Archives: Newsletter Post
Hope & Care
This month we invite you to consider physican Victor Montori’s reflection on the connection between hope and care. Montori writes, “The possibility of better emerges from the action of people who choose to care. … Care engenders hope.” Read more.
Flourishing as a Physician: Columbia’s Character Cooperatives
Lydia Dugdale could see it. Her students weren’t well. Whether it was the strain of four years at Columbia’s medical school, or being ill-prepared to face the kind of death and suffering that they encountered treating their patients, her students often seemed distressed and overwhelmed. Even though they might be making it through medical school, […]
Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon by Michael Lewis
On November 2, Sam Bankman-Friend was convicted of seven counts of fraud, a verdict that carries a maximum sentence of 115 years in prison. But just a couple years earlier, Bankman-Fried had been a rising star. According to Forbes, he was the richest person under 30, the billionaire founder of the FTX crypto exchange. And […]
Optimal Illusions: The False Promise of Optimization by Coco Krumme
We want our lives to be efficient – our work commutes brief, our checkout lines short, and our internet connections fast. But sometimes, this desire can obscure what matters most. In Optimal Illusions: The False Promise of Optimization (Penguin Random House, 2023), Coco Krumme provides a thought-provoking exploration of the often overlooked consequences of our […]
Considering Radical Hope
This fall at Virtues & Vocations, we have been exploring the virtue of hope. It is always timely, but feels even more pressing at this moment. We invite you to listen in on our conversation with Jonathan Lear on the ramifications of radical hope in his work and life since he published the seminal book […]
Leading with Character: Virtue Formation for Aspiring School Leaders
Late in 2018, North Central College received a grant from the Kern Family Foundation to infuse virtue ethics into their Educational Leadership program, and Dr. Maureen Spelman–then at Saint Xavier University–was brought on to lead the reimagination process. As a professor at Saint Xavier for almost 2 decades, Dr. Spelman had served as a consultant […]
Life Worth Living by Miroslav Volf, Matthew Croasmun and Ryan McAnnally-Linz
Life Worth Living is a book based on the popular Yale University class by the same name. As with the course, the book challenges readers to ask questions about what matters in life. It then gives an overview of various philosophical and religious answers to some of the biggest questions, highlighting competing claims about what […]
A Glimpse of Hope
This month we are featuring an art essay with pieces by incarcerated men from Westville Correctional Facility. This was featured in the Summer 2023 issue of Virtues & Vocations: Higher Education for Human Flourishing.
The Educator as Exemplar
In a higher education setting where students arrive with a variety of worldviews and from a society that prizes relativity and individualism, carrying out the role of an educator is bound to be delicate. Is the college experience mostly about the transfer of intellectual and academic knowledge, or is there something more? Should educators be […]
Reflecting on Hope
This month we launch the new issue of Virtues & Vocations: Higher Education for Human Flourishing. In 12 essays written by scholars from around the country, an interview with philosopher Jonathan Lear, an art essay, and select poetry, hope is engaged as a virtue and as a vocation. Read more.