Meghan Sullivan is the Wilsey Family College Professor in
Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, director of the God and
the Good Life Program, and director of the Notre Dame Institute for
Advanced Study. She has published works in many leading philosophy
journals. Her first book, Time Biases, was published by Oxford
University Press. Her work has been supported by grants from the
National Endowment for the Humanities, the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation, and the John Templeton Foundation. Sullivan has degrees
from the University of Virginia, Oxford University, and Rutgers
University, where she earned a PhD in philosophy. She studied at
Balliol College, Oxford University, as a Rhodes Scholar.
Paul Blaschko is an assistant teaching professor in
philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. He heads up curriculum
design and digital pedagogy for the God and the Good Life Program,
and has recently been working to develop similar curricula at
universities across the nation as part of an initiative funded by
the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Blaschko completed an MA in
philosophy at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, a PhD at the
University of Notre Dame, and held the Andrew W. Mellon
Postdoctoral Fellowship prior to being appointed to his current
position.
“[A] wise and accessible guide . . . entertaining and
insightful . . . Those pondering the perennial question of how
to live a good life should start here.” —Publishers Weekly (starred
review)
“A warm, empathetic guide for examining the quality and meaning of
one’s own life . . . Thoughtful contemplations about thorny moral
questions.” —Kirkus
“At once revolutionary and conservative . . . revolutionary in its
insistence that the results of philosophical reflection be put into
practice . . . positively warm, oddly free of moralizing, welcoming
of disagreement and engagement. By the end, you are ready to have a
beer with the authors—and you feel they would welcome the
opportunity . . . boldness in embracing controversy—enabled by the
calm confidence of the authors, which supports their willingness to
transparently and undogmatically engage—continues throughout, to
excellent effect . . . ’Find[ing] a goal proportionate to life’ (to
life, not to our essential nature) is the animating project of the
Good Life Method. Inviting and guiding the reader through a set of
reflections—even spiritual exercises—aimed at that discovery is a
very Good Thing.” —Pamela Hieronymi, Los Angeles Review of
Books
“For those looking for a self-help guide at the start of the new
year, philosophy professors Sullivan and Blaschko recommend
skipping diet books and pop psychology for Aristotle and
Thomas Aquinas. Their book is based on a class they teach at
the University of Notre Dame called God and the Good Life. The
time-tested principles they set forth include living generously,
working with integrity and accepting responsibility. Looking
around, it’s clear that those are all easier said than done,
but the payoff promised in the book’s title—the good life—is worth
it.” —Jim Kiest, The San Antonio Express News
“John Henry Newman remarked that ’a habit of mind is formed’
through humanities-based thinking, ’of which the attributes are
freedom, equitableness, calmness, moderation, and wisdom.’ For
Newman, this shapes the ’idea of a university.’ As a professor at
West Point, I’m particularly struck by how close those personal
intellectual attributes are to the ideal of shared public discourse
in the republic my students choose to defend. As a poet, though, I
can’t help but suspect that moral enquiry begins with a little of
what Keats called ’negative capability’—the habit of ’being in
uncertainties, mysteries, doubts.’ We all are. How do I live in my
own home with my family and neighbors as the person I want to be?
How do I be or become the person my children believe that I am? The
Good Life Method isn’t a script or prescription. It’s a book about
strong questions and how to face them, how to live with and through
them. It’s about setting conditions—both personally and in our
communities—for our most enduring habits of mind in our everyday
lives.” —Matthew Salyer, Associate Professor of
English, United States Military Academy, West Point
“’Make religion attractive,’ Pascal remarked, cryptically, in the
Pensées. That remark came to mind again and again as I read The
Good Life Method; individually, collaboratively, energetically,
enthusiastically, Meghan Sullivan and Paul Blaschko make philosophy
attractive.” —Paul Elie, author of The Life You Save May Be Your
Own
“The Good Life Method is a compulsively readable book. I found
myself squirming in places but pushing forward, reflecting on how
much all of us stand to gain from trying to ask and answer the
questions that Sullivan and Blaschko pose. They offer a method more
than a manual, one that lends itself not only to conversations
among families, friends, colleagues, leaders and voters, but also
invites thoughts of a grand national experiment.” —Anne-Marie
Slaughter, CEO, New America
“I know of no question more worthy of our time and attention than,
‘What is a good human life, and how do I live it?’ Meghan Sullivan
and Paul Blaschko have crafted a fascinating class, ‘God and the
Good Life,’ which has engaged and inspired our students at Notre
Dame about that question. They now offer observations and insights
from that course to readers of this book.” —Rev. John I. Jenkins,
C.S.C, President of University of Notre Dame
“In writing about The Good Life Method, Sullivan and Blaschko have
provided a flexible yet focused approach to help us
all ask—and answer—life's most
important questions. They weave together timeless truths
from great thinkers with contemporary research on college
student wellbeing and their own lived experience as scholars,
teachers and mentors to provide a practical approach to making
meaning in a world of choices and challenges.” —Penny Rue, PhD,
Vice President for Campus Life, Wake Forest University
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