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de Nicola Center Presents Notre Dame Evangelium Vitae Medal to Wm. David Solomon

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

[画像:David Solomon standing atop a hill]

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture presented the 2026 Notre Dame Evangelium Vitae Medal—the nation’s most important award for heroes of the pro-life movement—to the family of the late Wm. David Solomon, associate professor of philosophy emeritus and founding director of the Center, at a Mass and dinner attended by more than 400 guests on May 1, 2026, at the University of Notre Dame.

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Postdoctoral Fellow James Wilson on Studying the Bible and Literature

Author: Brooke Tranten, Ph.D.

James Wilson, in a brown sportcoat, teaching a literature class

James Wilson, the de Nicola Center’s 2025–26 postdoctoral fellow, has long held a fascination with Southern writer William Faulkner. The author became the subject of Wilson’s dissertation at the University of Cambridge, which Wilson is currently working to develop into a book.

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Myser Fellow Angela Knobel on Motherhood and the Moral Life

Author: Brooke Tranten, Ph.D.

Rev. Gregory Pine (left) and Angela Knobel (right) in conversation on 1-16-2016

Angela Knobel is no stranger to South Bend. The de Nicola Center’s 2025–26 Myser Visiting Fellow received her doctorate in philosophy from Notre Dame and considers the University a second home. “I’ve always loved Notre Dame,” she says. “From the moment I set foot on campus as a prospective graduate student a million years ago, Notre Dame has felt like home to me. I remember walking around campus all those years ago thinking, ‘I can be happy here.’” Now an accomplished professor of philosophy at the University of Dallas, Knobel is spending this year as the de Nicola Center’s Myser Fellow researching and reflecting on the theme of motherhood in preparation for a new book, Other Selves: Motherhood and the Moral Life.

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Welcoming Visiting Scholar Rev. Roberto Regoli

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

[画像:Rev. Roberto Regoli - priest in a black clerical suit speaks at a podium]

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture is pleased to partner with the University of Notre Dame’s Global Catholic Research Initiative to welcome Rev. Roberto Regoli to the University as a visiting scholar for the Spring 2026 semester. Father Regoli is professor of contemporary Church history and former director of the Department of History and Cultural Heritage of the Church at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, as well as the recently appointed president of the Vatican Foundation Joseph Ratzinger–Benedict XVI. During his residency with the de Nicola Center, Father Regoli will serve as the inaugural visiting fellow of Notre Dame’s Global Catholic Research Initiative.

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Notre Dame to Award 2026 Evangelium Vitae Medal to Wm. David Solomon, Founding Director of the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

[画像:David Solomon]

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture at the University of Notre Dame is proud to announce that the late Wm. David Solomon, associate professor of philosophy emeritus and founding director of the Center, has been named the recipient of the fifteenth annual Notre Dame Evangelium Vitae Medal, the nation’s most important award for heroes of the pro-life movement. The medal will be presented to Professor Solomon’s family at a special Mass and dinner on Friday, May 1, 2026, at the University of Notre Dame.

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Welcoming the Center's 2025–26 Graduate and Professional Student Mission Fellows

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

[画像:2025-26 Student Mission Fellows sidebar]

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture is pleased to welcome three new graduate mission fellows for the 2025–26 academic year: Solomon Fellows Rev. Brendan Baran, O.P., and Nicholas Ramirez, and Polking Fellow Joseph Mann.

As part of its mission as an interdisciplinary research center, the de Nicola Center annually awards two competitive fellowships for graduate and professional students at the University of Notre Dame who share the de Nicola Center’s interest in the moral and intellectual tradition of the Church, and whose research aligns with the mission of the Center. In addition to receiving a financial scholarship, during their time at Notre Dame Solomon and Polking Fellows play an active role in the life of the de Nicola Center, take part in regular Center events and conferences, and interact with its wide network of faculty and student fellows.

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de Nicola Center Welcomes Visiting Scholars for 2025–26

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

[画像:Angela Knobel and James Wilson]

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture is pleased to welcome two visiting scholars for the 2025–26 academic year: Myser Visiting Fellow Angela M. Knobel (University of Dallas) and Postdoctoral Fellow James Wilson (University of Cambridge).

As part of its mission as an interdisciplinary research center at the University of Notre Dame, the de Nicola Center annually welcomes visiting faculty, students, and postdoctoral fellows from around the world to pursue research projects in a vibrant scholarly community rooted in the Catholic intellectual, moral, and aesthetic tradition. During these research visits, scholars play an active role in the life of the de Nicola Center, taking part in regular Center events and conferences and interacting with its wide network of faculty and student fellows.

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Celebrating Newman, Doctor of the Church

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

St. John Henry Newman in cardinalatial vesture painted by Sir John Everett Millais

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture celebrates the July 31, 2025, news that Pope Leo XIV will soon declare St. John Henry Newman the newest Doctor of the Church, recognizing his personal sanctity and influential contribution to Catholic theology and doctrine. Jennifer Newsome Martin, director of the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture and the John J. Cavanaugh Professor of the Humanities at the University of Notre Dame, was a member of the committee of scholars that prepared the positio in support of Newman’s elevation to the honor.

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de Nicola Center Collaboration with Nueva Cultura Project Supports Scholars in the Global South

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

A group of 35 men and women pose in front of a doorway reading "William J. Carey Auditorium"

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture and the Jacques Maritain Center jointly hosted thirty professors and graduate students from Central and South America for two weeks of interdisciplinary research and scholarly collaboration, July 14–27, 2025. Sponsored by the Nueva Cultura project at the Universidad de los Andes (UANDES) in Chile, the group visits Notre Dame for two weeks twice a year to conduct research in the Hesburgh Libraries, present their research and receive feedback from one another, network with Notre Dame faculty, and give and receive mentorship in academic scholarship.

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de Nicola Center Hosts Plenary Session of Vatican AI Working Group

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

A group of men and women stand outside in front of the main building of the university of notre dame

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture hosted the Vatican’s Dicastery for Culture and Education and its Center for Digital Culture during its fourth Plenary Meeting on Ethics for AI at the University of Notre Dame, July 9–11, 2025. Under the leadership of Bishop Paul Tighe, secretary of the dicastery's Culture section, the working group met to discuss ethical issues surrounding artificial intelligence in relation to education and human agency, work on two forthcoming publications, and engage with Notre Dame experts and students.

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de Nicola Center Graduates 235 Sorin Fellows in Class of 2025

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

Sorin Fellows at Fall Conference 2024

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture congratulates the 235 student Sorin Fellows who completed their studies at Notre Dame, Saint Mary's College, and Holy Cross College in 2025. In all, 150 undergraduates and 85 graduate and professional Sorin Fellows participated in commencement ceremonies this year, joining more than 800 existing Sorin Fellow alumni.

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Three de Nicola Center Student Fellows to Clerk for US Supreme Court

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

[画像:Sorin Fellows to clerk at SCOTUS 2025-26 vertical]

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture is proud to have three former student fellows serving as clerks for the Supreme Court of the United States during the 2025–26 term.

Michael Bradley ’14, ’17 MTS, ’22 J.D., a recipient of the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture’s Polking Family Fellowship at Notre Dame Law School and an alumnus of the Center’s Sorin Fellows program, will serve as a law clerk for Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel Alito. William “Billy” Eisenhauer ’23 J.D., also an alumnus of the Sorin Fellows program for law students, will clerk for Chief Justice John Roberts. Caitlin Fennelly Ferguson ’21, a 2024 graduate of the University of Chicago Law School and an undergraduate Sorin Fellow during her time at Notre Dame, will clerk for Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

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Meet our 2024-25 dCEC Visiting Scolars: Lauren Spohn

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

Rev. Bill Miscamble, C.S.C. and Lauren Spohn in conversation

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture welcomed visiting scholar Lauren Spohn, a Rhodes Scholar and doctoral candidate in philosophical theology at Oriel College, Oxford, to the University of Notre Dame during the spring 2025 semester. Spohn's scholarship focuses on the thought of St. John Henry Newman, especially exploring the relationship between faith and reason through the philosophical concept of analogy.

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de Nicola Center Presents Evangelium Vitae Medal to Anthony & Phyllis Lauinger

Author: Kenneth Hallenius

A man in a green sport coat and a woman in a white jacket gaze into the distance on a sunny day

The de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture presented the 2025 Notre Dame Evangelium Vitae Medal—the nation’s most important award for heroes of the pro-life movement—to Anthony J. and Phyllis W. Lauinger of Tulsa, Oklahoma, at a Mass and dinner attended by more than 400 guests on May 3, 2025, at the University of Notre Dame.

“Both in the intimacy of their family life and in their respective professional lives—Tony with his tireless defense of the unborn through legislative efforts in his home state of Oklahoma, and Phyllis as a volunteer physician at St. Francis Xavier Clinic, which offers medical care at no charge to women, children, and men who are uninsured or underserved in their community—the Lauingers model pro-life values with sincerity, generosity, and humility,” said Jennifer Newsome Martin, director of the de Nicola Center and associate professor in the Program of Liberal Studies with a joint appointment in the Department of Theology.

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