* Bradley Hillier-Smith, Rights, Duties, and Inviolability (PDF)
* Matthew Advent, Usury and Interest: Forgotten Contributions to the Thomistic Tradition
* Justin A. Capes, On Repentance (PDF)
* T. C. Schmidt, Josephus and Jesus, gives an interesting argument that the Testimonium Flavium is genuine; for instance, he argues that, contrary to the assumptions usually made by those arguing that it is interpolated by Christians, early Christians did not read the Testimonium as a positive testimony -- they, of course, were not looking for historical evidence of Jesus the way modern scholars do, being more interested in chronology and the like, and when they regarded the Testimonium as significant at all, they often read it as a poor fit with Christian claims or treat it as relatively uninteresting. Thus, Schmidt argues, there is reason to think that the author is non-Christian, and he goes on to argue for internal evidence that it is indeed Josephus who wrote it.
* Ben Platts-Mills, Injury and Inhibition, at "Aeon", on what actually happened in the famous case of Phineas Gage
* Chloe Hadjimatheou, The real Salt Path: how a blockbuster book and film were spun from lies, deceit, and desperation, at "The Observer"
* B. A. Clarke, When Early Rifles are Written Badly, at "Clarke's Corner"
* Logan Paul Gage & Frederick D. Aquino, Newman's Illative Sense Re-Examined (PDF)
* Drunk Wisconsin, Non-Parents Think Having Kids Is Harder Than It Is
* Dennis McCarthy, How Darwin Really, Truly Solved the Mystery of Life, at "All the Mysteries that Remain"
* Fanatic Thomist, Is God Infinite? Insights from Francisco Suarez
* Olga Litvak, Untranslated, at "The Hedgehog Review"
* Andrea Araf & Lorenzo Zemolin, Paradoxical Opinions on Mixture in Alexander of Aphrodisias, De Mixtione (PDF)
* Hana Videen, What is Hwaet? The Debate Behind Beowulf's Opening Line, at "Medievalists.net"
* Sandrine Parageau, The French liar, at "Aeon", on Rene Descartes and how his contemporaries perceived him
* Ellen Wexler, Jane Austen Never Loved Bath -- But Bath Loves Jane Austen, at "Smithsonian Magazine"
* James Maliszewski, From the Brontes to Braunstein, at "Grognardia", on the pre-history of the modern role-playing game