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Our Lost Civilization
MP3•Maison d'episode
Manage episode 454080248 series 3546964
Contenu fourni par The Catholic Thing. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par The Catholic Thing ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
By Michael Pakaluk.
But first a note from Robert Royal: Professor Pakaluk - who I'm happy to say will be with us at our January 25th anniversary gala next month (click here for tickets) - explains today what has gone wrong with our whole educational system as well as the consequences for all of us as individuals and as a society. It's going to take serious effort to repair that loss, but there's no alternative, unless we're willing to live in inhuman chaos. The Church is the only institution capable of leading such a recovery and here at The Catholic Thing we try to do our part daily, every day of the year. In fact, we're stepping up our efforts with courses, seminars, podcasts, and more. I'm sure you know this. So if you haven't already given during this end-of-year campaign, please do your part in this great work. There are many ways to send support. Pick one. Please. Today.
Now for today's column...
Readers of Newman's Idea of a University are perhaps so distracted by its two brilliant opening arguments that they fail to notice other arguments as important, such as his claim that a university must have colleges, or that a university education must be classical.
His first brilliant argument is that since a university is a place of universal learning, then a "secular" university, which excludes the discipline of theology, will not be a genuine university and will suffer various ill effects. His second is that, as a university is different from a research institute, its main purpose is not "the production of knowledge," but the formation of intellectual virtues in its students - what he describes as the distinctive beauty of the mind.
Newman could see that a new conception of a university was taking shape, as a knowledge factory dominated by STEM subjects (as we call them), in the service of industry and the military, disregarding the genuine intellectual good of the students, and not orientated to any sort of "wisdom." Anyone who accepted his two main brilliant arguments would reject this novel conception.
Yet his argument that a university education must be classical obviously cuts against this conception as well. (See the chapter in The Idea, "Christianity and Letters."
The argument has similarities with Pope Benedict's famous lecture at Regensburg, where the Holy Father taught that Christianity's appropriation of Greek thought was providential, not accidental. And that theology therefore must lose its way if it becomes "de-Hellenized." Newman teaches similarly that higher education must lose its way if it turns from the Classics.
He begins by arguing that there is a such a thing as "Civilization." His view is nuanced. He acknowledges Chinese, Hindu, Aztec, and Saracen civilizations, but he says that each is isolated from the others and stands outside another distinct whole, which he contemplates:
I call then this commonwealth pre-eminently and emphatically Human Society, and its intellect the Human Mind, and its decisions the sense of mankind, and its disciplined and cultivated state Civilization in the abstract, and the territory on which it lies the orbis terrarum, or the World.
Readers will see immediately that all "woke" controversies hinge on this question whether there was and is this Civilization, as Newman asserts.
His next step is to say that Christianity once it arises becomes generally coincident with this Civilization: "on the whole, the two have occupied one and the same orbis terrarum. Often indeed they have even moved pari passu, and at all times there has been found the most intimate connexion between them."
Readers familiar with Newman's Apologia pro Vita Sua know that the conception "what the world as a whole judges" was central, too, to his embrace of Catholicism.
From this intimate connection, Newman argues to a similarity of structure and inspiration: "the Classics, and the subjects of thought and the studies to which they give rise. . .have ever, on the whole, been the instruments of education whic...
…
continue reading
But first a note from Robert Royal: Professor Pakaluk - who I'm happy to say will be with us at our January 25th anniversary gala next month (click here for tickets) - explains today what has gone wrong with our whole educational system as well as the consequences for all of us as individuals and as a society. It's going to take serious effort to repair that loss, but there's no alternative, unless we're willing to live in inhuman chaos. The Church is the only institution capable of leading such a recovery and here at The Catholic Thing we try to do our part daily, every day of the year. In fact, we're stepping up our efforts with courses, seminars, podcasts, and more. I'm sure you know this. So if you haven't already given during this end-of-year campaign, please do your part in this great work. There are many ways to send support. Pick one. Please. Today.
Now for today's column...
Readers of Newman's Idea of a University are perhaps so distracted by its two brilliant opening arguments that they fail to notice other arguments as important, such as his claim that a university must have colleges, or that a university education must be classical.
His first brilliant argument is that since a university is a place of universal learning, then a "secular" university, which excludes the discipline of theology, will not be a genuine university and will suffer various ill effects. His second is that, as a university is different from a research institute, its main purpose is not "the production of knowledge," but the formation of intellectual virtues in its students - what he describes as the distinctive beauty of the mind.
Newman could see that a new conception of a university was taking shape, as a knowledge factory dominated by STEM subjects (as we call them), in the service of industry and the military, disregarding the genuine intellectual good of the students, and not orientated to any sort of "wisdom." Anyone who accepted his two main brilliant arguments would reject this novel conception.
Yet his argument that a university education must be classical obviously cuts against this conception as well. (See the chapter in The Idea, "Christianity and Letters."
The argument has similarities with Pope Benedict's famous lecture at Regensburg, where the Holy Father taught that Christianity's appropriation of Greek thought was providential, not accidental. And that theology therefore must lose its way if it becomes "de-Hellenized." Newman teaches similarly that higher education must lose its way if it turns from the Classics.
He begins by arguing that there is a such a thing as "Civilization." His view is nuanced. He acknowledges Chinese, Hindu, Aztec, and Saracen civilizations, but he says that each is isolated from the others and stands outside another distinct whole, which he contemplates:
I call then this commonwealth pre-eminently and emphatically Human Society, and its intellect the Human Mind, and its decisions the sense of mankind, and its disciplined and cultivated state Civilization in the abstract, and the territory on which it lies the orbis terrarum, or the World.
Readers will see immediately that all "woke" controversies hinge on this question whether there was and is this Civilization, as Newman asserts.
His next step is to say that Christianity once it arises becomes generally coincident with this Civilization: "on the whole, the two have occupied one and the same orbis terrarum. Often indeed they have even moved pari passu, and at all times there has been found the most intimate connexion between them."
Readers familiar with Newman's Apologia pro Vita Sua know that the conception "what the world as a whole judges" was central, too, to his embrace of Catholicism.
From this intimate connection, Newman argues to a similarity of structure and inspiration: "the Classics, and the subjects of thought and the studies to which they give rise. . .have ever, on the whole, been the instruments of education whic...
67 episodes
MP3•Maison d'episode
Manage episode 454080248 series 3546964
Contenu fourni par The Catholic Thing. Tout le contenu du podcast, y compris les épisodes, les graphiques et les descriptions de podcast, est téléchargé et fourni directement par The Catholic Thing ou son partenaire de plateforme de podcast. Si vous pensez que quelqu'un utilise votre œuvre protégée sans votre autorisation, vous pouvez suivre le processus décrit ici https://fr.player.fm/legal.
By Michael Pakaluk.
But first a note from Robert Royal: Professor Pakaluk - who I'm happy to say will be with us at our January 25th anniversary gala next month (click here for tickets) - explains today what has gone wrong with our whole educational system as well as the consequences for all of us as individuals and as a society. It's going to take serious effort to repair that loss, but there's no alternative, unless we're willing to live in inhuman chaos. The Church is the only institution capable of leading such a recovery and here at The Catholic Thing we try to do our part daily, every day of the year. In fact, we're stepping up our efforts with courses, seminars, podcasts, and more. I'm sure you know this. So if you haven't already given during this end-of-year campaign, please do your part in this great work. There are many ways to send support. Pick one. Please. Today.
Now for today's column...
Readers of Newman's Idea of a University are perhaps so distracted by its two brilliant opening arguments that they fail to notice other arguments as important, such as his claim that a university must have colleges, or that a university education must be classical.
His first brilliant argument is that since a university is a place of universal learning, then a "secular" university, which excludes the discipline of theology, will not be a genuine university and will suffer various ill effects. His second is that, as a university is different from a research institute, its main purpose is not "the production of knowledge," but the formation of intellectual virtues in its students - what he describes as the distinctive beauty of the mind.
Newman could see that a new conception of a university was taking shape, as a knowledge factory dominated by STEM subjects (as we call them), in the service of industry and the military, disregarding the genuine intellectual good of the students, and not orientated to any sort of "wisdom." Anyone who accepted his two main brilliant arguments would reject this novel conception.
Yet his argument that a university education must be classical obviously cuts against this conception as well. (See the chapter in The Idea, "Christianity and Letters."
The argument has similarities with Pope Benedict's famous lecture at Regensburg, where the Holy Father taught that Christianity's appropriation of Greek thought was providential, not accidental. And that theology therefore must lose its way if it becomes "de-Hellenized." Newman teaches similarly that higher education must lose its way if it turns from the Classics.
He begins by arguing that there is a such a thing as "Civilization." His view is nuanced. He acknowledges Chinese, Hindu, Aztec, and Saracen civilizations, but he says that each is isolated from the others and stands outside another distinct whole, which he contemplates:
I call then this commonwealth pre-eminently and emphatically Human Society, and its intellect the Human Mind, and its decisions the sense of mankind, and its disciplined and cultivated state Civilization in the abstract, and the territory on which it lies the orbis terrarum, or the World.
Readers will see immediately that all "woke" controversies hinge on this question whether there was and is this Civilization, as Newman asserts.
His next step is to say that Christianity once it arises becomes generally coincident with this Civilization: "on the whole, the two have occupied one and the same orbis terrarum. Often indeed they have even moved pari passu, and at all times there has been found the most intimate connexion between them."
Readers familiar with Newman's Apologia pro Vita Sua know that the conception "what the world as a whole judges" was central, too, to his embrace of Catholicism.
From this intimate connection, Newman argues to a similarity of structure and inspiration: "the Classics, and the subjects of thought and the studies to which they give rise. . .have ever, on the whole, been the instruments of education whic...
…
continue reading
But first a note from Robert Royal: Professor Pakaluk - who I'm happy to say will be with us at our January 25th anniversary gala next month (click here for tickets) - explains today what has gone wrong with our whole educational system as well as the consequences for all of us as individuals and as a society. It's going to take serious effort to repair that loss, but there's no alternative, unless we're willing to live in inhuman chaos. The Church is the only institution capable of leading such a recovery and here at The Catholic Thing we try to do our part daily, every day of the year. In fact, we're stepping up our efforts with courses, seminars, podcasts, and more. I'm sure you know this. So if you haven't already given during this end-of-year campaign, please do your part in this great work. There are many ways to send support. Pick one. Please. Today.
Now for today's column...
Readers of Newman's Idea of a University are perhaps so distracted by its two brilliant opening arguments that they fail to notice other arguments as important, such as his claim that a university must have colleges, or that a university education must be classical.
His first brilliant argument is that since a university is a place of universal learning, then a "secular" university, which excludes the discipline of theology, will not be a genuine university and will suffer various ill effects. His second is that, as a university is different from a research institute, its main purpose is not "the production of knowledge," but the formation of intellectual virtues in its students - what he describes as the distinctive beauty of the mind.
Newman could see that a new conception of a university was taking shape, as a knowledge factory dominated by STEM subjects (as we call them), in the service of industry and the military, disregarding the genuine intellectual good of the students, and not orientated to any sort of "wisdom." Anyone who accepted his two main brilliant arguments would reject this novel conception.
Yet his argument that a university education must be classical obviously cuts against this conception as well. (See the chapter in The Idea, "Christianity and Letters."
The argument has similarities with Pope Benedict's famous lecture at Regensburg, where the Holy Father taught that Christianity's appropriation of Greek thought was providential, not accidental. And that theology therefore must lose its way if it becomes "de-Hellenized." Newman teaches similarly that higher education must lose its way if it turns from the Classics.
He begins by arguing that there is a such a thing as "Civilization." His view is nuanced. He acknowledges Chinese, Hindu, Aztec, and Saracen civilizations, but he says that each is isolated from the others and stands outside another distinct whole, which he contemplates:
I call then this commonwealth pre-eminently and emphatically Human Society, and its intellect the Human Mind, and its decisions the sense of mankind, and its disciplined and cultivated state Civilization in the abstract, and the territory on which it lies the orbis terrarum, or the World.
Readers will see immediately that all "woke" controversies hinge on this question whether there was and is this Civilization, as Newman asserts.
His next step is to say that Christianity once it arises becomes generally coincident with this Civilization: "on the whole, the two have occupied one and the same orbis terrarum. Often indeed they have even moved pari passu, and at all times there has been found the most intimate connexion between them."
Readers familiar with Newman's Apologia pro Vita Sua know that the conception "what the world as a whole judges" was central, too, to his embrace of Catholicism.
From this intimate connection, Newman argues to a similarity of structure and inspiration: "the Classics, and the subjects of thought and the studies to which they give rise. . .have ever, on the whole, been the instruments of education whic...
67 episodes
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