ºÚÉçÇø

light shines through a stained glass window

About the Claritas Initiative

Why Truth, Beauty and Goodness?

The preliminary work of the initiative involves retrieving the rich reflection on the transcendentals that has taken place throughout history. The Catholic intellectual tradition contains insights that are particularly valuable for this project at the ºÚÉçÇø, but these ideas can be found in other religious and philosophical traditions around the world.

A substantive concept of beauty is especially needed. Beauty is often regarded as trivial ornamentation today, and the rigorous reflection on it one finds in the tradition has been obscured. The initiative's efforts therefore focus particularly on rehabilitating beauty in accord with the views found within the tradition. In these deeper understandings, beauty pertains to much more than surface-level appearance. For instance, beauty can involve moral integrity, such that one perceives a person's goodness through that person's beauty. Along similar lines, the beauty of a thing can reveal its innermost structures (its truth). When beauty is again regarded in this more substantive way, then, goodness and truth become re-enlivened, and their desirability becomes palpably clear.

Although the initiative's efforts involve retrieval, its work is ultimately forward-looking in that it creatively applies insights from the tradition to address contemporary challenges through various interdisciplinary projects. Fields as diverse as environmental studies, psychology, law, engineering, ethics, physics, art history, literature, and education can all be illuminated through reflection on beauty in particular, and the transcendentals more broadly.

A student works with peers in a chemistry lab.

Encountering Truth

As a university ºÚÉçÇø, we understand the value of truth. In fact, pursuing truth is one of our convictions: "We value intellectual inquiry as a lifelong habit, the unfettered and impartial pursuit of truth in all its forms, the integration of knowledge across disciplines, and the imaginative and creative exploration of new ideas." The truths of our many disciplines provide us an understanding of the world, and truth-seeking pushes us to new heights of discovery.

Student Emily Byom painting the wall of a Habitat for Humanity home

Encountering Goodness

At St. Thomas, we also understand the value of goodness. Our university's mission is rooted in advancing the common good, and every day across campus, our faculty and staff engage in work aimed at helping our students discern their unique vocations so they can use their gifts to meet the world's needs. We understand that goodness can only be enacted relationally as we cultivate the "culture of encounter" of which Pope Francis speaks, according to which every single person is seen, known, and loved.

A garden bridge in fall colors

Encountering Beauty

And what of beauty? This transcendental is equally important, although, of late, it hasn't gotten the attention it deserves. We are surrounded by beauty every day on our campuses – physical beauty, of course; but also beautiful ideas, beautiful discoveries, beautiful ways of being in relationship with one another. Beauty is constantly at work in our lives, and many of the most meaningful moments we've experienced are also beautiful moments.

President Rob Vischer speaking

At the most fundamental level, beauty, goodness, and truth describe who we are. We have them as a part of our very being, not because of anything we do—or do not do.

President Rob Vischer