COLLECTION III

Published December 8, 2025

Letter from the Editor & Publisher

Dear Readers and Old Friends,
This letter marks our final collection of the year. In the two months since we last wrote, there have been some exciting developments at Merion West. We had the honor of co-sponsoring a dialogue at the University of Pennsylvania between Ross Douthat, a devout Catholic, and philosopher Damon Linker, a self-described secular Jew. Hosted by the Veritas Forum, the event was a great success and echoed the spirit of civil dialogue that we have always strived to embody in our pages. In terms of our team, Austin Allen James has officially joined as our new poetry editor, and we are most excited about his leadership of our arts section. We have also recorded a fascinating set of conversations for release in forthcoming collections.
Our selection of interviews and essays—our raison d'être—has remained strong. We begin this issue with the formerly agnostic intellectual Dr. Charles Murray, who, in his interview with Erich, discusses his evolving perspective on Christianity. Once an ascendant force, the New Atheist movement is perhaps breathing its last. It is our humble opinion that we are all the better for it.
You will find in this collection thoughtful writings on the pressing issues of the day, such as Gerfried Ambrosch's examination of contemporary anti-Semitism, alongside reflections of a more timeless sort—including Sadhika Pant's celebration of Fathers and Sons, an undeservedly overlooked classic of Russian literature, as well as philosophy professor Jimmy Alfonso Licon’s plea to distinguish between appearing virtuous and being such.
As always, we sincerely appreciate your belief in our project, and we hope you enjoy what you read.
With gratitude,

EDITOR & PUBLISHER

Charles Murray Interview Art

Why Charles Murray Is Taking Religion Seriously

Erich J. Prince speaks with one of America’s best-known political scientists. In this interview, Dr. Murray discusses his new book and the slow, unexpected path that took him from reluctantly attending Quaker meetings to defending the veracity of many religious claims.


Other Interviews

Essays

Learn more about Merion West.



Literary & Societal
Why We Should Return to Ivan Turgenev’s “Fathers and Sons”
In this essay, Sadhika Pant helps us to see why Turgenev’s fourth novel remains the most enduring portrait of Russia’s 19th-century ideological storm. More than a mere history, the novel continues to resonate as an antidote to the revolutionary spirits of today.
The Conservatism of Russian-Speaking Jews
Simon Maass, a German writer of Soviet Jewish descent, contends that Jews who left the Soviet Union often hold distinctly conservative views—and are steadily shaping politics in their new homes.
Agnosticism Is Not Reasonable
Refusal to make a choice is a choice of its own. Although often presented as the intellectually humble third option between belief and atheism, Stuart Doyle argues that agnosticism presents a false middle path that is neither coherent nor practical.
Is the Current Era of Free Speech Over?
Considering the rest of the developed world, it is a miracle that the First Amendment continues to reign in the United States. Tracing the precarious history of free speech in the country, legal scholar Eric Heinze writes that shifting bipartisan attitudes are placing it under threat.

Poetry



Explore other poems in the Poetry section


Smart Fish Don't Bite

New from W.D. Ehrhart

A long-time friend of Merion West and a frequently featured poet in our pages, Dr. Ehrhart returns with a compelling new release.

Featuring 77 new poems written since 2019, this volume runs the gamut from the serious to the playful. In both tone and substance, it stands as perhaps his most diverse collection to date.

Upcoming Readings
  • Feb 27: Bucks County Community College
  • Mar 4: Wallingford Art Center
Purchase Exclusively at
Moonstone Arts Center

Read the previous Collection