For Religious Studies professor Laura Lieber, the National Humanities Center feels more like a medieval monastery than a modern Research Triangle Park facility.
Lieber is one of three Duke faculty members to receive the , along with philosophy professors Sara Bernstein and Owen Flanagan. Since the inception of the program in 1978, 100 Duke faculty have been awarded 103 fellowships, making Duke the most represented institution among NHC fellows.
Bernstein, Flanagan and Lieber will begin their yearlong fellowships shortly after Labor Day and work on research projects alongside the 34 other fellows from around the world.
Laura LieberLieber said this is where the 鈥渕edieval monastery鈥 comparison comes in.
鈥淭he physical site of the NHC [in Research Triangle Park] is somewhat inspired by a medieval monastery,鈥 Lieber said. 鈥淭he doorways are set back in pairs, which lets you have conversations in the doorway without blocking the hallway, and all the fellows eat lunch together every day鈥攊t鈥檚 like the facilities were designed for you to have those impromptu conversations with your peers.鈥
Beyond collaborating with other fellows, each researcher is expected to focus on his or her own project. Lieber said that while most fellows are working on book manuscripts, as is the case for the three Duke faculty members, several might be in the preliminary research phases.
Each program applicant is evaluated by an independent committee of scholars, which assess each proposed project and its significance in the context of broader humanistic study, said Elizabeth Mansfield, the center鈥檚 vice president for fellowships.
鈥淭he three Duke faculty members, as with all of the [2015-16] fellows, did phenomenally well with their peer reviews and their projects presented themselves to the selection committee as important,鈥 Mansfield said.
Lieber鈥檚 project, 鈥淪taging the Sacred: Orchestrating Holiness in Late Antiquity,鈥 focuses on the use of popular entertainment, such as theater and mime, in church and synagogue services in the late Roman Empire.
With 鈥淭he Geography of Morals,鈥 Flanagan examines the moral traditions of non-Western thinkers to better understand how ethics in the different parts of today鈥檚 鈥渕ultiethnic, cosmopolitan world鈥 have developed. While many of Flanagan鈥檚 peers have used empirical methods rooted in neuroscience and psychology to address this problem, Flanagan argues that studying the texts of ancient non-Western philosophers can highlight the development of the concept of 鈥済oodness鈥 in different societies鈥 moral codes.
Owen Flanagan鈥淭he [understanding of 鈥榟uman good鈥橾 is not a matter of what is just in the genes or what goes on in the head,鈥 Flanagan said. 鈥淓thics involves human well-being, goodness and rightness in [the context of] history and culture. [Thus], reading great philosophers from other traditions helps bring into view the fact that the particularities of different moral traditions matter.鈥
Bernstein, Flanagan鈥檚 colleague in the philosophy department, will study the relationship between 鈥渇ailures鈥 and events that occur subsequently. Bernstein said that thinking about failures as 鈥渙missions鈥 -- events that might have taken place, but ultimately did not -- helped formulate her book project.
Sara Bernstein鈥淪uppose that you forgot to water your plant, causing the plant to die,鈥 Bernstein said. 鈥淗ow can a failure -- something that doesn鈥檛 occur -- cause something else to happen? My research suggests that the fact that you failed to water your plant is best understood as depending on the fact that you might have watered your plant -- you could have watered it, but didn鈥檛.鈥
Echoing Lieber, Bernstein added that her research would benefit from other NHC fellows鈥 comments and that she is looking forward to consulting with them.
鈥淚t provides the opportunity to talk with top scholars from other disciplines,鈥 Bernstein said. 鈥淐ausation is a central topic not just in philosophy, but also in history, science, economics, and many others. I鈥檓 looking forward to fruitful discussions with scholars from other fields.鈥
For more information about the National Humanities Center and the 2015-16 fellows, .