Philosophy

The Will to Question

The unexamined life, as Socrates famously stated, is not worth living. But what is it, to examine a life? How does one examine a life? Where do we begin? Is there a set of tools for its examination, methods to conduct our inquiry? Is there a training in its performance?Some would say “no”—but they would be wrong. For, although philosophical inquiry does not follow the rigid methodologies of contemporary science (what Jeremy Bentham named, and Charles Peirce took up calling, “idioscopic science”), it nevertheless is itself a scientific endeavor (what Bentham, and again Peirce, called “cenoscopic science”): meaning that its pursuit tends to the production of knowledge corresponding to acts of understanding following upon demonstrations. This process, moreover, is a recursive one: a continued reevaluation whereby the sole instrument of philosophy—that common faculty of intellectual reasoning accessible by all men and women—refines continually our grasp and articulation of the truth. This refinement does not occur all of its own, but by the exercise of conscious control in questioning both the beings that appear before us and our beliefs concerning them.

This will to inquire arises not by mere spontaneity in a given moment or two, but as a matter of an operative habitual disposition. Such a habit, as writes Jacques Maritain, is acquired:

…by exercise and customary use; but we must not therefore confuse habit in the present technical sense with the modern meaning of the word, namely, mere mechanical bent and routine: the two are utterly differently and opposed. Customary habit, which attests the solid weight of matter, resides in the nerve centres. Operative habit, which attests the activity of the mind, resides chiefly in an immaterial faculty only, in the mind or the will… Habits are interior growths of spontaneous life, vital developments which make the soul better in a given sphere and fill it full of a vigorous sap: turgentia ubera animae, as John of St. Thomas calls them.

Jacques Maritain 1923: Art and Scholasticism.

Retrieving the Habit of Inquiry

Philosophy Seminars

Learn more about the Lyceum Institute’s philosophy seminars, with an ever-changing schedule offered four-times per year (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall).

Beyond the University

Twelve people: that is how many faculty teach for the Lyceum Institute. In a world of billions, it is a very small number. But as history attests, twelve people can make profound and lasting changes in the world. Our faculty teach philosophy, languages, the Trivium, and more. They guide students in asking questions that matter, preserve the things worth remembering, and demonstrate the order of an intellectual life. In every seminar and every course, they show that education is not just preparation for life, but rather a fuller way of living.

This fall (from October 15 through 31 December), we are seeking to raise $48,000—enough to provide each of our faculty with a modest stipend of $4,000. These stipends are not salaries (which we hope to provide through our Endowment, which you can learn about here), but signs of gratitude and support for the dedication that makes the Lyceum Institute possible. Your gift does not prop up buildings or bureaucracy but sustains our people in the noble task of educating.

By giving today, you share in their work. Your contribution helps build a community where habits of thinking are not only taught, but lived.

Join us in bringing new life to education!

Donors who give $4,000+ will receive a special gift.

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