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Centers and Institutes

Centers and Institutes

³Ô¹ÏÍø Centers & Institutes

The ³Ô¹ÏÍø is associated with a number of centers and projects that are devoted to a deeper exploration of topics closely connected with the University's mission.

Ann & Joe O. Neuhoff Institute for Ministry & Evangelization

The Neuhoff Institute for Ministry & Evangelization offers a wide range of continuing education programs for adults interested in in-depth exploration of their faith as well as deacon formation programs in both English and Spanish. The Neuhoff Institute also hosts the annual Dallas Ministry Conference, an event attended by thousands of ordained and lay people from around the world.

Donald and Louise Cowan Center

The Donald and Louise Cowan Archive houses, contextualizes and presents texts and information pertaining to the writings, thought and teachings of Donald A. and Louise Cowan.

The St. Ambrose Center for Catholic Liberal Education and Culture exists to extend the ³Ô¹ÏÍø’ core mission—that the pursuit of wisdom, of truth, and of virtue are the proper and primary ends of education—to the world at large.

The Studies in Catholic Faith and Culture Program seeks to enrich the lives of Catholics by providing an intellectual formation that encompasses the breadth and depth of human culture. It explores the history, traditions, and works that have shaped the Catholic inheritance, resulting in a deeply Christian portrait of the human person.

The Institute for Homiletics will offer an array of preaching improvement opportunities and resources for Catholic clergy.

Affiliated Centers

The following centers and institutes are affiliated with the ³Ô¹ÏÍø but are separately governed, 501c3 entities.

ACTC is an international, professional, liberal arts organization dedicated to fostering the use of core texts (world classics and other texts of major cultural significance), in undergraduate education and the development of required or widely taken core programs steeped in such texts.

A forum for serious and informed discussion of the common good which brings to bear upon this discussion the insight and wisdom of the Christian intellectual tradition. 

To promote the study of Thomas More, especially his understanding of liberty,  statesmanship, and the need for educated and virtuous citizens. 

Their mission is to promote natural law public philosophy rooted in the principles of the American Founding – one that pursues freedom and prosperity, grounded on the moral integrity of the culture and of our social and political institutions. 

An ambitious long-term project to build a library of medieval Latin texts, with English translations, from the period roughly between 500 and 1500, which will represent the whole breadth and variety of medieval civilization. 

The Dallas Goethe Center was founded in 1965 to foster an appreciation of German art, drama, music, language, literature, history, and current affairs, and cultivate the mutual understanding between the people of German speaking countries and those of the United States of America. 

A nonprofit corporation dedicated to fostering an understanding of contemporary social-political issues informed by the perennial wisdom of Western philosophy and the intellectual heritage of Christian social teaching. 

Professor Richard Owsley founded the North Texas Heidegger Symposium in 1980, and hosted it for over twenty years.