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T
H E
K I N G ' S
C
O L L E G E |
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2008 - 2009
Program Maps
What is
Philosophy?
Philosophy is the exercise of
reason. It does not just train
reason. Reason finds in
philosophy its own purpose and
its own limitations. What do we
know about the world around us?
About its ultimate causes? Who
are we and what is the goal of
our lives? When studying
philosophy, we try to answer
these questions, and while
answering them, we discover the
beauty of our reason. Through
philosophy we develop logical
skills and learn to distinguish
between better and worse
arguments. It is hard to
conceive of any good liberal
arts college without philosophy
in the core of its curriculum.
Although philosophy has been
around for over 2500 years, few
if any scholars have mastered
it. Philosophy, rightly
understood, is immense and
difficult. Frequently,
intellectuals have treated
philosophy as a storehouse of
masks, worn to conceal the
shaggy faces of un-philosophical
worldviews. At The King’s
College, students learn about
philosophy as it was at its
beginning. We introduce our
students to the quest for wisdom
which the Greeks undertook eight
centuries before Christ. They
sought to understand reality and
themselves, while remembering
that they were only human and
that human knowledge has limits.
This attitude is no less
important than the tenets and
theories of the Greek
philosophers. Christians have
long admired this attitude even
as they rejected Greek ideas
about the human soul and
salvation. This Greek
philosophical quest for truth
was absorbed in the Christian
quest to understand God’s word.
It may be commonplace to say
that college should develop a
student’s capacity to reason. It
may be even more commonplace to
say that reason itself is a
beautiful gift from God.
Exploring how to exercise reason
and explaining why reason is
beautiful, however, are
difficult tasks. The King’s
College teaches philosophy as a
way of embracing that
difficulty.
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