Quaestiones Disputatae

Questions of Depth

Bernado Bazán 1985: Les Questions Disputées et Les Questions Quodlibétiques dans les Facultés de Théologie, de Droit et de Médecine, cited in https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/medieval-literary/#DisQuaQuoQue

What is a question?

Thus the stage of crafting a question consists, we could say, in three smaller steps:

  1. Musement.  This is a term taken from Charles Sanders Peirce (cf. 1908: “A Neglected Argument for the Reality of God” in The Essential Peirce, vol.2), and signifies our capacity to allow the mind, by a rigorous abstention from distractions, to play with different ideas, observing their relations, seeking out their possible causes, wondering about their possible effects, taking note of their varied similarities and differences from other ideas, and so on.  This give rise to the initial inquiring stance: why are these things as they are?  Which leads quite often to the fundamental question which answer we are truly seeking: what are these things?
  2. Articulation.  Now that you know what it is you want to say, how do you say it–and does saying it show to you something you did not see before?  This is the step of making public, somehow, your question: giving a name to it (however vague), writing up why you are interested in asking it, what thoughts you have had about it heretofore; where you find yourself still lacking certainty, and so on.
  3. Revision.  Based upon your initial attempts at articulation, the feedback you’ve received, the further reading you’ve done, and continued reflection (perhaps even a new instance of musement), you will likely find that you initial question needs tweaking, wholesale revision, or perhaps outright abandonment.
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Beyond the University

Beyond the University exists because the modern university, even where it succeeds, has become inadequate to the true tasks of education.  Education is not the transmission of information or preparation for employment, but the formation of good intellectual habits.  These aims no longer fit comfortably within institutions ordered primarily toward efficiency, expansion, and measurable outcomes.  The Lyceum Institute was founded to provide a genuinely different institutional form—one ordered toward education as an integral part of life rather than as a credentialing process.

The Lyceum cultivates enduring intellectual habits of inquiry, order, and memory through rigorous seminars, focused studies of the Trivium, classical languages, guided reading, and sustained inquisitive conversation.  By supporting the Lyceum Institute, you help sustain an independent public institution devoted to education ordered toward truth, continuity, and long-term intellectual formation.  Your gift ensures that this alternative remains available—not only for today’s students, but for generations to come.

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