The Daily Signal - In 2 Blue States, This College Teaches Students About Western Civilization
Episode Date: September 8, 2021At Thomas Aquinas College, students study the original works of the great thinkers of Western civilization, among them Aristotle, St. Augustine, Chaucer, Descartes, Newton, Locke, Lincoln, Einstein, a...nd Dostoevsky. After reading these influential scholars, students engage in small group discussions about the works, their conversations guided by a professor. But it's not just the curriculum and the classroom methodology that make Thomas Aquinas College different. Despite having campuses in liberal California and Massachusetts, this small Catholic college is bucking trends in higher ed. As students across America must obtain higher and higher loans to pay for higher education, Thomas Aquinas College is committed to ensuring that no student needs to take out more than $19,000 in loans. It encourages religious practices by making Mass available daily. And it offers only single-sex dorms. Paul O'Reilly, incoming president of Thomas Aquinas College, joins "The Daily Signal Podcast" to discuss the college's approach and results. We also cover these stories: The Taliban announce formation of an interterm government in an attempt to formalize control over Afghanistan. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., says new documents prove that Dr. Anthony Fauci lied to Congress about government funding for coronavirus research at a lab in Wuhan, China. Texas Gov. Greg Abbot signs election reform legislation despite opposition from the left. Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Wednesday, September 8th.
I'm Doug Blair.
And I'm Virginia Allen.
On today's show, Kate Trinco talks with Paul O'Reilly, the incoming president of the Catholic
Liberal Arts University, Thomas Aquinas College.
They discuss what makes Thomas Aquinas College unique and the importance of a liberal arts
education.
And don't forget, if you're enjoying this podcast, please be sure to leave a review or a five-star
rating on Apple Podcasts and encourage others to subscribe.
And now on to today's top news.
On Tuesday, the Taliban announced the formation of an interim government in an attempt to formalize their control over Afghanistan.
The leadership of the interim Afghan government, now known as the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, is made up exclusively of Taliban veterans.
Hebatula Akunzada, the Taliban supreme leader, will retain overall control of the affairs of state,
while Mullah Muhammad Hassan Akhund, a noted Taliban religious leader, will,
act as interim prime minister.
In a press statement released Tuesday announcing the new government, Ahunzada said,
Our previous 20 years of struggle and jihad had two major goals.
Firstly, to end foreign occupation and aggression and to liberate the country, and secondly,
to establish a complete, independent, stable, and central Islamic system in the country.
Experts have argued that the formation of this new government indicates previous assertions
by Taliban officials about building an inclusive government were false.
Here's heritage expert Peter Brooks describing the consequences of the Taliban-dominated
government per Fox business.
I think the Taliban are recalling the shots.
Even if they bring in some folks that may make them look inclusive to the international community,
once again, I think the Taliban is going to be deciding the policies of that government.
And we know exactly what we're dealing with when we're dealing with the Taliban.
We know their associations.
fighting alongside al-Qaeda today against some resistance groups in parts of Afghanistan.
They had a long relationship with terrorist groups like the Haqqani network and al-Qaeda.
So I mean, I don't know that you can bring people into the government, but really my sense
is that the Taliban is going to have a huge stamp on the policies of Afghanistan going forward.
Thus far, no foreign governments have extended diplomatic recognition to the Taliban government, but
Russia, China, Qatar, Turkey, and Pakistan have all kept their embassies open in the country.
Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul says new documents prove that Dr. Anthony Fauci lied to Congress
about the funding of research at the Wuhan lab in China.
Fauci heads the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,
and Senator Paul has previously accused the group of funding gain-of-function research at the Chinese
Wuhan lab. Gain of function research is the practice of making a virus more infectious for the
purpose of studying it. During a congressional hearing in July, Fauci said funding from his organization
was not used to fund gain of function research. But Paul says that new public documents prove
otherwise. A story by the Intercept published Monday reports that more than $3 million of government
money was given to the organization EcoHealth Alliance for bat coronavirus research at the
Wuhan Institute of Virology. About 600,000 of that 3 million was specifically used by the
Wuhan Institute of Virology to fund and change bat coronaviruses that can jump to humans, according to
the report. In a tweet Tuesday, Paul wrote, Surprise, Surprise, Fauci lied again. And I was right about his
agency funding novel coronavirus research at Wuhan. Rutgers University molecular biologist
Richard Ebright wrote on Twitter that the document makes it clear that Fauci was untruthful about the
National Institute of Health's funding of Gain of Function Research.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed a series of election integrity laws on Tuesday, making Texas
the latest state in the union to reform its voting laws. The bill has been a top priority for
Abbott and the Texas GOP, who view the reforms as necessary to combat voter fraud.
During the event celebrating the signing of the election integrity bill, Abbott said,
It does make it easier than ever before for anybody to go cast a ballot.
It does also, however, make sure it is harder than ever for people to cheat at the ballot box.
The bill has attracted controversy.
Back in May, Texas Democrats fled to Washington, D.C. to protest the bill and to prevent a quorum needed to conduct business.
The city of Portland, Oregon might boycott the state of Texas over its new pro-life law.
Texas has passed legislation to ban abortion after a baby's heartbeat can be detected,
which is usually around six weeks of pregnancy.
Last week, the Supreme Court denied a request to block the pro-life law from taking effect
while a legal battle continues over the legislation.
The bill is the most restrictive abortion law in America and has been receiving a great deal of pushback
from the political left. The Portland City Council is voting today Wednesday on whether or not to
ban future procurements of goods and services from Texas and to ban the funding of city employee
travel to Texas. A press release from the office of Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler said the abortion ban
violates the separation of church and state, and it will force people to carry pregnancies
against their will. Now stay tuned for Kate Trinko's conversation with
the incoming president of Thomas Aquinas College, Paul O'Reilly.
The Heritage Foundation has a new website to combat critical race theory. CRT, as it's known,
makes race the centerpiece of all aspects of American life. It categorizes individuals
into groups of oppressors and victims. The idea is infiltrating everything from our politics
and education to the workplace and even our military. Heritage has pulled together the resources
that you need to identify CRT in your community and the ways to fight it.
We also have a legislation tracker so you can see what's happening in your state.
Visit heritage.org slash CRT to learn more.
Joining me today is Paul O'Reilly.
He is the incoming president of Thomas Aquinas College, a Catholic liberal arts college,
which has campuses in both Southern California and Massachusetts.
Paul, thanks for joining me today.
It's my pleasure, Kate.
And I should note, I do have to make a disclosure about this interview.
I am a graduate of Thomas Aquinas College.
I spent four great years there, learned a lot, talked a lot.
So I'm going to just acknowledge I'm a little biased here.
So, Paul, first off, what makes Thomas Aquinas College different from other colleges and universities?
Yeah, that's a good question.
There's a number of ways in which we have a unique program.
In one way, it's easy to see what we don't offer.
We do not have majors or minors, no electives, no program overseas.
But maybe positively, I'd say it's a unified program.
We have four years of theology, four years of philosophy, but also four years of mathematics and four years of natural science.
And then in addition to those core subjects, we have language, which is study of language through Latin, music.
And then in a class that we call seminar, we study literature and history.
So that's kind of the overview of what the college offers, and we do so because we think that liberal education is important, and that it's important to have a unified program when all the parts fit together nicely.
So, for example, in our freshman year, we study Euclid's elements, the first kind of complete analysis of geometry.
And that helps in a number of ways
the young people get a sense of
you can know something,
and you can argue and prove things that are so.
But also it helps us in our logic tutorial
with freshman philosophy,
so they understand how premises lead to conclusions.
And that kind of unity really does help them understand
not just the mathematics itself,
but they can know things
and the way they know things are from premises to conclusions.
So I think that's something that's pretty distinct about Thomas Columbus College.
And I will note, although I personally hated Euclid. I did learn a lot about from it.
Had a great professor.
So you mentioned that these are all part of the liberal arts.
What is the liberal arts and what's the history of studying these things together?
That's another good question.
I guess traditionally the liberal arts were divided into the quadrivium and the trivium.
just the plodrivium were the mathematically based disciplines, geometry, arithmetic, astronomy, and music, curiously, because music can be studied mathematically.
And then what you might call the verbal, which is grammar, logic, and rhetoric, that would comprise the trivium.
But although that's traditionally what the seven liberal arts are, nowadays I think liberal arts and liberal arts education is more synonymous with four.
liberal education. And that's an education that doesn't principally look to practical pursuits,
though it's not impractical, or the necessary things that take up much of the time in our lives.
Rather, it pursues knowledge that perfects human beings just by knowing things.
So, for example, in our sophomore philosophy, we study Aristotle's On the Soul.
And in that semester, we come to understand what is the soul.
And Aristotle's got a really interesting argument there that the soul isn't the body.
It's not a bodily thing.
And he argues that from nature and philosophical principles.
But that's worth knowing just for its own sake.
It's not necessarily something you would take out and get a job
or you have some particular practical application.
It just helps us understand who we are, what we are,
and as a result, even what are our ethical and political responsibilities.
So in addition to having an unusual curriculum,
Thomas Aquinas has what I'd call an unusual classroom approach.
It's not a professor lecturing all the students.
Talk to our audience about how classes work at TAC.
Yeah, we describe it as either the Socratic method or the discussion method.
And really what that means is just as you mentioned, the professor isn't there to profess an understanding of a particular text or a particular matter.
In fact, we call our teachers tutors, which means that they function as guides.
They're more prepared.
They obviously understand the material in a more deep way, but still they're functioning in class as guides.
So what that means is the students before each class have to prepare a text.
They have to read a text and read it kind of carefully with a view to discussing it with their peers around the table.
And so that means that they must be active.
They must have some understanding and even some questions and some confusions about the text before they come to class.
It's also our view that the author of the text is the principal teacher.
Again, our tutors or guides, the author is the principal teacher.
And that's kind of an interesting, I think, approach because, listen, the authors don't all agree.
Marx doesn't agree with John Stuart Mill doesn't agree with others.
So you can see that although we're trying to understand what the author is telling us,
the goal is not just to understand the author's view, but ultimately to judge the true.
truth and falsity of it. And that's what we do day in and day out around the table.
Now, I know that you over the years have taught a lot of classes yourself, although I never actually
had you. But how do you think they work out in practice? I could see people thinking, you know,
hey, when I was a teenager, I wasn't that smart, or I know a lot of idiot teenagers now who, you know,
like Marx and things like that. Does it really make sense for a group of students to be primarily
learning from each other? Yeah, well, that's a good.
That's a good question, and I think that's kind of a common criticism of Thomas Quentin's College.
They sometimes say it's just a mass exchange of ignorance, but I don't think it's quite right to say that the students are learning from each other.
Sure, the students are all working together, but principally they're learning from the author of the book, whether it's Aristotle or Augustine, and even if it's Marx, to understand why Marx has the view that he does.
and ultimately where it goes astray.
So in a way, if the tutor is effective,
he's guiding the students to understand what the position is,
how it compares with other positions that they've read before.
And so although they're helping each other,
I would say principally they're learning from the authors.
Okay.
Well, in the past couple of years,
we've had some pretty heated debates in the United States
about our history,
about Western civilization, about, you know, what thinkers we should care about and not care about.
So at Thomas Aquinas, students don't take a history class per se, although, as you mentioned,
they do read historical works in the program. But of course, the whole program is reading the work
of the world's greatest thinkers over the years. So how did you decide what thinkers to feature
in the curriculum and does that list ever change? Yeah, that's interesting. Well, there's been a longstanding
tradition of what the great books are. Now, maybe that's more, more challenged nowadays, but usually
for political correct reasons, not because a serious study of the authors themselves. But for a long,
long time, the University of Chicago, among others, had published the great books. And so there was a
general understanding, if you were to be educated, you should know Homer. You should have read
the Iliad and the Odyssey. You should have read Herodotus and Thucydides, among the
historians, that you should read Euclid as a geometer in Aquinas and Augustine and theology.
And that was a view not just for Christians, but all kind of serious thinkers thought there are
some books that are better than others.
And so that they were the great books.
Now, although there's a generally accepted view about what the great books are, where people
of goodwill can disagree, especially around the country.
contemporary works. And at Thomas Quince College, we have changed some of the readings that
we assign, but usually it's in the senior year, the more contemporary works. So, for example,
this year, we read Flannery O'Connor. We added her to the program and Willa Cather. Those are
great, wonderful texts. And they're accessible in some way and address some of the contemporary
issues in a literary fashion, which we think is really helpful.
So we will add some things, and then people of goodwill can disagree about, do you need
to read Willa Cather to be liberally educated?
Maybe, maybe not.
But at least in the core, the basic texts, I think there's general agreement among
academics that some books are better than others and we're studying.
So at Thomas Aquinas, students also read some of the works by the founding fathers, and
as I recall, the Lincoln Douglas debates, how does that affect their view of the United States?
I think that's a wonderful, timely question, Kate, because I'm an immigrant. I was born in Ireland.
I became an American citizen about 15 years ago. I am shocked to hear some of my fellow citizens
denigrate the founders, denigrate the principles that make this country great,
suggest that we're a fundamentally racist country.
I think that's simply not true.
I know that we've had awful parts of our history that we're ashamed of.
But one of the things that we do with our students is we read the Declaration,
we read the Constitution, as you say, we read the Lincoln-Douglas debates.
And if you read those carefully, you see, at its core, in its principles,
America is not just a great country.
It is not in any way a racist country.
despite again acts of racism.
So, for example, in the Declaration,
we read and take seriously the claim that all men are created equal.
Now, one of the things we read as a kind of a challenge,
how to understand that, is the Dred Scott decision,
and that was a Supreme Court decision, which is shameful,
in which the Supreme Court argued that that must mean,
because of the existence of slavery at the time,
that must mean only all white men.
and males generally are equal.
That's simply not what the words mean,
and Lincoln helps us walk through,
I think, a coherent understanding of the Declaration and the Constitution
so that we have a better understanding of what this country is all about.
And I think the result, at least in the classroom,
is greater patriotism, love for the country,
and understanding of what makes it great.
Yeah, and I think one of my biggest takeaways for my student time
was reading all these great thinkers, both United States and international, made me realize
how much people had gotten wrong in the past, which is helpful because right now I think we have a lot of
folks who think that they have everything absolutely right. And when you've had the humbling experience
of reading smart people get things wrong, you realize it's probably unlikely that there's any
group of people that is everything absolutely right in one day and age.
Yes, so true. That is. All right. Well, back in 2015,
Senator Marco Rubio said during a presidential debate, welders make more money than philosophers.
We need more welders and less philosophers.
Did he really say that?
He did.
He did.
Rubio has since changed his mind somewhat.
He tweeted something somewhat sympathetic to philosophers a couple of years later.
But you've talked about how the curriculum is beneficial for its own sake.
But how do students coming from Thomas Aquinas, how do they do in the job?
market and what is career preparedness at the college?
Yeah, that's something actually, I think, preparing for careers is something we've gotten a
little better at over the years.
But initially, our view was, you know, you throw them into the waters and they'll figure
out how to swim on their own account.
But we do have some career advisement, some practical guides to give our seniors how to present
their education away to employers that is attractive.
objective, to understand the good things that they have acquired at the college, especially
the ability to read carefully, to agree and disagree respectfully, to understand things
and their principles, to articulate what it is that they understand and what it is they
don't, and how they can progress in that way.
Those are really excellent skills in the marketplace.
and we have now many employers who come to the college to interview our students because they like
what they see.
There's a big health care company here in Southern California that every year sends executives
to interview people who might be interested in working in the health care field.
Obviously, we have school districts and charter schools that come out every year because,
are, again, our students are, they're excited about the intellectual life, want to make a difference
in their communities, and they try to encourage them to think about working in their school system.
So I think what happens is this, that our students have, if they give themselves to the program,
really have skills that are easily translatable in many different fields.
And so we have our good share of lawyers and doctors.
We have teachers.
We have IT specialists.
But there's no discipline that are no field that our students can't pursue if they have the interest.
So student loan debts are increasingly becoming a big issue in the United States.
And, of course, we've all heard stories about people graduating with insane, sometimes even six figures worth of student loans.
So how does Thomas Aquinas College's financial aid program work and what principles govern those decisions?
Okay.
Well, that's a good question.
One of the, I'm currently the vice president for advancement.
I will, as you mentioned, move into the president's office next year.
But one of my principal tasks is to raise every year funds for our financial aid program.
And the financial aid program is very simple.
it's this, that we will accept any student who is willing and able to do our program.
And once a student has been accepted, then we work out the financial aid if it's needed.
So if there's a need, it has to be a demonstrated need.
The parents fill out the financial aid paperwork.
But then the college will provide loans, grants that are necessary for the student to
to attend to college. Now, our tuition room and board is relatively low, around 35,000 all in.
All our students are required to live on campus. So even in my own daughter, who's a sophomore
here, we live three minutes away. She's required to live on campus because that community life is
so important. So all students will be paying tuition room and board. But what we do is we cap
student loans such that no student graduates with more than $19,000 in debt.
And in order to do that, we have to raise the money to fund our financial aid program.
And then any student who's going to receive, whether it's a loan and or a grant, they must
work on campus for 13 hours.
So they have to give back to the campus too.
They have to work on campus, whether it's in the grounds, in the office or the kitchen
or wherever, in order to get financial aid.
And I will say during my time there, one thing that impressed me was there was true economic
diversity.
There really were classmates who were taking full advantage of the financial aid, and there
were folks who didn't need any.
And I think that's something that we talk a lot about, but I'm not sure how many colleges
actually have it.
So you mentioned the community.
So right now, the culture at a lot of universities is fairly dismal.
A lot of college students seem to be liberal, if not frankly, communists, they're atheists, they're agnostic, even if they were raised in a religious household.
Even when you get outside of ideology, there's issues of sexual assault, of binge drinking, and we're beginning to see studies showing that younger Americans in Gen Z are having more mental health struggles than past generations.
So what is Thomas Aquinas trying to encourage in its campus cultures and its communities,
and how is it grappling with some of the issues affecting today's students?
Yeah, that's a good question.
Thomas Aquinas College is not going to be immune from some of those issues because, listen,
I think the culture has gotten worse.
Families are becoming, at least in some cases, more dysfunctional.
I have seen this with teenagers.
years, they come and some of them are just unhappy.
And so you have to take people as you find them.
But what we do is, you know, we've got three or four prong approach.
First of all, we have rules of residents that are meant to foster good habits.
So whether it's as simple as there's no alcohol in the dormitories, we do serve wine and beer at certain college events to those who are of legal age.
We have a curfew so that students can come back to the dormitory, get some rest, be prepared for class, etc.
Other rules about how to behave around those of the opposite sex, etc.
But rules are only as good as the people who are in the community.
And so we have to form our young people.
Fortunately, the juniors and seniors, the upperclassmen can be good examples.
We have chaplains, fort chaplains at the college here in California, too, in New England,
that also look after the young people.
We do have a counselor for those who need the benefit of his skills.
So we try to address the things that we're discovering in our culture
in a way that improves the lives of these young people,
gives them support and encouragement.
And I think generally,
Anthony Hopkins, the actor, came on our campus about a year and a half ago.
One thing he said to us is, these kids are happy.
I can see it in their eyes.
And there is some people notice that.
This is a little respite from the things that ails.
And I think in part that's because of the community that we form.
So Thomas Aquinas has campuses in California and Massachusetts,
which are two of the most liberal states out there, frankly,
and I say this as a native Californian.
Has the college faced religious freedom issues
or other issues related to being a Catholic college
in those two states?
Yeah, listen, if you would have asked us,
would you want to have two campuses
in Massachusetts and California?
We would have said no.
The challenges are, at least the potential challenges,
are likely to be significant.
But, you know, it's our view that God's ways are not our ways.
The college received as a gift, the land in Santa Paula for the California campus,
and it's turned out to be good.
We own now about almost 900 acres.
So we have a little buffer from the world.
It's a little enclave.
and generally, generally, we don't get too much pushback from California or the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.
They're always challenging us about the number of our male authors as opposed to female,
white authors as opposed to minorities, et cetera.
But our position there has always been, we read the greatest books.
We don't care about the author himself, what his background is, whether he's male, female, white, or minority, or whatever.
We just try to look for the best.
So that is a challenge, but I think we're up to that.
I'm a little bit more worried about what might come down the pipe.
You know, we have male and female dormitories, for example, and with the aggressive push to accommodate those who are confused.
about their sex, that could be problematic for us.
But it's our view that we have to protect the majority of our female students who want
and do have a right to privacy in their own dorm life.
I think it's against faith and reason to allow biological males in a female dormitory.
Those are challenges that come our way, but we are not going to buckle under.
We're not going to give in.
We think it's important to maintain principles that are rational and religious.
So Thomas Aquinas College is actually hitting its 50th anniversary soon.
Is there anything else you'd like to share about the college and its unique approach?
Well, it is exciting.
Not only are we about to celebrate our 50th anniversary,
but we also this year, at the end of this academic year,
we'll have our first commencement on the East Coast campus.
So 50 years suggests the kind of stability,
but the fact that we're growing and have a second campus,
and that second campus is thriving,
is really, it's exciting for us who have been at the college for a long time.
And I have seen, I've been to that East Coast campus many times,
and it's so interesting to compare it.
We have a beautiful campus here in California.
It's got that Spanish mission.
style of architecture. It's got the Southern California weather. You go to the East Coast
campus, old New England buildings, beautiful in their own way. But then when you walk the campus,
it's the same college. It's the same conversations over lunch. The faculty are wondering about
the same issues. The students are engaged in the same conversations. It's really an exciting
thing to witness. And the fact that we got actually that East Coast campus,
from the National Christian Foundation,
you were the only Catholic organization that applied for it.
It's extraordinary, too.
When we write the history of Thomas Client's College,
that'll have to be part of that story.
Okay. Well, thanks so much for joining us today, Paul.
Well, thank you very much, Kate. Thank you.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
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