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A scientific, literary, theological, political, and moral education is necessary for personal happiness and to perpetuate the blessings of civil and religious liberty. Hillsdale College furnishes these beautiful courses for free to all who wish to learn and to enjoy those blessings.
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HILLSDALE IN THEATRES
Kick off your celebration of America’s 250th anniversary with Hillsdale on the big screen. See our new, feature-length documentary, Revolutionary America, only in theatres May 31–June 2. Click below to buy tickets!
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Our Newest Course
Classical Logic and Rhetoric
Human beings are unique among the animals in our ability to think and to speak. This course will help students hone those activities that most define our humanity. The study of logic helps us slow down and evaluate our ability to know truth and to understand the world around us. The art of rhetoric allows us to refine our ability to persuade others in both written and oral communication. In short, logic helps us think clearly and rhetoric helps us speak clearly.
Latest Articles

How Far Should Government Go in Legislating Morality?
April 23, 2026
Throughout American history, conflict has often arisen over the role that government should have in shaping society. From debates over abolition to Supreme Court decisions such as Roe v. Wade and, more recently, the Dobbs decision, Americans have continued to ask: how far should government go in legislating morality? Thomas West and David Azerrad discuss this question from the perspective of th...

Mere Rhetoric
April 2, 2026
If the word “rhetoric” inspires a bit of suspicion in us—if it conjures an impression of ulterior motives or the empty bluster of salesmen and politicians—we are in good company. About 2,400 years ago, Plato raised a question about the ethics of rhetoric. A major theme of his dialogue Gorgias is the issue of how easily the art of rhetoric devolves into sophistry; how easily language might conceal ...

Beware the Ides of March
March 12, 2026
On the morning of March 15th, 44 BC, a crowd of senators marched triumphantly from the curia, claiming they had restored liberty and rescued the republic from crisis. But where they expected applause, they were met with stony silence. There was just one hitch in their otherwise foolproof plan: the man they had murdered was a popular hero—and one of the greatest political and military geniuses of t...
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Takes the student through the full context of the course subject matter. Wonderful insight into how we strayed and its consequences and offers a solution.
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