Info

HeightsCast: Forming Men Fully Alive

Welcome to HeightsCast, the official podcast of The Heights School. Every week, we feature interviews with teachers, educators, and experts in a variety of fields, both here at The Heights School and beyond our school's walls. Our conversations concern the education and formation of men fully alive in the liberal arts tradition. In other words, we talk about the education of the kind of man you’d want your daughter to marry. We hope that these conversations may be both delightful and insightful; and that through them, your vocation as educators may be ever renewed. Join us!
RSS Feed Subscribe in Apple Podcasts
HeightsCast: Forming Men Fully Alive
2024
April
March
February
January


2023
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2022
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2021
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March


2020
December
November
October
September
May
April
February
January


2019
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
March
February


2018
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2017
December
November
October
September
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2016
December
November
October
September
August
May
April
February
January


2015
December
November
October
September


All Episodes
Archives
Now displaying: November, 2023
Nov 16, 2023

“I’m a big believer in boredom…. All the [technology] stuff is wonderful, but having nothing to do can be wonderful, too.” Thought-provoking words from the man whose company produces one of the most powerful tools for distracting ourselves from any feelings of boredom. Not only Steve Jobs, but seventeenth-century French philosopher Blaise Pascal, too, understood the dangers of perpetual entertainment, the inability to sit alone in a room by oneself. 

Given the current cultural moment, a particular arena in which children—and, indeed, parents too—need to grow in self-mastery is that of screens and technology. This week on HeightsCast, we feature a talk given by Colin Gleason, head of lower school. First given at last Saturday’s Parenting Conference, this talk addresses how parents can foster the interior dispositions their sons will need to use technology well, and not to be used by it. He encourages parents to train their young sons in other arenas in order to prepare for healthy use of technology. Moreover, he speaks to the need for parents to model the virtues they’d like to see, and accompany their boys in a close and intimate relationship once they begin their digital journey.

Colin underscores that trust is not merely a result of but rather a means to achieving peace. If parents want their children to grow in virtue, they need to first trust that they can do so; for an intimate and personal relationship provides the proper culture for the growth of virtue. While external guardrails can be helpful and are at times necessary, in the end, virtue will be the best defense against evil and the strongest guarantee of the good.

Chapters 

  • 3:30 A common sense convention 

  • 6:30 Fostering internal guides

  • 9:20 Trust 

  • 10:25 Training 

    • 11:45 Let him be hungry 

    • 15:35 Let him be bored 

    • 19:30 Let him stay outside 

  • 23:15 Modeling 

    • 24:05 Detachment 

    • 25:15 Manners

  • 26:00 Establishing an intimate and personal relationship

    • 26:39 Freedom

    • 32:45 Ownership

    • 33:50 Learning from mistakes 

    • 34:20 Encouragement

    • 37:50 Trust  

Missed the conference but don’t want to miss out on the content? Check out the Freedom and Technology Collection

 

Nov 6, 2023

“Man He made to serve Him wittily,” said Thomas More in Robert Bolt’s A Man for All Seasons, “in the tangle of his mind.” To serve God wittily requires an orderly mind, one capable of parsing through truths and falsehoods, able to string together arguments. Thus, the trivium endures: grammar, rhetoric, and logic. 

To discuss teaching logic to high school students, we welcome to the podcast Mark Grannis, Heights teacher, attorney, father, and author of The Reasonable Person: Traditional Logic for Modern Life. In this episode, Mr. Grannis discusses what logic is, why it matters today, and how to teach it. Given man’s nature as a rational animal, Mark argues that the study of logic—what he refers to as the art and science of sound reasoning—can improve the daily lives of everyone, regardless of his professional or academic path. Moreover, as social animals, Mark explains how logic can be a powerful means to attaining consensus in the public arena. 

In a world in which thinking has become an increasingly outsourced ability, learning the art and science of thinking well is perhaps more important than ever.

Chapters

  • 2:45 Introduction
  • 3:30 Law and logic: Mark’s path to the classroom 
  • 5:40 Why (traditional) logic today? 
  • 11:30 Symbolic and traditional logic 
  • 14:30 Examples of traditional logic 
  • 19:00 Practical benefits of logic 
  • 22:55 Logic and writing 
  • 24:40 Teaching logic to high schoolers
  • 26:40 Why write your own textbooks? 
  • 28:40 What’s different about The Reasonable Person?

Recommended Resources 

The Reasonable Person: Traditional Logic for Modern Life by Mark Grannis 

Logic and the Reasonable Person by Mark Grannis

AI and the Take-Home Essay with Matt Mehan

Why a Liberal Arts Education Today? with Michael Moynihan 

1