City vs. Country vs. Suburban

City vs. Country vs. Suburban

Stadler and Cincinnatus sparked an interesting debate last week in their comments on the gay marriage in Iowa post on the time-honored question of which is more virtuous, city life or country life? I want to do some more with the specific comments, but the issue is worth thinking about. First, let’s understand that “virtue” does NOT necessarily signify moral righteousness and freedom from sin. Let’s agree that sin spans all demographics. “Virtue” comes from a word meaning “strength.” The four cardinal virtues of the pagan Greeks and Romans were courage, justice, prudence, and self-control. They were traits of good character, in a civil sense, but they could be held by cruel tyrants and evil men. (With the exception, perhaps of “justice,” which does involve transcendent morality, Alexander the Great and Attila the Hun could claim these virtues.)

So what are the virtues–that is, the cultural strengths–of different places to live? Could we agree that rural areas, including small towns, promote a sense of community and tend to be more culturally conservative and closer to nature? And that urban areas promote a sense of freedom, cultural change, and dominance of nature? What are the corresponding vices?

A significant strain of political thinkers, from Thomas Jefferson to Wendell Berry, argues that country life provides the best soil for cultivating citizens for a democratic republic. Are they wrong?

What virtues are there in suburbia, where, in fact, most Americans now live?

"Freedom to express difference of opinion in a healthy way. without disproportionate consequences.Freedom of assembly. ..."

DISCUSS: What Do You Love about ..."
"Right, we don't want the "lies for children" problem where the concept has to be ..."

Monday Miscellany, 7/7/25
"It seems like they are already here and likely to become more prevalent not many ..."

Monday Miscellany, 7/7/25
"quantum computers could break every known encryption system.This is repeating a common misunderstanding. Quantum computing ..."

Monday Miscellany, 7/7/25

Browse Our Archives

Follow Us!