the YALE LOGOS

an undergraduate journal of Christian thought.

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Military Mental Health: Whole Persons
Personal & Longform The Yale Logos Personal & Longform The Yale Logos

Military Mental Health: Whole Persons

January 20, 2022 | By Jadan Anderson MC ‘22

Two years out from her twenty-year service with the U.S. Air Force, Mom keeps an American flag, neatly folded and elegantly framed in a closet downstairs, and insomnia between the restless tosses and turns of her four-hour sleep cycle. Though Mom is undoubtedly one of the strongest women I know, insomnia is just a single item on the long list of ailments that warrant her full disability compensation. That she has full disability is, to service members recently retired or retiring, great news. The sudden and somewhat steep drop of benefits experienced by veterans as they retire from service often feels more like getting the boot than a grateful send-off.

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Emotional Enlightenment
New Creation, Arts & Culture The Yale Logos New Creation, Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

Emotional Enlightenment

December 31, 2021 | By Hannah Turner, BK ‘23+1

​​The concepts Karl Marx did not grasp led to the downfall of communism, but may also lead to the magnification of our societal understanding. He believed that there must be an enlightenment of the proletariat for the realization of the bourgeoisie’s exploitation of them. A revolt would follow. Finally, once the proletariat is in control of the state, a communist society would be born. Everyone would live, “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.”

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The People Are A Temple
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

The People Are A Temple

October 26, 2021 | By Jadan Anderson MC ‘22

And souls are candles, each lighting the other.

I read this short poem by Gennady Aygi, a Russian poet, in a class where I had hoped to build substantial relationships with my classmates as we discussed faith through the lens of poetry, and vice versa. Surprisingly, I’ve been building those relationships even more in my introductory Chinese class, in between our bad third tones and character-related short-term memory loss.

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Do Emotions Distort Knowledge Pt. 2
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

Do Emotions Distort Knowledge Pt. 2

Sept 16, 2016 | By He Li TD '17

This danger of distortion, however, is only present when emotions sway the receptive mind during the reception of an idea. If the listener does not heed to such temperaments during the receptive process, then he is at no risk of obtaining distorted knowledge. The active and receptive intellects necessarily correspond with each other when they are free from emotion. The intellect is in fact the only receptive faculty used in human communication. Emotional faculties do not receive emotions; they respond to input received by the intellect by producing emotions.

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Do Emotions Distort Knowledge Pt. 1
Arts & Culture The Yale Logos Arts & Culture The Yale Logos

Do Emotions Distort Knowledge Pt. 1

Aug 20th, 2016 | By He Li TD ‘17

When we communicate with one another, we wish by nature to do so in a manner that is not subject to distortion. We desire to attain an exact image of another person’s thoughts, just as they exist in his mind. Not only do we intend to understand the other person’s intellectual workings, we also wish to be fully receptive to the emotive aspects of his message.After all, sway of the heart may play just as crucial a role in a message as does sway of the mind. The active communicator often melds these two components together to form a complete idea.

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