Love, Sex, and the Human Person
8th Annual Summer Seminar
May 29 – June 3, 2018
The true significance of physical sex as an experience is inseparable from its character as the expression and flower of a specific kind of love.
Dietrich von Hildebrand
In Defense of Purity
The 8th Annual Hildebrand Project Summer Seminar, “Love, Sex, and the Human Person” looked to the philosophical anthropology of Dietrich von Hildebrand and Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II to provide a foundation for thinking about love, sex, and marriage today. Both men sought to articulate a vision of the human person at once consistent with the deepest impulses of the Christian tradition and also informed by new philosophical thinking that recognized the importance of the human subject.
Hildebrand broke new ground in his 1927 book, In Defense of Purity, wherein he examined the embodied person with stunning originality, presenting a positive and comprehensive understanding of purity. Fifty years later, John Paul II presented to the world his Theology of the Body, one of the most original and enduring parts of his legacy. In Hildebrand and John Paul II, we find a vision of the human person that offers a beautiful and convincing answer to contemporary questions about love, sex, and purity.
Love, Sex, and the Human Person – Videos
Why is it so Difficult to Understand the Embodiment of the Human Person? (John F. Crosby)
Hildebrand's Unique Vision of Human Sexuality (Maria Fedoryka)
John Paul II's Understanding of Conscience, Consciousness, and Humanae Vitae (Janet Smith)
Passion and Reverence in the Thought of John Paul II and Dietrich von Hildebrand (Michael Waldstein)
Open Q&A with Janet Smith
Personalism & Humanae Vitae: A Close Reading of TOB 118-125 (Peter Colosi)