Daily schedule
Seminars meet each weekday morning after breakfast.
After lunch, afternoons are free for individual study or exploring the many places of interest in and around the city. Optional plenary excursions and social activities including walking tours will also be available.
The course fee includes breakfasts Monday-Saturday (residential guests only), lunches Sunday-Friday, and three-course dinners Sunday-Thursday. All meals are taken in Christ Church’s spectacular dining hall.
On Friday, there will be a special four-course gala dinner to celebrate the closing of the week.
Seminars
Monday seminars
Sexual and romantic love: Philosophers have generally dismissed merely sexual love as base and irrational, and the general opinion of romantic love has hardly been higher. But desire, unity, and strong feeling have their defenders.
Tuesday seminars
Philosophical love: Plato is the great philosopher of eros, a love that takes sexual desire to a whole new level. His followers decided that the trues love disdained anything so crude as physical pleasure. For them, a pure love was literally what makes the world go round.
Wednesday seminars
Divine love: The love of God, both for and from the divinity, has inspired many moral philosophers. The Christian understanding of sacrificial love (agape) has added additional intensity, including some imaginative efforts at the philosophy of marriage.
Thursday seminars
Love without romance: For Aristotle, friendship (philia) was a higher sort of love than anything sexual. For some modern philosophers of psychology, the love of mother and her newborn child is the most perfect. These days, love of animals attracts philosophical interest, as does the appeal of transgressive love.
Friday seminars
Contemporary love: Concept-loving philosophers stand in awe of love of the Other, who is ultimately divine. At a more mundane level, the preeminence of love and romance has led to the near abandonment of the traditional philosophical understanding of gender, marriage, and procreation.