Tragedy, Proportion, and the Limits of Moral Language

A death begins as something local and personal. It is a family’s loss, a community’s shock, a small circle of people who must now live with an empty chair and unfinished conversations. In cases like Alex Pretti’s or George Floyd’s, that initial human reality is quickly overtaken by something much larger. The name moves from … Continue reading Tragedy, Proportion, and the Limits of Moral Language