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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241003T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241003T180000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T180035Z
UID:10000780-1727971200-1727978400@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Graduate Student Social
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current graduate students at the University of Chicago. Advanced registration is encouraged. Hors d’oeuvres and drinks will be provided. This social is co-presented by Calvert House. \nCome join us over wine and cheese to celebrate the start of the new academic year. Learn more about the Lumen Christi Institute\, Calvert House\, and meet new and returning graduate students! \nThe social will run from 4:00pm – 6:00pm on Thursday\, October 3rd at Gavin House (1220 East 58th Street).
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-grad-student-social/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Social
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/gavin_1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241007T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241007T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175909Z
UID:10000874-1728324000-1728329400@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages: Umberto Eco Graduate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current graduate students at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Aidan Valente at valenteaidan@uchicago.edu. Books and drinks will be provided. This will be held at the LCI Residence (5554 S Wooodlawn Ave). \n“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” – This well-worn aphorism suggests that what we find “beautiful” relies only on subjective taste; and yet\, many would agree in finding a Gothic cathedral obviously more beautiful than a brutalist library. Is there\, then\, an objective component to beauty\, and if so\, where and how can we locate it? \nPhilosophers and theologians of the Middle Ages argued for the objectivity of beauty\, but they did so in diverse ways. This reading group will follow Umberto Eco’s introduction to medieval aesthetics (in the scholastic context and especially the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas) and will explore both Eco’s sources and his interpretation of medieval attitudes toward art and architecture. \nAn optional session at the end of the course will take place at the Art Institute of Chicago to examine and discuss medieval art first-hand. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet on Mondays (beginning Oct 7th) from 6:00pm – 7:30pm over dinner. \nOct 7: Preface\, Introduction\, and I: The Medieval Aesthetic Sensibility (19 pages) \nOct 14: II\, Transcendental Beauty and III\, The Aesthetics of Proportion (26 pages) \nOct 21: IV\, The Aesthetics of Light and V\, Symbol and Allegory (22 pages) \nOct 28: VI\, Aesthetic Perception and VII\, The Aesthetics of the Organism (19 pages) \nNov 4: VIII\, Development and Decline of the Aesthetics of the Organism and IV\, Theories of Art (21 pages) \nNov 11: X\, Inspiration and the Status of Art and XI\, Conlusion (19 pages) \nA optional trip\, free with a UCID\, to the Art Institute of Chicago or Smart Museum will be planned to conclude the group. \nA copy of Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages will be provided to all participants. The reading may be picked up at Gavin House (1220 E 58th street) during buisness hours at the start of the fall quarter. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-04-umberto-eco-reading-group-2/2024-10-07/
LOCATION:5554 S. Woodlawn Ave.\, Chicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Aidan-Group-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241008T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241008T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175741Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175951Z
UID:10000870-1728410400-1728415800@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Non-Credit Course | Science and Religion: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nThis event is in-person only. Intended for university students\, faculty\, and staff. Others interested in attending please contact dstrobach@lumenchristi.org. \nThis 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. \nRegistrants are free to attend as many sessions as they choose. Sessions do not presuppose previous attendance or prior knowledge of the subject. \nIt is often assumed\, on the basis of contemporary controversies\, that science and religion have always been in an oppositional relationship\, and that conflict between them is inevitable.  In this course we will consider the long history of science-religion relationships\, exploring the ways in which religious factors played a positive role in the emergence of modern science\, and were important in establishing a permanent and prominent place for scientific activity at the heart of modern Western culture. Specifically\, the course will consider how the very ideas of ‘science’ and ‘religion’ came to take on their present form\, while examining historical episodes such as the Galileo affair\, the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species\, and the nineteenth-century invention of the conflict thesis.  We will also discuss how historical insights can provide resources for helping understand present relations between science and religion. \nSCHEDULE  \nOctober 8th: The Boundaries of Science & Religion \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion ch 1 and 2.\n\nOctober 15: Religion and the Rise of Science \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, ‘Christianity and the Rise of Western Science’\, ABC Religion and Ethics\, 8 May\, 2012.\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion\, ch. 3.\n\nOctober 22: Exemplars of Conflict: Galileo and Darwin \n\nFurther Reading: Graney\, Christopher\, ‘Opposition to Galileo was Scientific\, not just Religious’\, Aeon Magazine\, 21 September\, 2016.\nFurther Reading: Dixon\, Thomas and Adam Shapiro\, Science and Religion\, chs. 2 & 4.\n\nOctober 29: Science and Modern Naturalism \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Some New World\, Introduction.\n\nFORMAT \nTuesdays\, October 8-October 29\n6:00pm: Dinner\n6:30pm: Presentation
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-fall-non-credit-course-peter-harrison-2-2/2024-10-08/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Non-Credit Courses
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Peter-Harrison-NCC.PNG
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241010T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241010T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161447Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241108T170323Z
UID:10000791-1728583200-1728588600@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Dante's Divine Comedy Graduate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current graduate students at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Kristóf Oltvai at oltvai@uchicago.edu. Books and dinner will be provided.  \nIn what is perhaps the literary triumph of the European imagination\, Dante Alighieri’s Commedia offers a vision of unforgettable cosmic and spiritual grandeur. Join us on this journey from the horrors of Hell\, along Mount Purgatory’s breathtaking vistas\, all the way into the bosom of the eternal Church Triumphant as our poet-protagonist discovers the meaning of sin\, love\, virtue\, and redemption in conversation with his guides\, Virgil and Beatrice. \nThis reading group will focus on two themes: \n(1) Dante as a moral pedagogue – as one who leads us from accepting the righteousness of God’s judgment; through pursuing virtue as a prerequisite for beatitude; to seeing\, at last\, even that ethical growth as a gift of grace \n(2) The communion of saints as the fabric of the universe. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet on Thursdays (beginning October 10th) from 6:00pm – 7:30pm over dinner. We will read 10 cantos before each meeting. \n\n\nOct 10: Inferno 1-10 \n\n\nOct 24: Inferno 11-20 \n\n\nNov 7: Inferno 21-30 \n\n\nNov 21: Inferno 31-34\, Purgatorio 1-6 \n\n\nDec 5th: Purgatorio 7-17 \n\n\nA copy of Dante’s Divine Comedy will be provided to all participants. The reading may be picked up at Gavin House (1220 E 58th street) during buisness hours at the start of the fall quarter. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-dante-reading-group/2024-10-10/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/jacopo-ligozzi-scene-from-the-divine-comedy-1-illustration-lg.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241011T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241011T163000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251022T194104Z
UID:10000790-1728658800-1728664200@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:The Boldness of Belief and Timidity of Technology: A Symposium on Gratitude\, Creation\, and the Technological Mindset
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE FOR ZOOM LIVESTREAM \nREGISTER HERE FOR IN-PERSON \nOpen to students and faculty. For more information\, contact dstrobach@lumenchristi.org. \nThis event is cosponsored and supported by the University of Chicago John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought. It is also cosponsored by The Point Magazine. 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. \nIn his Introduction to Christianity\, Joseph Ratzinger saw that at the root of the “technological mindset” was an anxiety about how man can come to know the world.  Ratzinger contrasted the technological orientation to the world with an orientation of belief. Belief was not incomplete or provisional knowing\, but a trustful standing upon and loyalty to that which is given by Creation. \nIn this symposium\, Matt Crawford and Mark Shiffman will come together to discuss the problem of virtue in light of Ratzinger’s distinction. Crawford will begin by exploring how the virtue of gratitude often eludes us under a technological mindset. A better approach is to boldly entrust oneself to that which one cannot make or fully grasp. \nMark Shiffman will respond by using this same distinction between technocracy and givenness to and explain the difference between optimism and hope. Melanie Barrett will also offer comments. \nOn Saturday\, Matt Crawford and Mark Schiffman will lead a Master Class on Max Scheler’s work\, Ressentiment.
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-standing-on-what-is-given/
LOCATION:Social Sciences\, Tea Room\, 1126 E 59th St.\nChicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Symposia
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/MC-image.PNG
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241012T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241012T150000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161443Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T174229Z
UID:10000789-1728734400-1728745200@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Is Christianity a Slave Morality? Max Scheler on Ressentiment
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen 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. An optional wine and cheese reception will follow.  \nThis 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. \nIn his book Ressentiment\, the German philosopher Max Scheler deepens Nietzsche’s account of ressentiment\, the life-denying disposition of spite\, envy and revenge. Nietzsche finds this spiritual sickness to be the inner secret of so-called Christian love\, which is really an expression of weakness. Scheler turns this account upside down\, and finds Christianity a life-affirming doctrine that elevates its adepts into generosity and strength. Scheler also sharply distinguishes Christian love from egalitarian humanitarianism. Sometimes called “the Nietzschean Catholic\,” Scheler is thus a helpful guide for thinking through the quarrels that are emerging today between the neo-pagan\, online Right\, which takes its bearings from Nietzsche\, and the nascent revival of orthodox Christianity. Scheler equips us to see some overlap in the intuitions of these camps\, and to retrieve a more aristocratic and virile strand in the Christian tradition. It is a strand that can speak to our present discontents\, and to the pervasive sense of civilizational collapse. \nReadings:\nWe will read Max Scheler’s Ressentiment\, which may be found here  \nThe master class will focus on: \n\nCh. 1\nCh. 3\nCh. 4\n\nIf you prefer\, you can pick up a printout of the readings at Gavin House (1220 E. 58th Street) Mon-Fri\, 10am-4pm. Please email David Strobach at dstrobach@lumenchristi.org to let us know you are coming. \nDiscussion Questions Forthcoming\nSchedule:\n11:30-12:00 | Optional pre-event lunch \n12:00-1:20 | Session 1 \n1:20-1:40 | Coffee break \n1:40-3:00 | Session 2 \n3:00-3:30 | Reception
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-max-scheler-master-class/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Master Classes
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Ressentiment-Image.PNG
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241014T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241014T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175909Z
UID:10000928-1728928800-1728934200@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages: Umberto Eco Graduate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current graduate students at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Aidan Valente at valenteaidan@uchicago.edu. Books and drinks will be provided. This will be held at the LCI Residence (5554 S Wooodlawn Ave). \n“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” – This well-worn aphorism suggests that what we find “beautiful” relies only on subjective taste; and yet\, many would agree in finding a Gothic cathedral obviously more beautiful than a brutalist library. Is there\, then\, an objective component to beauty\, and if so\, where and how can we locate it? \nPhilosophers and theologians of the Middle Ages argued for the objectivity of beauty\, but they did so in diverse ways. This reading group will follow Umberto Eco’s introduction to medieval aesthetics (in the scholastic context and especially the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas) and will explore both Eco’s sources and his interpretation of medieval attitudes toward art and architecture. \nAn optional session at the end of the course will take place at the Art Institute of Chicago to examine and discuss medieval art first-hand. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet on Mondays (beginning Oct 7th) from 6:00pm – 7:30pm over dinner. \nOct 7: Preface\, Introduction\, and I: The Medieval Aesthetic Sensibility (19 pages) \nOct 14: II\, Transcendental Beauty and III\, The Aesthetics of Proportion (26 pages) \nOct 21: IV\, The Aesthetics of Light and V\, Symbol and Allegory (22 pages) \nOct 28: VI\, Aesthetic Perception and VII\, The Aesthetics of the Organism (19 pages) \nNov 4: VIII\, Development and Decline of the Aesthetics of the Organism and IV\, Theories of Art (21 pages) \nNov 11: X\, Inspiration and the Status of Art and XI\, Conlusion (19 pages) \nA optional trip\, free with a UCID\, to the Art Institute of Chicago or Smart Museum will be planned to conclude the group. \nA copy of Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages will be provided to all participants. The reading may be picked up at Gavin House (1220 E 58th street) during buisness hours at the start of the fall quarter. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-04-umberto-eco-reading-group-2/2024-10-14/
LOCATION:5554 S. Woodlawn Ave.\, Chicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Aidan-Group-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241015T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241015T140000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161440Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T173331Z
UID:10000787-1728997200-1729000800@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Greek New Testament Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current students and faculty at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Joe Haydt at jhaydt@uchicago.edu. Lunch will be provided.  \nWe will work through the Greek text of chapters eight and nine of the Gospel of Luke. Particular attention will be paid to the narrative structure of these chapters. Participants with all levels of Greek are welcome to attend. Lunch will be provided by the Lumen Christi Institute. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet every Tuesday (beginning October 15th) from 1pm – 2pm. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-greek-new-testament/2024-10-15/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/saint_luke_2012.79.2-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241015T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241015T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175741Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175951Z
UID:10000932-1729015200-1729020600@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Non-Credit Course | Science and Religion: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nThis event is in-person only. Intended for university students\, faculty\, and staff. Others interested in attending please contact dstrobach@lumenchristi.org. \nThis 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. \nRegistrants are free to attend as many sessions as they choose. Sessions do not presuppose previous attendance or prior knowledge of the subject. \nIt is often assumed\, on the basis of contemporary controversies\, that science and religion have always been in an oppositional relationship\, and that conflict between them is inevitable.  In this course we will consider the long history of science-religion relationships\, exploring the ways in which religious factors played a positive role in the emergence of modern science\, and were important in establishing a permanent and prominent place for scientific activity at the heart of modern Western culture. Specifically\, the course will consider how the very ideas of ‘science’ and ‘religion’ came to take on their present form\, while examining historical episodes such as the Galileo affair\, the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species\, and the nineteenth-century invention of the conflict thesis.  We will also discuss how historical insights can provide resources for helping understand present relations between science and religion. \nSCHEDULE  \nOctober 8th: The Boundaries of Science & Religion \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion ch 1 and 2.\n\nOctober 15: Religion and the Rise of Science \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, ‘Christianity and the Rise of Western Science’\, ABC Religion and Ethics\, 8 May\, 2012.\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion\, ch. 3.\n\nOctober 22: Exemplars of Conflict: Galileo and Darwin \n\nFurther Reading: Graney\, Christopher\, ‘Opposition to Galileo was Scientific\, not just Religious’\, Aeon Magazine\, 21 September\, 2016.\nFurther Reading: Dixon\, Thomas and Adam Shapiro\, Science and Religion\, chs. 2 & 4.\n\nOctober 29: Science and Modern Naturalism \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Some New World\, Introduction.\n\nFORMAT \nTuesdays\, October 8-October 29\n6:00pm: Dinner\n6:30pm: Presentation
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-fall-non-credit-course-peter-harrison-2-2/2024-10-15/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Non-Credit Courses
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Peter-Harrison-NCC.PNG
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241017T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241017T183000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251022T181816Z
UID:10000009-1729184400-1729189800@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Virtue\, Moral Formation\, and the University
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE FOR IN-PERSON \nREGISTER HERE FOR LIVESTREAM \nOpen to students and faculty. For more information\, contact gzokal@lumenchristi.org. \nThis 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. \nAs scholars such as Julie Reuben have documented\, there has been a decline in the mission of moral formation of students over the history of US higher education and this role of the university is no longer to be taken for granted. What role\, if any\, does the university play in the moral formation of its students? Is moral formation beyond the bounds of its mission or is it inescapable? What virtues are formed in the modern university? This public panel\, part of the Annual Meeting of the In Lumine Network\, will serve to provide a broad conversation about the role of the university in regard to virtue and moral formation. \nImage courtesy of: Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center\, University of Chicago Library
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-virtue-moral-formation-and-the-university/
LOCATION:Swift Hall\, 3rd Floor Lecture\, 1025 E 58th St.\nChicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
CATEGORIES:Lectures & Symposia
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/apf1-03338r-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241018T104500
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241018T114500
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241028T174821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241028T174821Z
UID:10000797-1729248300-1729251900@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Latin Vulgate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current students and faculty at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Emily Barnum at ebarnum@uchicago.edu. Coffee\, tea\, and pastries will be provided.  \nSt. Jerome’s Latin translation of the Bible was used exclusively by the Western Church for centuries; its significance for the Roman Catholic tradition cannot be overstated. In this group\, we will work through sections of the Vulgate in order to appreciate its beauty and practice our Latin. For the first session\, no preparation is necessary; we will decide together which texts we will read. Please come with a desire to grow in Latin Bible knowledge with St. Jerome and friends! \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet every Friday (beginning Oct 18th) from 10:45am – 11:45am over coffee\, tea\, and pastries. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-latin-vulgate-2/2024-10-18/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/1947.117---Saint-Jerome-in-the-Wilderness-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241021T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241021T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175909Z
UID:10000929-1729533600-1729539000@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages: Umberto Eco Graduate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current graduate students at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Aidan Valente at valenteaidan@uchicago.edu. Books and drinks will be provided. This will be held at the LCI Residence (5554 S Wooodlawn Ave). \n“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” – This well-worn aphorism suggests that what we find “beautiful” relies only on subjective taste; and yet\, many would agree in finding a Gothic cathedral obviously more beautiful than a brutalist library. Is there\, then\, an objective component to beauty\, and if so\, where and how can we locate it? \nPhilosophers and theologians of the Middle Ages argued for the objectivity of beauty\, but they did so in diverse ways. This reading group will follow Umberto Eco’s introduction to medieval aesthetics (in the scholastic context and especially the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas) and will explore both Eco’s sources and his interpretation of medieval attitudes toward art and architecture. \nAn optional session at the end of the course will take place at the Art Institute of Chicago to examine and discuss medieval art first-hand. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet on Mondays (beginning Oct 7th) from 6:00pm – 7:30pm over dinner. \nOct 7: Preface\, Introduction\, and I: The Medieval Aesthetic Sensibility (19 pages) \nOct 14: II\, Transcendental Beauty and III\, The Aesthetics of Proportion (26 pages) \nOct 21: IV\, The Aesthetics of Light and V\, Symbol and Allegory (22 pages) \nOct 28: VI\, Aesthetic Perception and VII\, The Aesthetics of the Organism (19 pages) \nNov 4: VIII\, Development and Decline of the Aesthetics of the Organism and IV\, Theories of Art (21 pages) \nNov 11: X\, Inspiration and the Status of Art and XI\, Conlusion (19 pages) \nA optional trip\, free with a UCID\, to the Art Institute of Chicago or Smart Museum will be planned to conclude the group. \nA copy of Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages will be provided to all participants. The reading may be picked up at Gavin House (1220 E 58th street) during buisness hours at the start of the fall quarter. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-04-umberto-eco-reading-group-2/2024-10-21/
LOCATION:5554 S. Woodlawn Ave.\, Chicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Aidan-Group-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241022T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241022T140000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161440Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T173331Z
UID:10000860-1729602000-1729605600@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Greek New Testament Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current students and faculty at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Joe Haydt at jhaydt@uchicago.edu. Lunch will be provided.  \nWe will work through the Greek text of chapters eight and nine of the Gospel of Luke. Particular attention will be paid to the narrative structure of these chapters. Participants with all levels of Greek are welcome to attend. Lunch will be provided by the Lumen Christi Institute. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet every Tuesday (beginning October 15th) from 1pm – 2pm. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-greek-new-testament/2024-10-22/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/saint_luke_2012.79.2-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241022T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241022T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175741Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175951Z
UID:10000933-1729620000-1729625400@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Non-Credit Course | Science and Religion: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nThis event is in-person only. Intended for university students\, faculty\, and staff. Others interested in attending please contact dstrobach@lumenchristi.org. \nThis 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. \nRegistrants are free to attend as many sessions as they choose. Sessions do not presuppose previous attendance or prior knowledge of the subject. \nIt is often assumed\, on the basis of contemporary controversies\, that science and religion have always been in an oppositional relationship\, and that conflict between them is inevitable.  In this course we will consider the long history of science-religion relationships\, exploring the ways in which religious factors played a positive role in the emergence of modern science\, and were important in establishing a permanent and prominent place for scientific activity at the heart of modern Western culture. Specifically\, the course will consider how the very ideas of ‘science’ and ‘religion’ came to take on their present form\, while examining historical episodes such as the Galileo affair\, the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species\, and the nineteenth-century invention of the conflict thesis.  We will also discuss how historical insights can provide resources for helping understand present relations between science and religion. \nSCHEDULE  \nOctober 8th: The Boundaries of Science & Religion \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion ch 1 and 2.\n\nOctober 15: Religion and the Rise of Science \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, ‘Christianity and the Rise of Western Science’\, ABC Religion and Ethics\, 8 May\, 2012.\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion\, ch. 3.\n\nOctober 22: Exemplars of Conflict: Galileo and Darwin \n\nFurther Reading: Graney\, Christopher\, ‘Opposition to Galileo was Scientific\, not just Religious’\, Aeon Magazine\, 21 September\, 2016.\nFurther Reading: Dixon\, Thomas and Adam Shapiro\, Science and Religion\, chs. 2 & 4.\n\nOctober 29: Science and Modern Naturalism \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Some New World\, Introduction.\n\nFORMAT \nTuesdays\, October 8-October 29\n6:00pm: Dinner\n6:30pm: Presentation
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-fall-non-credit-course-peter-harrison-2-2/2024-10-22/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Non-Credit Courses
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Peter-Harrison-NCC.PNG
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241024T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241024T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161447Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241108T170323Z
UID:10000865-1729792800-1729798200@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Dante's Divine Comedy Graduate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current graduate students at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Kristóf Oltvai at oltvai@uchicago.edu. Books and dinner will be provided.  \nIn what is perhaps the literary triumph of the European imagination\, Dante Alighieri’s Commedia offers a vision of unforgettable cosmic and spiritual grandeur. Join us on this journey from the horrors of Hell\, along Mount Purgatory’s breathtaking vistas\, all the way into the bosom of the eternal Church Triumphant as our poet-protagonist discovers the meaning of sin\, love\, virtue\, and redemption in conversation with his guides\, Virgil and Beatrice. \nThis reading group will focus on two themes: \n(1) Dante as a moral pedagogue – as one who leads us from accepting the righteousness of God’s judgment; through pursuing virtue as a prerequisite for beatitude; to seeing\, at last\, even that ethical growth as a gift of grace \n(2) The communion of saints as the fabric of the universe. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet on Thursdays (beginning October 10th) from 6:00pm – 7:30pm over dinner. We will read 10 cantos before each meeting. \n\n\nOct 10: Inferno 1-10 \n\n\nOct 24: Inferno 11-20 \n\n\nNov 7: Inferno 21-30 \n\n\nNov 21: Inferno 31-34\, Purgatorio 1-6 \n\n\nDec 5th: Purgatorio 7-17 \n\n\nA copy of Dante’s Divine Comedy will be provided to all participants. The reading may be picked up at Gavin House (1220 E 58th street) during buisness hours at the start of the fall quarter. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-dante-reading-group/2024-10-24/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/jacopo-ligozzi-scene-from-the-divine-comedy-1-illustration-lg.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241025T104500
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241025T114500
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241028T174821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241028T174821Z
UID:10000801-1729853100-1729856700@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Latin Vulgate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current students and faculty at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Emily Barnum at ebarnum@uchicago.edu. Coffee\, tea\, and pastries will be provided.  \nSt. Jerome’s Latin translation of the Bible was used exclusively by the Western Church for centuries; its significance for the Roman Catholic tradition cannot be overstated. In this group\, we will work through sections of the Vulgate in order to appreciate its beauty and practice our Latin. For the first session\, no preparation is necessary; we will decide together which texts we will read. Please come with a desire to grow in Latin Bible knowledge with St. Jerome and friends! \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet every Friday (beginning Oct 18th) from 10:45am – 11:45am over coffee\, tea\, and pastries. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-latin-vulgate-2/2024-10-25/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/1947.117---Saint-Jerome-in-the-Wilderness-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241028T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241028T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175909Z
UID:10000930-1730138400-1730143800@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages: Umberto Eco Graduate Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current graduate students at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Aidan Valente at valenteaidan@uchicago.edu. Books and drinks will be provided. This will be held at the LCI Residence (5554 S Wooodlawn Ave). \n“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” – This well-worn aphorism suggests that what we find “beautiful” relies only on subjective taste; and yet\, many would agree in finding a Gothic cathedral obviously more beautiful than a brutalist library. Is there\, then\, an objective component to beauty\, and if so\, where and how can we locate it? \nPhilosophers and theologians of the Middle Ages argued for the objectivity of beauty\, but they did so in diverse ways. This reading group will follow Umberto Eco’s introduction to medieval aesthetics (in the scholastic context and especially the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas) and will explore both Eco’s sources and his interpretation of medieval attitudes toward art and architecture. \nAn optional session at the end of the course will take place at the Art Institute of Chicago to examine and discuss medieval art first-hand. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet on Mondays (beginning Oct 7th) from 6:00pm – 7:30pm over dinner. \nOct 7: Preface\, Introduction\, and I: The Medieval Aesthetic Sensibility (19 pages) \nOct 14: II\, Transcendental Beauty and III\, The Aesthetics of Proportion (26 pages) \nOct 21: IV\, The Aesthetics of Light and V\, Symbol and Allegory (22 pages) \nOct 28: VI\, Aesthetic Perception and VII\, The Aesthetics of the Organism (19 pages) \nNov 4: VIII\, Development and Decline of the Aesthetics of the Organism and IV\, Theories of Art (21 pages) \nNov 11: X\, Inspiration and the Status of Art and XI\, Conlusion (19 pages) \nA optional trip\, free with a UCID\, to the Art Institute of Chicago or Smart Museum will be planned to conclude the group. \nA copy of Art and Beauty in the Middle Ages will be provided to all participants. The reading may be picked up at Gavin House (1220 E 58th street) during buisness hours at the start of the fall quarter. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-04-umberto-eco-reading-group-2/2024-10-28/
LOCATION:5554 S. Woodlawn Ave.\, Chicago\, IL 60637\, Hyde Park\, IL
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Aidan-Group-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241029T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241029T140000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241003T161440Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T173331Z
UID:10000861-1730206800-1730210400@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Greek New Testament Reading Group
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nOpen to current students and faculty at the University of Chicago. Participants can come to whichever sessions they choose. Others interested in participating should contact Joe Haydt at jhaydt@uchicago.edu. Lunch will be provided.  \nWe will work through the Greek text of chapters eight and nine of the Gospel of Luke. Particular attention will be paid to the narrative structure of these chapters. Participants with all levels of Greek are welcome to attend. Lunch will be provided by the Lumen Christi Institute. \nSCHEDULE:\nThis group will meet every Tuesday (beginning October 15th) from 1pm – 2pm. \n\nThe University of Chicago is famous for its graduate student reading groups\, in which students pursue their own intellectual interests among friends in an informal setting. The Lumen Christi Institute supports this endeavor by sponsoring a number of graduate student reading groups each quarter. LCI provides space\, hospitality\, and books. \nReading groups cover the whole spectrum of ideas. Texts do not need to be explicitly Catholic\, though we follow St. Paul’s injunction to attend to whatever is true\, noble\, right\, admirable\, and lovely (Phil 4:8). Groups follow LCI’s guiding principles\, which… \n\n\nAffirm the intellectual life as good in itself \n\n\nAsk questions animated by the principle that “all knowledge forms one whole” \n\n\nTranscend the ideological / political divide (i.e.\, programs should not be partisan in nature) \n\n\nWelcome religious perspectives as part of the intellectual life (i.e.\, programs need not be theological in nature but conversations should be open to religious insights) \n\n\nNurture friendships\, to support the pursuit of truth\, beauty\, and goodness (i.e.\, programs should have a social component)
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-greek-new-testament/2024-10-29/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Reading Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/saint_luke_2012.79.2-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20241029T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241029T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T074825
CREATED:20241029T175741Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T175951Z
UID:10000934-1730224800-1730230200@lumenchristi.org
SUMMARY:Non-Credit Course | Science and Religion: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:REGISTER HERE \nThis event is in-person only. Intended for university students\, faculty\, and staff. Others interested in attending please contact dstrobach@lumenchristi.org. \nThis 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. \nRegistrants are free to attend as many sessions as they choose. Sessions do not presuppose previous attendance or prior knowledge of the subject. \nIt is often assumed\, on the basis of contemporary controversies\, that science and religion have always been in an oppositional relationship\, and that conflict between them is inevitable.  In this course we will consider the long history of science-religion relationships\, exploring the ways in which religious factors played a positive role in the emergence of modern science\, and were important in establishing a permanent and prominent place for scientific activity at the heart of modern Western culture. Specifically\, the course will consider how the very ideas of ‘science’ and ‘religion’ came to take on their present form\, while examining historical episodes such as the Galileo affair\, the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species\, and the nineteenth-century invention of the conflict thesis.  We will also discuss how historical insights can provide resources for helping understand present relations between science and religion. \nSCHEDULE  \nOctober 8th: The Boundaries of Science & Religion \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion ch 1 and 2.\n\nOctober 15: Religion and the Rise of Science \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, ‘Christianity and the Rise of Western Science’\, ABC Religion and Ethics\, 8 May\, 2012.\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Territories of Science and Religion\, ch. 3.\n\nOctober 22: Exemplars of Conflict: Galileo and Darwin \n\nFurther Reading: Graney\, Christopher\, ‘Opposition to Galileo was Scientific\, not just Religious’\, Aeon Magazine\, 21 September\, 2016.\nFurther Reading: Dixon\, Thomas and Adam Shapiro\, Science and Religion\, chs. 2 & 4.\n\nOctober 29: Science and Modern Naturalism \n\nFurther Reading: Harrison\, Peter\, Some New World\, Introduction.\n\nFORMAT \nTuesdays\, October 8-October 29\n6:00pm: Dinner\n6:30pm: Presentation
URL:https://lumenchristi.org/event/2024-10-fall-non-credit-course-peter-harrison-2-2/2024-10-29/
LOCATION:Gavin House\, 1220 E 58th St.\, Chicago\, IL\, 60637
CATEGORIES:Non-Credit Courses
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lumenchristi.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Peter-Harrison-NCC.PNG
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR