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NEWS AND NOTES
Listen to the lecture, entitled "Catholic Higher Education: a Culture in Crisis," Presented by Melanie M. Morey, Ph.D., Senior Director for Research and Consulting at NarrowGate Consulting, and John J. Piderit, S.J., President of the Catholic Education Institute, on Thursday, November 8, 7 p.m. in Seattle University's Pigott Auditorium.
Read the article by Kevin Birnbaum in the November 15, 2007 issue of the Northwest Catholic Progress. SU speakers address Catholic identity “crisis”
New and newly designated courses that are approved for Catholic Studies. The new courses and designations will appear in the 2008-2009 University Bulletin
ENGL Special Topics Courses
Catholic Themes in Literature
Literature and Christianity
Theology and Literature
Spiritual Autobiographies
PHIL Special Topics Courses
Catholic Social Philosophy
THRS 324 Religion and Ecology
THRS 341 Ignatian Spirtuality
THRS Special Topics Courses
Theology and Literature
Spiritual Autobiographies
Theology of Peace
Religion and Science
Catholic Worker Movement
PHYS 480 Cosmology and Culture
VISION
The
Catholic Studies Minor at Seattle University explores the Catholic tradition
in the context of philosophy and theology, the natural and social sciences,
business and law, literature, art, and culture. Students will engage the
wealth and depth of Catholic thought and culture in history and in the
contemporary world, and will probe intellectual and ethical issues raised
by the dialog of Catholicism with other fields of human inquiry. This
program provides a scholarly means of assessing the weaknesses and strengths
of Catholic tradition in all of its dimensions. Students will approach
Catholic tradition both critically and constructively for its contribution
to wise and fruitful responses to economic, political, cultural, and ecological
challenges faced by humankind today.
Seattle
University’s minor in Catholic Studies stands in continuity with
the centuries-long project of fides quaerens intellectum, “faith
seeking understanding.” This quest for understanding engages all
fields of human knowledge, for Catholic theology holds that God is revealed
not only in the Word of scripture but also in the whole created world.
The Catholic vision includes a notion of nature as the product of dynamic
divine providence, of the fine arts as an intimation of divine beauty,
and of history as a drama of revelation and response. Catholic tradition
rests on a vision of the transcendent meaning and value of the human person,
and of the earth and its life forms. In Ignatian terms, appropriate to
Seattle University’s Jesuit identity, the tradition attempts to
assist human beings to become who they really are precisely by seeking
and seeing God in all things. The Catholic Studies Minor is intended for
students in all disciplines of the university.
OBJECTIVES
- To increase awareness of and insight into the history, culture, and intellectual traditions of Catholicism.
- To provide a more systematic means to encounter, learn from, challenge,
and build upon Catholic traditions as expressed in a variety of different
fields, among them theology, philosophy, spirituality, literature, art,
and the natural and social sciences.
- To promote a better understanding of the relations between theology and philosophy, faith and reason, and science and religion, particularly in the context of Catholicism.
- To enable students to respond to economic, political, and cultural, and ecological challenges through the knowledge they have achieved in assessing the strengths and weaknesses of Catholic traditions, including traditions of Catholic social thought.
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