The great Roman statesman and orator, Marcus Tulius Cicero said:
In truth… while I wish to be adorned with every virtue, yet there is nothing which I can esteem more highly than being and appearing grateful. For this one virtue is not only the greatest, but is also the parent of all the other virtues.
The ancients understood—as most moderns don’t—that virtuous living makes us happy. Thus, Cicero argued, gratitude, thanksgiving is the gateway to happiness.
With the celebration of Thanksgiving Day approaching, Wyoming Catholic College President Kyle Washut had this to say about the virtue of thanksgiving.
”What is the World For” a Lecture by Dr. Scott Olsson
Lament, the Wheel of Fortune, and ”The Consolation of Philosophy” with Dr. Jason Baxter
The Nature of Poetry: Socrates‘ Dialogue with Ion with Dr. Pavlos Papadopoulos
Thanksgiving and ”Dappled Things” with Dr. Glenn Arbery
Music, Mathematics, and Morality in Boethius with Prof. Christopher Hodkinson
”From Thy Bounty” with Miss Marietta Mortensen
Machiavelli on the Stage and in the Classroom with Dr. Tiffany Schubert
Telling ”The American Story” with Dr. Christopher Flannery
The American Character and the Revolution with Dr. Pavlos Papadopoulos
Creation and Preservation in St. Thomas Aquinas with Dr. Travis Dziad
On Learning to Write with Dr. Jason Baxter
Aeneas: Journey into the Underworld with Dr. Adam Cooper
Knowing God Through Reason and Revelation with Prof. Kyle Washut
Aristotle‘s ”Categories” with Dr. Michael Bolin
In Conversation with Ancient Greek and Latin with Prof. Stephen Hill
Snow in August and the Liberal Arts by Prof. Kyle Washut
From the Mountains to the Classroom by Dr. Glenn Arbery
A Philosopher Reads St. Thomas Aquinas with Dr. Daniel Shields
Understanding the Trinity with Dr. Jeremy Holmes
Wyoming is Our Classroom: Field Science with Dr. Paul Giesting
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The Meaningful Life with Andrew G. Marshall
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