Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life
Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life
SCOTT CENTER
Creating and Implementing Social Policy in a New Political Environment
- Sponsored by:
- Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life
The 2017 Pasteur Pierre and Helene Gagnier “Acting Righteously in Times of Danger Event: How is social policy shaped and implemented at the national level? How do we address the divide across progressive and conservative views on the issues of our time?
Learn from students who have just spent a week in Washington, DC engaging these questions on an alternative spring break trip organized and led by the Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life.
Seating is limited. Refreshments will be served. Please come early!
Learn from students who have just spent a week in Washington, DC engaging these questions on an alternative spring break trip organized and led by the Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life.
Seating is limited. Refreshments will be served. Please come early!
Wilson Hall, McCullough Student Center
Satya Circle
- Sponsored by:
- Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life
What are your truths that you need to tell?
We come to a place of better knowing ourselves and this community when we tell our truths, deeply hear the truths of others, sit still and contemplate what is real for us beneath all the noise.
Satya is Sanskrit for “truthfulness.” It is an ethical principle for a well-lived and joyful life, and is the second of five Yamas in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali.
We come to a place of better knowing ourselves and this community when we tell our truths, deeply hear the truths of others, sit still and contemplate what is real for us beneath all the noise.
Satya is Sanskrit for “truthfulness.” It is an ethical principle for a well-lived and joyful life, and is the second of five Yamas in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali.
(Private)
Satya Circle
- Sponsored by:
- Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life
What are your truths that you need to tell?
We come to a place of better knowing ourselves and this community when we tell our truths, deeply hear the truths of others, sit still and contemplate what is real for us beneath all the noise.
Satya is Sanskrit for “truthfulness.” It is an ethical principle for a well-lived and joyful life, and is the second of five Yamas in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali.
We come to a place of better knowing ourselves and this community when we tell our truths, deeply hear the truths of others, sit still and contemplate what is real for us beneath all the noise.
Satya is Sanskrit for “truthfulness.” It is an ethical principle for a well-lived and joyful life, and is the second of five Yamas in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali.
(Private)
Satya Circle
- Sponsored by:
- Charles P. Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life
What are your truths that you need to tell?
We come to a place of better knowing ourselves and this community when we tell our truths, deeply hear the truths of others, sit still and contemplate what is real for us beneath all the noise.
Satya is Sanskrit for “truthfulness.” It is an ethical principle for a well-lived and joyful life, and is the second of five Yamas in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali.
We come to a place of better knowing ourselves and this community when we tell our truths, deeply hear the truths of others, sit still and contemplate what is real for us beneath all the noise.
Satya is Sanskrit for “truthfulness.” It is an ethical principle for a well-lived and joyful life, and is the second of five Yamas in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali.
(Private)