Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada
Humanities Colloqiuim at StFX

Humanities Colloquium

About Humanities Colloquium

The Humanities Colloquium is a foundation year at StFX, where great minds don’t always think alike. The Latin word colloquium means “conversation.” In the Humanities Colloquium you will have many conversations about the most important ideas: conversations with great thinkers from the past, with professors, with students, and with invited speakers, both in the classroom and outside.

What is the Humanities Colloquium?

It is a first year option in which enrolled students all take the same three sections of Philosophy, English, and History. These courses are taught collaboratively, as if they were a single course. Lectures, assignments, and discussions are coordinated to bring out exciting connections among the disciplines, and to avoid conflicts in assignment due dates. 

What makes us human? If you want to know, study the humanities: those specialized fields of inquiry - religious studies, philosophy, literature, history, languages, history - which focus on what makes us human. Your companions will be ancient Greek philosophers, mediaeval saints, Renaissance artists and modern revolutionaries.

A foundation year:

The Colloquium will provide you with a foundation for any major in the Faculty of Arts. It will also give you a community of scholars and friends, because you can live together with other HC students in one residence. The conversations there and the books you study will often raise more questions than they answer. The goal of the Colloquium is not to make you think like others, but to give you the best tools to think for yourself.

Course of Study:

In these courses, you will learn from the greatest teachers — The Bible, the Qur’an, Plato, Sophocles, Aristotle, Virgil, St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas, Chaucer, Michelangelo, Machiavelli, Mary Wollstonecraft, Marx, Nietzsche. The study of these will be coordinated historically: for example, when you read Shakespeare in English, you will also read Descartes in Philosophy and Calvin in History. Guest lectures, debates, and informal discussions will supplement classroom learning.

Contact:

Steve Baldner

Nicholson Tower 706 NH

Phone: (902) 867-2115

Email: sbaldner@stfx.ca

Mailing Address:

2329 Notre Dame Avenue

Antigonish, Nova Scotia

Canada

B2G 2W5

I am interested in learning more

12345 or 12345-6789
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Start Your Journey