We celebrated Epiphany last Sunday. We will celebrate the Baptism of Jesus next Sunday then the following Monday we begin “Ordinary Time.” There’s something going on here—actually many things going on here—that cannot be summed up with Google Calendar and a wristwatch.
Google Calendar and wristwatch time is what philosopher Charles Taylor calls “secular time”: It’s 10 AM. I have a meeting at two this afternoon. The corporate quarter ends on January 30. The year is 2020.
But is that all there is to time? Is it merely an empty expanse of moments that we fill or is there—as Taylor suggests—something more to time, something that, as he puts it, gathers and reorders secular time?
Dr. Jeremy Holmes has thought a great deal about the nature of time and is our guest this week on The After Dinner Scholar.
On Podcasting with Dr. Jim Tonkowich
Dante's Divine Comedy - 2 with Dr. Tiffany Schubert
Dante's Divine Comedy - 1 with Dr. Tiffany Schubert
Easter Joy with Dr. Jeremy Holmes
The Four Last Things in Holy Week with Dr. Kent Lasnoski
Biology, Theology, and Philosophy with Dr. Daniel Shields
On the French Revolution with Dr. Pavlos Papadopoulos
Contemplating Nature with Dr. Stanley Grove
"Are Video Games Fine Art?" with Gregory Bowman
"No Pain, No Gain: The Radical Nature of Sacrificial Love" with Moira Milligan
The Eucharist and Wyoming Catholic College with Dr. Jeremy Holmes
About Infinity with Dr. Scott Olsson
Jane Austen’s Romantic Medievalism with Dr. Tiffany Schubert
Freshmen in the Snow with Mr. Karl Eby
Aristotle on Friendship with Dr. Pavlos Papadopoulos
A Christmas Week Full of Martyrs with President Kyle Washut
Pondering the Incarnation of the Divine Son with Dr. Jeremy Holmes
Music at Christmas with Mr. Paul Jernberg
Virgil’s ”Aeneid” with Dr. Tiffany Schubert
Jesus Christ, King of the Universe with Dr. Kent Lasnoski
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Meaningful Life with Andrew G. Marshall
Heal, Survive & Thrive!
A Voice In The Darkness
جافکری | Jafekri
BPLUS بیپلاس پادکست فارسی خلاصه کتاب