The After Dinner Scholar

By: Wyoming Catholic College
  • Summary

  • Weekly conversations about the Liberal Arts and The Great Books with Wyoming Catholic College professors, board members,and guests.
    Copyright 2023 . All rights reserved.
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Episodes
  • On Podcasting with Dr. Jim Tonkowich
    May 1 2024

    The first After-Dinner Scholar podcast on February 1, 2017 began:

    The 16th century English philosopher, statesman and scientist Francis Bacon famously stated, “Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested: that is,” he went on to explain, “some books are to be read only in parts, others to be read, but not curiously, and some few to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention.”

    Much to my surprise, that first podcast was seven and a half years, 390 episodes, and more than 205,000 downloads ago. And as of this episode, I’m hanging up my headphones and (for the most part) my mortarboard.

    Links:

    The Eucharist Podcast with Wyoming Catholic College

    Mars Hill Audio Journal

    Dr. Jim Tonkowich at The Stream

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    10 mins
  • Dante's Divine Comedy - 2 with Dr. Tiffany Schubert
    Apr 16 2024

    Last week Dr. Tiffany Schubert discussed Inferno, the first book of Dante’s Comedy. Our friend and former colleague Jason Baxter remarked that in Inferno, “Dante’s poetic violence is meant to melt down the hard heart so that it can be reforged into something new.”

    Purgatorio is the place where that melted down and malleable heart finds the forge, the place where the hammer of suffering purges all impurities and fashions our hard hearts into hearts perfected.

    And finally Paradiso shows us the path of choosing the good, true, and beautiful habitually as we gaze on the Face of God eternally “lost,” as the hymnwriter put it, “in wonder, love, and praise.”

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    15 mins
  • Dante's Divine Comedy - 1 with Dr. Tiffany Schubert
    Apr 9 2024

    Midway in the journey of our life

    I came to myself in a dark wood,

    for the straight way was lost.

    Ah, how hard it is to tell

    the nature of that wood, savage, dense and harsh—

    the very thought of it renews my fear!

    It is so bitter death is hardly more so. (Inferno 1.1-7)

    During Lent and now during Easter, our sophomores, under the guidance of Dr. Tiffany Schubert, have been reading Dante's Divine Comedy in their humanities class. And while that reading is academic, no one can avoid Dante’s emphasis throughout the poem on our spiritual lives.

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    17 mins

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