A final question as we consider our mistakes: If everybody makes them, and they can be a source of knowledge, something we can learn from, then why do we have to be punished for our mistakes? Or even be left...
A modern author reflecting the spirit of the age has written: “There’s no such thing as a mistake. There are only experiences. Some are good, and some are bad. Either way, it is an experience we learn from.” Do you...
Everybody likes to say how important it is that we learn from our mistakes. But isn’t the best evidence of learning the fact that we get the answers right, not wrong? Isn’t a wrong answer worthless? After all, we don’t...
This week, we’re talking about mistakes. We are all prone to them, but why is it that we make mistakes in the first place? Whether it is on an exam, in a cooking recipe, or while we’re driving, is it...
Welcome back. I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving with your families. As we get back into the swing of school (and yes, I know that the first day back is always difficult – hang in there), I thought...
In 1863, in the midst of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln still saw fit to issue a Thanksgiving proclamation to the nation. This is some of what he said, after listing the many blessings the nation had enjoyed despite the...
Over the last few days, we’ve considered the ways and circumstances in which we should give thanks. But there’s another way that we should be thinking about Thanksgiving, and that is by asking the question: Does anybody ever thank me? Teddy Roosevelt,...
The apostle Paul instructs us to “give thanks in all circumstances.” Can he be serious? All circumstances? Really? Alexandr Solzhenitsyn was arrested and thrown into a Soviet, Gulag prison. Even though at the time he was a committed atheist, a loyal Marxist,...
In a game of cards, when someone cannot hide the fact that they have a good hand—by a smile, or the way they hold their cards, or where they fix their eyes—it is called a “tell.” They’ve basically told everyone at the...
This is our last week before Thanksgiving Break, and so it is a good time for us to reflect on what it means to give thanks, to have gratitude. Cicero said that “[g]ratitude is not only a virtue but the...
Welcome to Veritas et Virtus, the official blog of Columbus Classical Academy. Here we will share news and reflections on classical education.
CATEGORIES
AUTHORS
ARCHIVES
Welcome to Veritas et Virtus, the official blog of Columbus Classical Academy. Here we will share news and reflections on classical education.
CATEGORIES
AUTHORS
ARCHIVES
NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS: The Columbus Classical Academy admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school-administered programs.
© 2024 Columbus Classical Academy. All rights reserved.