Category: VOLUME XII, No. 3

AGREEMENT

On the Abrahamic Faiths in Europe Preparing for this occasion1 at the Archabbey of Pannonhalma, I was wondering if I could refrain from speaking about football this time, because ever since I was ordained as a rabbi in 2005, I have referred to football in a couple of teachings each month.

RANZ FERDINAND
HAD NOT DIED IN SARAJEVO

A Counterfactual History of Hungary, 1914–1919* Alternative or counterfactual history is not merely fiction or wishful thinking. According to E. H. Carr in his seminal What is History? (1961), the historian’s task is to ‘explain why one course was eventually chosen rather than another’. But while he—like so many other

THOMAS MOLNÁR’S LIFELONG
STRUGGLE AGAINST MODERNISM

János Pánczél Hegedűs in interview with Gergely Szilvay Currently, the main problem of the right is that it is paralysed and it feels it has to meet the expectations of the left, says János Pánczél Hegedűs, after Thomas Molnár, the Hungarian- born American philosopher who passed away in 2010, and

AMERICA AS THE CLIMATE CHANGES

America is often said to have taken a ‘holiday from history’ between the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the jihadist attacks on two symbols of American power—New York’s World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Washington—on 11 September 2001. President Clinton, who was the most powerful man

GYÖRGY MATOLCSY’S
MONETARY POLICIES IN THE 2010s

Overview of György Matolcsy’s Economic Balance and Growth 2010–2019: From the Last to the First SUMMARY Certain works exploring the cultural history of mankind describe the living, regenerative economic organization of a country as a sort of ‘botanical garden’. György Matolcsy, former minister of the economy and current governor of

AMERICA AS THE CLIMATE CHANGES

America is often said to have taken a ‘holiday from history’ between the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the jihadist attacks on two symbols of American power—New York’s World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Washington—on 11 September 2001. President Clinton, who was the most powerful man