James V. Schall
James Vincent Schall was an American Jesuit Roman Catholic priest, teacher, writer, and philosopher. He was, most recently, Professor of Political Philosophy in the Department of Government at Georgetown University. He retired from teaching in December 2012, giving his final lecture on December 7, 2012, at Georgetown; it was entitled "The Final Gladness," and was sponsored by the Tocqueville Forum. Of his many publications his book Another Sort of Learning has been hailed as exceptional.
Biography
Born in Pocahontas, Iowa, and educated in local public schools, he graduated from Knoxville High School in 1945.After time in the U.S. Army, he joined the Society of Jesus in 1948, and then attended Santa Clara University in California. He earned an MA in Philosophy from Gonzaga University in 1955. He earned a PhD in Political Theory from Georgetown University in 1960, and was ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in 1963. In 1964, he earned an M.A. in Sacred Theology from Santa Clara University.
Fr. Schall was a member of the faculty of the Institute of Social Sciences, Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome, from 1964–77, and a member of the Government Department, University of San Francisco, from 1968–77. Among the sources for Schall's lectures were Christian Scripture, Aristotle, Plato, Cicero, Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, G.K. Chesterton, and Pope Benedict XVI.
Before retiring, he had been a member of the Government Department at Georgetown University since 1977. In 1993, 2004 and 2010, Fr. Schall was presented the Edward B. Bunn, SJ, Award for Faculty Excellence by the senior class in the College of Arts and Sciences at Georgetown University.
Schall retired from his position at Georgetown in December 2012 and moved into the Jesuit retirement home in Los Gatos, California where he continued to write books and articles for publications and websites. He also continued to give presentations to small groups on request.
Schall served as a member of the Pontifical Commission on Justice and Peace, in Rome from 1977-82. He was also a member of the National Council of the Humanities, and a member of the National Endowment for the Humanities from 1984-90.
A prolific writer, he wrote more than 30 books and edited or co-edited 8 others. By July 2002, his website listed his authorship of 356 essays, 148 book reviews, and 660 columns, including his monthly column, "Sense and Nonsense," for the Catholic journal Crisis, and his columns in Gilbert! magazine, the Saint Austin Review, and the University Bookman.
Fr. Schall was an expert on the thought of G. K. Chesterton; he edited two volumes of Chesterton's collected works and wrote his own volume of essays on the famous Catholic convert.
Schall was a vigorous supporter of Benedict XVI's critique of western culture which categorizes it as a "dictatorship of relativism". Schall taught that Catholicism is where "Revelation is addressed to reason" and stated that "We are living in a time where the logic of disorder is at work, rejecting systematically the logic of being a human being." Schall stated that the societal re-examination of the definition of the family "is not just an accident," but is the culture "rejecting heavenly answers and replacing them with human answers. A will is leading you, and it says there is something wrong with being human. That goes back to the whole drama of the Fall. C.S. Lewis says the ultimate sin, the ultimate disorder, is to say what is good is bad, what is bad is good." A reporter summed up his statements as "If we reject the intelligibility and goodness of creation, will we still be able to hear God’s voice calling us to our supernatural end?"
Medical issues
Schall survived a few major illnesses, including one that resulted in the loss of function in one of his eyes. In the summer of 2010 he had a cancerous jawbone and its attached teeth removed and replaced with bone taken from his leg.Writings (selection)
Books- Reason, Revelation, and the Foundations of Political Philosophy
- Redeeming the Time LC 68-13845 ASIN: B0006BUD2I
- Human Dignity and Human Numbers
- Play On: From Games to Celebrations
- The Sixth Paul
- Welcome, number 4,000,000,000!
- The Praise of "Sons of Bitches": On the Worship of God by Fallen Men
- Christianity and Life
- Christianity and Politics
- Church, State, and Society in the Thought of John Paul II
- Liberation Theology
- The Politics of Heaven and Hell: Christian Themes from Classical, Medieval, and Modern Political Philosophy
- Unexpected Meditations Late in the XXth Century
- Another Sort of Learning
- Religion, Wealth, and Poverty
- What Is God Like?: Philosophers and 'Hereticks' on the Triune God: The Sundry Paths of Orthodoxy from Plato, Augustine, Samuel Johnson, Nietzsche, Camus, and Flannery O'Connor, even unto Charlie Brown and the Wodehouse Clergy
- *An edition of What Is God Like? was published in Manila, P.I., by St. Paul's, 1995.
- Does Catholicism Still Exist?
- Idylls and Rambles: Lighter Christian Essays
- At the Limits of Political Philosophy: From "Brilliant Errors" to Things of Uncommon Importance ; paperbound,
- Jacques Maritain: The Philosopher in Society
- Schall on Chesterton: Timely Essays on Timeless Paradoxes
- On the Unseriousness of Human Affairs
- Reason, Revelation, and Human Affairs: Selected Writings of James V. Schall, Marc D. Guerra, editor
- Roman Catholic Political Philosophy
- Sum Total Of Human Happiness
- The Order of Things
- The Regensburg Lecture
- The Life of the Mind: On the Joys and Travails of Thinking
- The Mind That Is Catholic: Philosophical & Political Essays
- The Classical Moment: Selected Essays on Knowledge and Its Pleasures
- The Modern Age
- A Journey through Lent 24pp.
- The Catechism of the Catholic Church. 22pp.
- Ethics and Economics 40pp. ASIN: B000GT3QW4
- A Student's Guide to Liberal Learning 66pp.
Edited with introduction
- The Whole Truth about Man: John Paul II to University Students and Faculties.
- Sacred in All Its Forms: John Paul II on Human Life
- Essays on Christianity and Political Philosophy. with George Carey.
- Out of Justice, Peace. Pastorals of the German and French Bishops.
- G. K. Chesterton, Collected Works, Vol. IV, What's Wrong with the World, etc.
- Studies on Religion and Politics. with Jerome J. Hanus.
- On the Intelligibility of Political Philosophy: Essays of Charles N. R. McCoy. with John Schrems.
- G. K. Chesterton, Collected Works, Vol. XX, Christendom in Dublin, Irish Impressions, the New Jerusalem, etc.