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What does it take to spark a new Renaissance?
Manage episode 477095100 series 2568617
In February 2025, Ralston College hosted a landmark symposium in Savannah, Georgia, bringing together leading thinkers, artists, educators, and students for a searching conversation about the renewal of our shared culture.
Over the course of a wide-ranging roundtable, speakers explored the collapse of higher education, the need for sacred space, the conditions for reawakening beauty and truth, the integral importance of literature, music and architecture, and the crucial role of the young in rebuilding a meaningful culture that can inspire and endure.
This conversation is not an academic exercise in abstraction. It is the practical work of preservation—of remembering what the world has forgotten, and of laying foundations for what must come next.
The roster of speakers is as follows:
- Stephen Blackwood: Why we are on the verge of renaissance
- James Orr: Why America is ready for change
- David Butterfield: Why colleges are the institutions to build
- James Hankins: Why the Italian Renaissance emerged
- Joseph Conlon: Why learning languages is essential
- Gregg Hurwitz: Why literature must resonate outside academia
- Jonathan Pageau: Why renewal requires in-person, communal remembrance
- Samuel Andreyev: Why music needs to know its tradition to thrive
- Christian Sottile: Why we need beautiful architecture
- Mari Otsu: Why Ralston College was the place that changed my life
Authors, Artists, and Works Mentioned in this Episode:
- Sir Isaac Newton
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
- Friedrich Hölderlin’s Patmos
- Martin Heidegger
- John of Patmos, a figure traditionally identified with John the Apostle or John the Evangelist
- Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam
- The Cambridge Five
- Sir Niall Ferguson
- Saint Benedict of Nursia
- Flavius Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus
- Charlemagne
- Alcuin of York
- Walter de Merton
- Gaius Marius
- Marcus Tullius Cicero
- Paradiso – the third and final part of Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy
- Francesco Petrarca
- Cola di Rienzo
- Richard Wagner’s opera Rienzi
- Livy (Titus Livius)
- Homer
- Plato
- Plutarch
- “JD Vance States the Obvious About Ordo Amoris” – in First Things, by James Orr
- Pythagoras
- Plato’s dialogue Phaedrus
- Charles Dickens
- Alfred Hitchcock
- William Shakespeare
- Metamorphoses by Publius Ovidius Naso (43 BCE – 17 CE), known as Ovid
- Albert Camus – The Stranger
- James M. Cain – The Postman Always Rings Twice
- Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray
- Michelangelo Buonarroti
- Pope Julius II
- The Bible
- Ezra Pound, quote from ABC of Reading (1934)
- Professor Jeffrey Eley
- Mark C. McDonald
- The Medici Family
- Gian Giorgio Trissino
- Andrea Palladio
- Otto Wagner
- The Black Paintings (Las Pinturas Negras) by Francisco Goya
- Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio
- Peter Paul Rubens
60 episodes
Manage episode 477095100 series 2568617
In February 2025, Ralston College hosted a landmark symposium in Savannah, Georgia, bringing together leading thinkers, artists, educators, and students for a searching conversation about the renewal of our shared culture.
Over the course of a wide-ranging roundtable, speakers explored the collapse of higher education, the need for sacred space, the conditions for reawakening beauty and truth, the integral importance of literature, music and architecture, and the crucial role of the young in rebuilding a meaningful culture that can inspire and endure.
This conversation is not an academic exercise in abstraction. It is the practical work of preservation—of remembering what the world has forgotten, and of laying foundations for what must come next.
The roster of speakers is as follows:
- Stephen Blackwood: Why we are on the verge of renaissance
- James Orr: Why America is ready for change
- David Butterfield: Why colleges are the institutions to build
- James Hankins: Why the Italian Renaissance emerged
- Joseph Conlon: Why learning languages is essential
- Gregg Hurwitz: Why literature must resonate outside academia
- Jonathan Pageau: Why renewal requires in-person, communal remembrance
- Samuel Andreyev: Why music needs to know its tradition to thrive
- Christian Sottile: Why we need beautiful architecture
- Mari Otsu: Why Ralston College was the place that changed my life
Authors, Artists, and Works Mentioned in this Episode:
- Sir Isaac Newton
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
- Friedrich Hölderlin’s Patmos
- Martin Heidegger
- John of Patmos, a figure traditionally identified with John the Apostle or John the Evangelist
- Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam
- The Cambridge Five
- Sir Niall Ferguson
- Saint Benedict of Nursia
- Flavius Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus
- Charlemagne
- Alcuin of York
- Walter de Merton
- Gaius Marius
- Marcus Tullius Cicero
- Paradiso – the third and final part of Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy
- Francesco Petrarca
- Cola di Rienzo
- Richard Wagner’s opera Rienzi
- Livy (Titus Livius)
- Homer
- Plato
- Plutarch
- “JD Vance States the Obvious About Ordo Amoris” – in First Things, by James Orr
- Pythagoras
- Plato’s dialogue Phaedrus
- Charles Dickens
- Alfred Hitchcock
- William Shakespeare
- Metamorphoses by Publius Ovidius Naso (43 BCE – 17 CE), known as Ovid
- Albert Camus – The Stranger
- James M. Cain – The Postman Always Rings Twice
- Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray
- Michelangelo Buonarroti
- Pope Julius II
- The Bible
- Ezra Pound, quote from ABC of Reading (1934)
- Professor Jeffrey Eley
- Mark C. McDonald
- The Medici Family
- Gian Giorgio Trissino
- Andrea Palladio
- Otto Wagner
- The Black Paintings (Las Pinturas Negras) by Francisco Goya
- Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio
- Peter Paul Rubens
60 episodes
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