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Liberal education is an inquiry into what it means to be
human - a quest to understand the rational, spiritual, and aesthetic dimensions
of human life. Because St. Thomas University is devoted to open-minded
inquiry, it encourages a variety of disciplinary approaches to this quest.
Liberal education is more important than ever. In a culture where image
and icon often short-circuit reason, liberal education seeks to free people
from thoughtless adherence to the authoritative opinions of their time
and place. In an age where information is prepared for massive and quick
consumption, liberal education seeks to strengthen the capacity to raise
fundamental questions. In an era characterized by enormous pressures to
conform, liberal education seeks to inspire the imagination and engage
the spirit.
At St. Thomas University, the goals of a liberal education are pursued
within a humanistic and Catholic tradition. The University aims to create
an academic, cultural, and social environment in which each student can
develop:
1. An independent, inquiring mind. A liberal education teaches people
how to think; it does not dictate what they ought to think. It encourages,
through independent reasoning and fair-minded inquiry, the recognition
of unstated assumptions, the thoughtful reconsideration of received ideas,
and the challenging of simplistic generalizations. The liberal arts thus
explore controversial and competing ideas in ways that demand informed,
careful, and considered judgement.
2. A breadth of knowledge and depth of understanding. Through both general
and specialized studies, a liberal education seeks to stimulate an understanding
of the content, methods, and theoretical approaches of different disciplines,
as well as a capacity to integrate knowledge across disciplinary boundaries.
3. An awareness of the perennial questions and new challenges confronting
humanity. A liberal education encourages appreciation of the variety and
complexity of circumstances and human responses to them in different times
and places.
4. A depth and consistency of moral judgement. A liberal education emphasizes
the seriousness and difficulty of moral and ethical issues, and the necessity
of examining them thoroughly.
5. An ability to write and speak with clarity and precision. A liberal
education recognizes the connection between clear thinking and effective
communication. It fosters the ability to develop sustained, well-reasoned,
and clearly-presented arguments.
6. A capacity and life-long desire for learning. Because liberal education
is a process of questioning, rather than a set of answers, it is by definition
a life-long project. Liberal education seeks to create in students a love
of learning and the capacity to continue their personal and intellectual
development long after they have left St. Thomas University.

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