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The Seven Liberal Arts
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Lessons
Lesson 1: Why the Seven Liberal Arts are "Liberal" and "Arts" (Preview Content)4 Topics|1 Quiz -
Lesson 2: Why the Seven Liberal Arts are "Liberating" (Preview Content)4 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 3: The Seven Liberating Arts3 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 4: The History of the Seven Liberal Arts3 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 5: The Trivium Arts3 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 6: The Quadrivium Arts3 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 7: Teaching the Quadrivium Like We Aren't Materialists2 Topics|1 Quiz
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Lesson 8: Discussion of Harmony, Pedagogy and Assessment of the Arts1 Topic
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Lesson 9: Discussion of the Arts as Liberating Arts1 Topic
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End of Course TestEnd of Course Test: The Seven Liberal Arts1 Quiz
Lesson 4,
Topic 1
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Recommended Reading
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In this lecture, Andrew Kern mentions the following books and essays you may wish to read for a deeper look at classical education and the liberal arts:
- “The Lost Tools of Learning,” by Dorothy Sayers (1948), available online.
- “The Liberal Arts in St. Thomas Aquinas,” by Pierre Conway and Benedict Ashley in The Thomist: A Speculative Quarterly Review (1959)