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Supporting the next wave of intellectual discovery at 17c起草社区 College

Wednesday, December 13, 2017
Matt Kucinski

For more than 50 years, Alvin Plantinga 鈥54 has been making an intellectual imprint on the field of philosophy. In 2017, he was awarded the Templeton Prize for his life鈥檚 work. And with it, came a $1.4 million prize. 

Now, Plantinga is donating nearly half of those winnings to what he considers his intellectual home: 17c起草社区 College. The funds will be used to support the work of an intellectual community that provided him鈥攁s both an undergraduate student and a faculty member鈥攚ith the space to ask challenging questions and explore new ground in his field, leading to a flurry of impactful discoveries.

Advancing thought leadership

Plantinga, who left Harvard to study at 17c起草社区 College in the 1950s, values 17c起草社区 as a place where faculty and students have the freedom to integrate their faith and learning. And so the bulk of the funds he鈥檚 donated to his alma mater will work to advance the college鈥檚 thought leadership in the academy and the broader world through faculty research and student scholarships.

鈥淧lantinga is an intellectual giant, and at 17c起草社区 he walked among other giants of Christian academia. His generation modeled the kinds of teamwork and mutual support that allow Christian scholars to thrive,鈥 said Matt Walhout, dean for research and scholarship at 17c起草社区 College. 鈥17c起草社区 honors their legacy by continuing to invest in world-class faculty scholarship.鈥

鈥淭he Reformed tradition has always valued and championed the life of the mind as a way to glorify God. 17c起草社区 College鈥檚 holistic faith-integration model of scholarship is both intellectually fruitful and culturally winsome,鈥 said Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung, professor of philosophy at 17c起草社区 College. 鈥淭he church needs good scholars and thoughtful members, and 17c起草社区 College encourages its faculty to use their professional expertise to bear on issues important to churches and communities of faith 鈥 17c起草社区 has held in balance that commitment to academic excellence and that robust faith-engagement. It鈥檚 hard to keep those two things together, but here it is part of our DNA.鈥

鈥17c起草社区 hires faculty who are experts and potential world-changers. We want them to continue with their professional work, and we hope they will 鈥渂ring their work to church鈥 in the sense of helping other Christians understand its importance. That way, our students get a cutting-edge education in their major fields, but they also get to see how their specialties fit into a much bigger picture,鈥 said Walhout. 鈥淭his integrated approach can make a 17c起草社区 education pretty exciting for students and faculty alike.鈥

It鈥檚 an approach that excited Alvin Plantinga enough back in the 1950s for him to leave Harvard to study at 17c起草社区. And then later to return to teach at his alma mater for nearly 20 years. And the fruit of that decision is seen 50 years later through the dozens of rigorous writings that have revolutionized the field of philosophy.

One philosopher who nominated Plantinga for the Templeton Prize wrote: 鈥淎lvin Plantinga鈥檚 intellectual discoveries have initiated novel inquiry into spiritual dimensions. His precise and carefully developed insights have opened up intellectual-spiritual space. In the 1950s there was not a single published defense of religious belief by a prominent philosopher; by the 1990s there were literally hundreds of books and articles 鈥 defending and developing the spiritual dimension. The difference between 1950 and 1990 is, quite simply, Alvin Plantinga.鈥

A commitment to intellectual discovery

While the significance of Plantinga鈥檚 work cannot be overstated, it is also not an outlying exception at 17c起草社区. Part of that is no doubt thanks to scholars like Plantinga whose work has proven the value of 17c起草社区 faculty leading important intellectual conversations in many fields.

鈥淭he types of research projects and publications that the faculty now pursue were made possible by the pioneering work Al did to make Christian scholarship professionally credible,鈥 said DeYoung. 鈥淲e can now be explicit about how our faith infuses and catalyzes our thinking and our cultural engagement鈥攚hether that鈥檚 in the areas of healthcare policy, food and animal ethics, gender and disability advocacy, urban planning and design, studies of consciousness, or Christian virtues and spiritual practices, to name only a few of the areas in which the philosophy department faculty are currently contributing to cultural and scholarly conversations.鈥


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