EFTA00759206.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 96.5 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 2 pages
From: '
To: "JE Vacation" leevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: Re:
Date: Sat, 15 May 2010 00:05:45 +0000
Yes, I am familiar with this 4 YEAR UNIVERSITY PROGRAM. It's not quite the same as reading the books by
myself, without getting explanations and forgetting them within a week... I am sure you could do it but that is not
how I learn.
Sent via portable phone
From: Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 14 Ma 2010 19:44:36 -0400
To: a
Subject:
the fact that you have lived a priveldged life , and remain ungrateful, blaming me for you lack of education.
schooling. baby, and assume that no matter how little you do, or how much you aggravate/nag me, that you
should continue living the same life as if you had done what i asked. im afraid is unrealistic.
The Great Books program
The Great Books program (often called simply "the Program" or "the New Program" at St. John's) was developed at
the University of Chicago by Stringfellow Barr, Scott Buchanan,Robert Hutchins, and Mortimer Adler in the mid-1930s as an
alternative form of education to the then rapidly changing undergraduate curriculum. St. John's adopted the Great Books
program in 1937, when the college was facing the possibility of financial and academic ruin. The Great Books program in use
today was also influenced by Jacob Klein, who was dean of the college in the 1940s and 1950s.
The four-year program of study, nearly all of which is mandatory, demands that students read and discuss the works of many
of Westem civilization's most prominent contributors to philosophy, theology, mathematics, science, music, poetry, and
literature, such as Aristotle, Shakespeare, Descartes, and Einstein. In line with the views of the program's founders—who
complained of "vocational interests" that "clutter" other colleges' curricula—"Johnnies", as St. John's students style
themselves, usually value intellectual pursuits for their own sake, regardless of whether they have practical application.
Tutorials (mathematics, language, and music), as well as Seminar and Laboratory, are discussion-based. In the Mathematics
tutorial students often demonstrate propositions that mathematicians throughout various ages have laid out. In the Language
tutorial student translations are presented (Ancient Greek is studied in the first two years and French for the last two). The
tutorials, with Seminar and Laboratory, constitute the "classes". All classes, and in particular the Seminar, are considered
formal exercises; consequently, students address one another, as well as their teachers, only by their last names during class.
U
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EFTA00759207
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- Created
- Feb 3, 2026