In this Legal Humanities Fellowship, we will consider perhaps the most important amendment to the US constitution: the 1st. Our aim in considering this amendment will be twofold. We’ll aim to understand the implicit philosophy of the human person that undergirds the 1st Amendment. What does its high evaluation of religion, speech, mean about the human person? Secondly, we will try to understand the legal implications of these amendments especially as legal practitioners and citizens.
This program welcomes a small group of student fellows to participate in six seminar-style discussion sessions. The discussions will be facilitated by academics and professionals in law, history, and philosophy. The seminars seek to cultivate reflection on the relationship between law and the good life, exploring questions like: How can law—its substance and practice—help us to become more fully human?
Alumni of the Fellowship are eligible to participate again in the Spring semester, as all of the readings and speakers will be new. To learn about past semesters' speakers, readings, and topics, visit https://www.collegiuminstitute.org/legal-humanities.
The meetings will take place in the Benjamin Franklin Room 218 on the following Mondays, 12:00pm–1:15pm:
January 23 - Introduction: Understanding the human person
January 30 - The History of the First Amendment
February 6 - Homo religiousus: Freedom of Religion and the spiritual orientation of the human
February 13 - Homo Locans: Freedom of speech and the communicative nature of the person
February 20 - Homo Politicus: Freedom of Assembly and Petition and the human as the political animal
February 27 - Retrospective Discussion
Meet our Spring 2023 Legal Humanities Fellows:
Iulia-Elena Cazan
Becca Smith
Paul-Angelo dell’Isola
Sydney Sun
Brandon Merrill