Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

John Sexton

    John William Sexton is an Irish poet, short-story writer, radio script-writer, and children's novelist. His work is celebrated for its distinctive linguistic style and profound exploration of the human experience. Sexton delves into themes of memory, identity, and the search for meaning in the contemporary world. Both his prose and poetry are characterized by vivid imagery and a tone that is at once melancholic and hopeful, prompting deep reflection in the reader.

    Red Friends
    Standing for Reason: The University in a Dogmatic Age
    Standing for Reason
    • Standing for Reason

      • 240 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      A powerful case for the importance of universities as an antidote to the "secular dogmatism" that increasingly infects political discourse John Sexton argues that over six decades, a "secular dogmatism," impenetrable by dialogue or reason, has come to dominate political discourse in America. Political positions, elevated to the status of doctrinal truths, now simply are "revealed." Our leaders and our citizens suffer from an allergy to nuance and complexity, and the enterprise of thought is in danger. Sexton sees our universities, the engines of knowledge and stewards of thought, as the antidote, and he describes the policies university leaders must embrace if their institutions are to serve this role. Acknowledging the reality of our increasingly interconnected world--and drawing on his experience as president of New York University when it opened campuses in Abu Dhabi and Shanghai--Sexton advocates for "global network universities" as a core aspect of a new educational landscape and as the crucial foundation-blocks of an interlocking world characterized by "secular ecumenism."

      Standing for Reason
    • A powerful case for the importance of universities as an antidote to the “secular dogmatism” that increasingly infects political discourse John Sexton argues that over six decades, a “secular dogmatism,” impenetrable by dialogue or reason, has come to dominate political discourse in America. Political positions, elevated to the status of doctrinal truths, now simply are “revealed.” Our leaders and our citizens suffer from an allergy to nuance and complexity, and the enterprise of thought is in danger. Sexton sees our universities, the engines of knowledge and stewards of thought, as the antidote, and he describes the policies university leaders must embrace if their institutions are to serve this role. Acknowledging the reality of our increasingly interconnected world—and drawing on his experience as president of New York University when it opened campuses in Abu Dhabi and Shanghai—Sexton advocates for “global network universities” as a core   aspect of a new educational landscape and as the crucial foundation-blocks of an interlocking world  characterized by “secular ecumenism.”

      Standing for Reason: The University in a Dogmatic Age
    • The story of the friends and allies of the Chinese Revolution

      Red Friends