Archives: Newsletter Post
A Burning: A Novel
For the summer newsletter, we decided to highlight a work of fiction. “All I am guilty of, Purnendu, listen – all I am guilty of is being a coward.” – Jivan, p. 187 Megha Majumdar’s debut novel, A Burning, is classified in the “Mystery, Suspense and Thriller” category online, but this story is more about the […]
Virtual Events Worth Revisiting
The past year was marked by an abundance of virtual events that brought together panels and speakers who were physically distant and might not otherwise have been able to be together. Many of these talks were recorded and are available for summer viewing. Here is a roundup of some of our favorites from the past […]
Character Journals: Reflection as a Character Development Strategy
Founded in 1802, the United States Military Academy at West Point sits on the banks of the Hudson River about 50 miles north of New York City. West Point is a four-year military service academy. It is a hybrid of higher education and military training. On one hand, it has 13 academic departments and 37 […]
Lost in Thought: The Hidden Pleasures of an Intellectual Life
“If human beings flourish from their inner core rather than in the realm of impact and results, then the inner work of learning is fundamental to human happiness, as far from pointless wheel spinning as are the forms of tenderness we owe our children or grandchildren.” – Zena Hitz, Lost in Thought Lost in Thought begins […]
Race and the Professions
During the summer of 2020, many Americans took to the streets after the murder of George Floyd and emerging statistics about COVID health disparities brought issues of racial justice to the foreground of national discourse. In response, The Purpose Project at Duke developed the Race and the Professions Fellowship, a year-long program for graduate students […]
Seeking Forgiveness/Searching for Hope in our Anthropocene World
When I talk to people about climate change and the multiple forms of eco-social damage that punctuate our world, I now know that I risk inducing the symptoms of what some mental health professionals are calling Pre-Traumatic Distress Syndrome. This form of PTSD happens when people are bombarded, like so many concussive blows, by an […]
How To Change: The Science of Getting from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be
Katy Milkman is an engineer turned behavioral economist who co-directs the Behavior Change for Good Initiative at the University of Pennsylvania with Angela Duckworth. In Milkman’s new book, How to Change, she tells a story about the first time she realized that perhaps she could change her own habits if she tackled her inability to change […]
UVA Equips Student Athletes to Promote Flourishing
When University of Virginia men’s lacrosse player Quentin Matsui was a first-year student, he noticed that at practice, his teammates worried about schoolwork, and in class, they were worried about their performance on the field. As a student in “The Art and Science of Human Flourishing,” a first-semester interdisciplinary course sponsored by the UVA Contemplative Sciences […]
Crabwalking Towards Purpose
Over the past several years, I have developed curricular and co-curricular programming to engage students at Duke in questions of purpose—what it means, why it matters, and how cultivating it can be transformational. Everyone wants a purposeful life; however, wanting purpose is different than cultivating the ability to discern it. Below are a four things […]
Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future
At the conclusion of Under a White Sky, Elizabeth Kolbert writes,“This has been a book about people trying to solve problems created by people trying to solve problems” (200). While that summary is an accurate description of the uniting thread in the book, it does not capture the compelling narrative that precedes it. Under a White Sky is […]