Archives: Newsletter Post
Professions and Politics in Crisis
The legal profession is currently experiencing a crisis of well-being. According to a study of nearly 13,000 lawyers by the American Bar Association in 2016, 28% struggle with depression, 23% experience chronic stress, and as high as 36% qualify as problem drinkers, with all of these rates higher for lawyers less than 10 years removed […]
Workplace Ethics Require Courage
According to a recent National Business Ethics Survey (2013), almost one out of two U.S. employees has witnessed wrongdoing in their workplace. Half of them did not report the wrongdoing or take any action. Why do some individuals display courage at work while many of their co-workers — when faced with the same situation — […]
Civic Virtue Education as an Antidote to Political Polarization
Growing up, I had a lot of questions. As a toddler, I asked all the usual “why” questions, and as I got older, my questions became ever more abstract. My mother wasn’t surprised when I eventually decided to study philosophy. I also learned that there were certain questions that you didn’t ask. In particular, I learned the […]
More Than an Internship: The Calling and Purpose in Society Fellowship
At Valparaiso University, the Institute for Leadership and Service is giving undergraduate students the opportunity to combine a summer internship with a communal, reflective experience as a way of developing deeper purpose and a sense of calling through the Calling and Purpose in Society (CAPS) Fellowship Program. “The point of the CAPS program is to […]
The Virtues of Limits
The virtues are often discussed in terms of human excellence and achievement, exploring all that flourishing human lives can accomplish. In his latest book, however, David McPherson considers the ways in which the virtues are about acknowledging our limitations. As finite creatures, there is only so much we can accomplish. Our limited time, energy, and […]
Cultivating Virtue in the University
Cultivating Virtue in the University is a collection of essays from scholars in education, history, literature, philosophy, psychology, sociology, and theology, exploring the context, opportunities and challenges surrounding the ethical formation of college students. Jonathan Brant, Edward Brooks, and Michael Lamb not only edit the volume, they also provide a case for character education in universities […]
Cultivating Empathy in the Classroom
In her analysis of the parable of The Good Samaritan, Simone Weil emphasizes the acute, gentle attentiveness of the Samaritan when he encounters someone in need: “Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity.” This generosity is something that must be cultivated. According to Weil, growing generosity for the other is a creative act, […]
Engaging Students in an Educational Conversation
This year, more than 150 Boston College students who are enrolled in “The Educational Conversation” are exploring what it means to be educated and considering how that should impact their time in college. “”We like to start by giving students a chance to reflect on what they have just been through. What was the point […]
The Life We’re Looking For: Reclaiming Relationship in a Technological World
“There is a kind of technology that is easily distinguishable from magic – a kind that involves us more and more deeply as persons rather than diminishing and sidelining us. This kind of technology elevates and dignifies human work, rather than reducing human beings to drones that only do the work the robots have not […]
Ethics at Work: An Interdisciplinary Approach
What would it look like for professional education to not only provide the skills necessary for technical excellence, but also prepare students to pursue meaningful, well-integrated work lives where they have the wisdom to bring the appropriate values to bear when faced with ethical challenges and emerging disruptive technologies? This is the question that motivated […]