Open to current graduate students and faculty. Advanced undergraduates and others interested in participating should contact dstrobach@lumenchristi.org. This event is in-person only. All registrants will receive copies of the selected readings, which should be read in advance of the class. Reception will follow.
This event is made possible through the support of ‘In Lumine: Supporting the Catholic Intellectual Tradition on Campuses Nationwide’ (Grant #62372) from the John Templeton Foundation.
The ancient Stoics rejected grief as a passion. Was it inhuman to grieve? Or was it inhuman to suppress this natural human affect? What about longing for lost loved ones or the fear of death? To what extent did early Christian teaching modify or reject the Stoics? And how does one approach the possibility of loss and death today, in a contemporary medical context that has prioritized statistical analysis and abstraction in lieu of concern for the concrete ‘other’?
Cyprian of Carthage’s sermon Mortality, delivered in the middle of a devastating plague in the third century, provides an early Christian vision of how to face death, which both takes up and transforms ancient Stoic approaches to death. This seminar-style discussion will explore these themes as well as its call to care for others despite risk. It will explore these insights in relation to today’s dramatically changed medical context in which care for the human person risks being occluded by statistical abstraction.
Readings:
Cyprian’s “Mortality” from Treatises in CUA’s Fathers of the Church Series (pp. 193-221).
Secondary:
Scherz “Grief, Death, and Longing in Stoic and Christian Ethics” Journal of Religious Ethics 45: 1 (2017), 7–28.
Scherz, “Chapter 10: Caring for the Statistical Other” in The Ethics of Precision Medicine: The Problems of Prevention in Healthcare (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, Forthcoming).
Both the required and recommended readings will be distributed to participants via Dropbox. If you prefer, you can pick up a printout of the readings at Gavin House (1220 E. 58th Street) Mon-Fri, 10am-4pm once they are ready. Please email David Strobach at dstrobach@lumenchristi.org to let us know you are coming.
Discussion Questions:
According to Cyprian, how should Christians approach death? How is this similar and/or different from contemporary stances toward death?
For Cyprian, how does a proper attitude toward death affect our actions and feelings toward others? How does it affect our emotions for loved ones who have died?
Schedule:
11:30-12:00 | Optional pre-event lunch
12:00-1:20 | Session 1
1:20-1:40 | Coffee break
1:40-3:00 | Session 2
3:00-3:30 | Reception