Show Notes
About our Guest
Dr. Reno Lauro received his PhD from the University of St. Andrews Institute for Theology, Imagination and the Arts in 2011, where he wrote on J. R. R. Tolkien’s philosophy of Mythopoeia. For the past 10 years, he has worked at the intersection of Humane and Digital learning.After completing his degrees, Theology (MDiv) and History (BA), Reno apprenticed for 18 months on the Palme d’Or winning film The Tree of Life with director Terrence Malick, which transformed his understanding of the Classics, the modern world, and how to communicate the relationship between the two.
He has taught at the graduate and undergraduate level as well as in both Lower and Upper School classrooms of Classical Schools. Most recently, Reno has served as the Assistant Headmaster at St. Peter’s Classical School in Fort Worth, TX and of a Great Hearts Archway School and also worked closely with the CEO of the globally recognized BASIS.ed charter schools to create and pilot seminar-style history courses as alternatives to AP classes.
Show Notes
We discuss Tolkien’s view of education through the lens of cosmology, anthropology, and story. Reno discusses the theological implications between language and story and how this view ties to the recovery of Christian classical education. Philology is the foundation of the humane letters and there is more to learning than the seeking and the mining of literature in an academic way. This “lifeless” and “dull” style of the university in Tolkien’s Valedictory Address to the University of Oxford, points to a larger anthropological view of education. This leads us to think of education as a living, breathing, and whole that is multi-faceted and varied.
In this world of machines, we need to recover the fullness of human life.
Key Text:
Some topics in this episode include:
- What was Tolkien's struggle with his peers at The University and how does it show us his philosophy of education?
- Tolkien as a Dante for the technocratic age
- Encountering education as a living, breathing, whole within the cosmos
- The medieval view of education
- What was Tokien’s relationship with the cosmos and trees and how does this influence his view of learning?
Books & Titles Mentioned In This Episode
Secret Fire: The Spiritual Vision of J.R.R. Tolkien by Stratford Caldecott
The Discarded Image by C.S. Lewis
Credits:
Sound Engineer: Andrew Helsel
Music: Used with permission. cellists: Sara Sant' Ambrogio and Lexine Feng; pianist: Alyona Waldo
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