuous republic for generations to come.
Rooted in the timeless ideals of liberty, truth, virtue, and citizenship, this volume lays out a coherent framework for education policy and practice—one that affirms the central role of families, upholds the transmission of cultural heritage, cultivates virtue and citizenship, and champions academic excellence.
Jeff Glassman offers a deep dive into the California Science Framework and a blueprint for K-12 science education that holds significant sway across the U.S. He presents a pointed critique and puts forth an alternate approach to fostering science literacy, aiming to benefit both students and the wider public.