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What is UD's Core Curriculum?
Many colleges and universities emphasize liberal arts. They have core curricula whose broad requirements students must meet by selecting from a range of
science and humanities courses. The goal is that students acquire a general education.
The University of Dallas shares this intent but takes it a step further by constructing
a specific sequence of fifteen courses for all students-the Core Curriculum. This curriculum is devoted to studying those works that have been the most influential
in shaping and revolutionizing the history of thought. When freshmen arrive in
their first semester, they all begin by reading Homer and Vergil and Plato and
Aristotle together. By the time they graduate they have read Aeschylus and Sophocles, Thucydides and
Livy, Augustine and Aquinas, Luther and Calvin, Shakespeare and Milton, Descartes
and Kant, Dostoevsky and Melville, Hegel and Heidegger, and other authors who created
the tradition that defines us.
Reflection reveals to us that this tradition is a conversation among the greatest
minds, discussing the issues of greatest concern to all of mankind. To assess
this tradition, to accept, to modify, to reject any part of it, to think and
to live in freedom with it or from it, we must all join this conversation at the highest possible level with every resource
at our command. A true core curriculum enables us to do that. It teaches us to listen attentively
to the most powerful and articulate voices from the past, to reflect long and deeply
on what they say, to engage in animated argument with each other about what they
mean, and then, after sifting and weighing and testing, to make up our own minds.
By putting a systematic and careful study of great books at the center of our education,
we gain a familiarity with the full range of human experience and an understanding
of the noblest moments in the history of human thought. In this way we prepare
ourselves to live full, free, active lives, and we learn what we need to know
in order to enter any discussion with authority, whether in court or church or
classroom or council.
Core Courses
Texts in UD's Core Curriculum
What Others Say About UD's Core
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