* JSC, Did Julian of Norwich Write a Consolation?
* Tessa Carman, Light in 'Jane Austen's Darkness', at "Mere Orthodoxy"
* Kevin Fernandez, On Vincible and Invincible Ignorance (with St. Thomas Aquinas)
* Julia Minarik, Synthetic Disenchantment, at "Blog of the APA"
* Victoria, The running of the deer: celebrating Christmas in 1644, at "Horace & Friends"
* Ben Goldhaber, Unexpected Things that are People, at "Gold Takes"
* D. Luscinius, Every realm of nature is marvelous, at "Nelle Parole"
* Sami Pihlström, Putnam's transcendental arguments (PDF)
* Rob Alspaugh, The Point of ST I-II Q6 a1, at "Teaching Boys Badly"
* Brandon Carter, In Eodem Sensu: St. Vincent of Lerins and Development of Doctrine, at "Theophilosophizer"
* John Wright, Saint John Henry Cardinal Newman on Assent, at "John's Substack"
* Gregory B. Sadler, Thomas Aquinas’ Discussion of Law and the Sapiental Mediation of Reason and Revelation in the Summa Theologiae
* Henry Oliver, Why we love Jane Austen more than ever after 250 years, at "The Common Reader"
* Brad Skow, Free Indirect Style: A Theory, at "Mostly Aesthetics"
* Matthew Minerd, An Introduction to Dialectical Logic: The Recovery of Probable Certainty as the Labor of the Human Intellect, at "To Be a Thomist"
* Aaron Pidel, SJ, Vatican II, at the Encyclopedia of Catholic Theology
* Lucas Thorpe & Zübeyde Karadağ Thorpe, Kant on the Ontological Argument for the Existence of God: Why Conceivability Does Not Entail Real Possibility (PDF)
* Jane Austen was born December 16, 1775, which is why there has been a slow uptick in Austen-related posts online, as people do something for the 250th anniversary.