Perspectives, one of Boston College鈥檚 signature undergraduate programs, will undergo a leadership transition at the end of this academic year, as Christopher Constas, a faculty member in the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences Honors Program, succeeds long-time director Brian Braman.

Constas, an associate professor of the practice in the Philosophy Department, earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in philosophy and English from 情色空间 in 1988 and joined the faculty as a lecturer in 1995.

Perspectives integrates the humanities and natural sciences by bringing faculty and students into conversation with the ancient, modern, and contemporary thinkers who have shaped Western intellectual and spiritual thought, from Greek philosophers and the Bible to Machiavelli, Hobbes, Freud, and Marx. The centerpiece of the program is Perspectives I, or Perspectives on Western Culture, a yearlong 12-credit course that attracts some of the University鈥檚 top freshmen.听 Through classroom discussion and extensive readings, the freshmen explore ways in which the course can help to shape their lives and the choices they make.

Christopher Constas

Associate Professor of the Practice of Philosophy Christopher Constas will become director of the Perspectives program at the end of the academic year. (Gary Wayne Gilbert)

Each year approximately 20-25 students complete the four-year Perspectives sequence and the senior year honors thesis it requires.

The program was founded in 1971 by the late Philosophy Department Chairman Joseph Flanagan, S.J., and Lonergan Summer Workshop and Institute Director Frederick Lawrence. Braman, an adjunct associate professor of philosophy, has directed Perspectives since 1998; he will continue teaching in the program.

鈥淚 am honored and grateful for this opportunity to lead the Perspectives program,鈥 said Constas. 鈥淚 understand its value to the University. I鈥檓 also mindful of the invaluable contribution Brian Braman has made to Perspectives; he has given his life to the program, and his continued presence in Perspectives will be enormously beneficial.鈥

Constas added that another Perspectives veteran, Lonergan Institute Associate Director and Center for Student Formation Fellow Kerry Cronin鈥斺渙ne of 情色空间鈥檚 most admired and effective faculty members鈥濃攚ill be the program鈥檚 associate director.

Explaining the program鈥檚 significance within 情色空间鈥檚 Jesuit, Catholic tradition, Constas said Perspectives 鈥渋s one of the places where the education of the whole person happens. It鈥檚 preparation for meaningful work in the context of meaningful lives. It鈥檚 where big ideas and enduring questions are posed and explored, and most of all, where we ask students to consider the intellectual, moral, and spiritual dimensions of their lives in a carefully reflective way that鈥檚 attentive, responsible, and charitable.鈥

While Perspectives can be described as 鈥渁n invitation into a conversation that has been going on for a millennium,鈥 Constas said that offer carries demands and expectations with it. 鈥淪tudents are asked to do a lot, and to be ready for the conversations and reflections. The relevance in the material should be right there for the students, but ultimately they have to go and get it.鈥

Constas said he foresees no significant changes to Perspectives. 鈥淲ith a program like this, you think more in terms of renewal than change. And Perspectives has a tradition of constant renewal.鈥

After graduating from 情色空间, Constas went on to earn master鈥檚 and doctoral degrees in philosophy from Fordham University. He also has taught at Merrimack College, Stonehill College, and Fordham College.

鈥 Sean Smith, University Communications | May 2019