Living and Learning: To Be Within or Without of the Study
“How can someone write about the bottom when they have not been there?”
On Boldness in the Face of Uncertainty: A Reflection on Tanner’s “The Annunciation”
This bravery and boldness in spite of seemingly insurmountable obstacles and humble means is by far humanity’s most beautiful trait, and one that is so clearly reflected in Tanner’s piece.
The Beating Heart of Community
Given that each component involved in the complex machinery of the heart, no matter how small, must operate properly and in whole communion with its counterparts, it was no wonder to me why the heart served as a universal symbol of love
Faith Healing When Medicine Fails
Irrespective of the core religious doctrine that one follows, continual exposure to tragedy and suffering might cause one to question the role of spirituality and conviction in their religious followings.
Reading Elizabeth Anscombe - an Unusual Path to Ethics
However, our everyday morality may depend on many contextual complexities, which we can take into account only by paying attention to the details of the action-descriptions.
On The Creations of Children
We are all using this creation of children, all of the time. That’s a beautiful thing.
Does Uncertainty Make Room for Choice?
Soon after, people began to realize that, as far as anyone could prove, they too were just systems of moving objects--which implied that all of their thoughts, words, and actions could be deterministically predicted by Newton’s equations.
Yesterday’s Lessons for Today’s Learning
Among those epochs of education, is there one that is superior? One that may be closer to the perfect educational process? Are we as a society veering closer or further away from that ideal model?
Andy Warhol's Skull as a Memento Vivere
We live in a world wherein we treat death paradoxically: it is to be ignored if at all possible, yet when it is faced, it is done so to the highest extent, in scenes of gruesome loss and mournful tragedy
Living with Death II: Memento Mori
One way this expression spread was through visual symbols like skulls. These images were meant to remind viewers of their mortality, and that no matter their lot in life, whether they were the pope, a lord or a peasant, death would come for them
Finding Fraternity in Modern Times: On Pope Francis’ Fratelli Tutti
He is holy, but he is human, and as the head of the Catholic Church and bearer of some nondenominational, universal messages of human rights in this encyclical, he has a herculean task.
On Why Adversity Doth Best Discover Virtue
“Prosperity is not without many fears and disasters; and adversity is not without comforts and hopes”
Leisure As the Basis of Democratic Culture?
To reinvigorate democratic culture in America, we must revisit our understanding and practice of leisure, before it is annihilated by the world of total work.
Living with Death I: On Mortality
They instinctively considered the extension of life to this extent unnatural, and believed that it is the impermanence of life that gives it value.
This entirely student-run blog is intended to be a lively space of engagement for our student fellows where they can freely experiment with ideas together. They should not be assumed to be equivalent with students’ own settled convictions, let alone with the views of the Collegium Institute itself.