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The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences exists to provide an atmosphere of
responsible learning to a varied group of students who will be called to
intellectual, moral, and professional leadership. To fulfill these goals, the College seeks to promote intellectual curiosity and rigor within the University; to instill the fundamentals of critical insight, mature judgment, and independent thinking in its students; and to awaken in its students a sense of the importance of values and the moral responsibility of caring for others and working for the betterment of society.
Villanova has always openly and proudly declared that it is a Catholic
institution of higher learning. The University maintains a strong respect for
the beliefs of its diverse community of faculty, students, and staff. In keeping
with its central place in a Catholic University, the College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences has a special commitment to the Christian belief that creation is an
expression of divine truth through the redemptive life, death and resurrection
of Jesus Christ, the incarnate Word of God. It also seeks to provide a Christian
intellectual and moral environment and believes that it is the common right of
all to participate in creation, to seek truth and to apply such truth attained
to protect and enrich personal and communal life.
To fulfill these goals, the College seeks to promote intellectual curiosity and rigor within the University; to instill the fundamentals of critical insight, mature judgment, and independent thinking in its students; and to awaken in its students a sense of the importance of values and the moral responsibility of caring for others and working for the betterment of society.
Villanova's special Augustinian heritage enables the College to draw upon the
dynamic legacy of St. Augustine whose passionate pursuit of wisdom, understood
through the metaphor of one heart and one mind, inspires its own quest for
knowledge in open, intelligent, responsible and mutually respectful interaction
of points of view. This legacy is classically illustrated by the Augustinian
Order's impact on the medieval universities, its distinguished cultivation of
Renaissance art, and its fostering of the scientific discoveries of
Gregor
Mendel. It is further expressed in the conviction that all authentic human
wisdom is ultimately in harmony with Divine Wisdom, and it invites collaboration
with other Christians and peoples of other traditions who might share at least
the general features and dynamics of this Augustinian vision.
In light of this legacy, the College has developed a diversified
academic
program and a core curriculum which provide its students with a scale of
well-defined universal values that equips them to be wise critics of the society
in which they live, and which sustains a moral base and social consciousness
that transcends economic barriers and questions of race, gender, and creed.
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