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Pandemic of Lunacy

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"Brilliant, the corrective we need to pull the nation back from the abyss of unreason."—Dean KoontzA bestselling moral philosopher dissects and explodes the crazy—but deadly serious—ideas that have...
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  • 03 February 2026
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"Brilliant, the corrective we need to pull the nation back from the abyss of unreason."—Dean Koontz

A bestselling moral philosopher dissects and explodes the crazy—but deadly serious—ideas that have spread, bred, and metastasized throughout contemporary society.

What is happening to the world? Why does it seem like everyone has gone insane? Why are so many things that seemingly everyone believed the day before yesterday suddenly held to be retrograde, hateful, or even criminal? And why are things that everyone seemed to view as lunacy the day before yesterday suddenly taught or even required? 

In Pandemic of Lunacy: How to Think Clearly When Everyone Around You Seems Crazy, University of Texas philosopher J. Budziszewski patiently explains the delusions that beset us. Ranging over the topics of morality and happiness, politics and government, family and sexuality, the real and the unreal, and God and religion, Budziszewski makes the case for sanity in commonsense language accessible to all. 

Pandemic of Lunacy will be treasured by any who are troubled or confused, any who wonder whether the world has gone crazy or whether they have, and any who feel the need for a trustworthy guide in a topsy-turvy age.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Creed & Culture Books
Imprint: Creed & Culture
Publication Date: 03 February 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781967613014
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy, PHILOSOPHY / Good & Evil, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Conservatism & Liberalism, RELIGION / Christianity / Catholic / Social Teaching, Ethics & moral philosophy, Cultural policies and debates, Conservatism / conservative ideologies and movements, Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church
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"Pandemic of Lunacy is brilliant, the corrective we need to pull the nation back from the abyss of unreason. Too many elites and intellectuals are saturated with ideologized education that has left them withering in a drought of real knowledge and common sense. Caring guides like J. Budziszewski might bring the best of them back from the realm of false light." Dean Koontz, bestselling author

“This book is simply the most complete, clear, and uncompromising account of our decaying culture's insanity that I have read yet.” —Peter Kreeft, professor of philosophy, Boston College

“Philosophy and science go deeper than what common sense tells us, and sometimes correct it around the edges. But as thinkers like Aristotle and Aquinas knew, sound philosophy and science cannot coherently reject common sense altogether, especially in what it tells us about everyday human life. Modern thought has been plagued by one assault on common sense after another, typically grounded in simple but persistent fallacies. We need books that expose these fallacies and come to the defense of common sense. J. Budziszewski provides exactly that.” Edward Feser, author, Five Proofs of the Existence of God

"J. Budziszewski offers both a subtle and wide-ranging exposition of the various individual lunacies that make up our corporate social insanity. His is a sober and shrewd voice that offers answers to our malaise. This is a profoundly helpful book for those wanting clarity in our deeply chaotic times." Carl Trueman, author, The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self




J. Budziszewski is a professor of government and philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. Internationally recognized for his work on natural law, self-deception, happiness, and ultimate purpose, he is widely read on the unraveling and possible restoration of our common culture. Among his twenty previous books are What We Can’t Not Know, How to Stay Christian in College, How and How Not to Be Happy, On the Meaning of Sex, The Line Through the Heart, The Revenge of Conscience, and a series of line-by-line commentaries on Thomas Aquinas’s Summa Theologiae. Married for more than five decades, a teacher for more than four, Budziszewski has two grown children and a clutch of grandchildren. His website, The Underground Thomist, is at www.undergroundthomist.org. Professor Budziszewski lives in Austin, Texas.

Introduction: Some Crazy Ideas Are Deadly Serious

Part I: Delusions About Virtue and Happiness

Lunacy 1: Basic Right and Wrong Are Vague and Equivocal

Lunacy 2: Basic Right and Wrong Are Different for Everyone

Lunacy 3: Sometimes We Just Have to Do the Wrong Thing

Lunacy 4: There Is No Such Thing as Good Character

Lunacy 5: Good Character Is Unnecessary for Well-Being

Part II: Delusions About Politics and Government

Lunacy 6: There Is No Such Thing as the Common Good

Lunacy 7: We Can Attain the Common Good Without Virtue

Lunacy 8: The Purpose of Government Is to Take Care of All Our Needs

Lunacy 9: Scientists, Scholars, and Experts Are Neutral Authorities

Lunacy 10: Democracy Is the Literal Rule of the People

Part III: Delusions About Family and Sexuality

Lunacy 11: Uncoupling Sex from Its Consequences Has No Consequences

Lunacy 12: Both Sexes Must Make the Same Choices

Lunacy 13: Marriage Can Be Whatever We Want It to Be

Lunacy 14: Manhood and Womanhood Can Take Any Shapes That We Wish

Lunacy 15: Men and Women Don’t Need Each Other

Part IV: Delusions About What It Means to Be Human

Lunacy 16: Each Human Being Has His Own Nature

Lunacy 17: Human Nature Is Merely Animal

Lunacy 18: Everyone Is Evil—Or Deep Down, Everyone Is Good

Lunacy 19: Human Nature Changes

Lunacy 20: We Can Transcend Human Nature

Part V: Delusions About What Is Real and Unreal

Lunacy 21: Reality Doesn’t Have to Be Logical or Make Sense

Lunacy 22: Each Person Has His Own Reality

Lunacy 23: Things Are Whatever We Say They Are

Lunacy 24: All That Exists Is Material

Lunacy 25: Existence Has No Meaning Unless We Invent One

Part VI: Delusions About God and Religion

Lunacy 26: Religion Does Not Concern the Truth About God

Lunacy 27: We Can’t Know the Truth About God

Lunacy 28: The Truth Is That There Is No God

Lunacy 29: Judging What Is True or False Is Intolerant

Lunacy 30: The Truth About God Doesn’t Matter

Conclusion

Acknowledgments

Standard Disclaimer

Notes