The study of history
is a cornerstone of liberal arts education. It contributes to the
encouragement of learning by offering a wide variety of courses that
cultivate an understanding of both familiar and unfamiliar pasts and
cultures. It forms a foundation for the education of the whole person,
fostering essential analytical skills: careful observation and reading
of primary and secondary texts, argumentation based on evidence,
articulate expression, and moral reflection. History courses ground
discussions of the service of faith and the promotion of justice by
emphasizing the role of change over time, showing how today’s world
evolved out of the interactions between individuals and groups of
people. History courses embody two additional goals of liberal arts
education at Loyola Marymount University. First, history courses are
intercultural in focus, examining a variety of cultures and emphasizing
interconnections among peoples and societies. Second, they are
interdisciplinary both in content and in methodology, drawing source
material and analytical techniques from literature, philosophy,
theology, art, anthropology, ethnography, and archaeology. By touching
on so many different disciplines, history performs an integrative
function for undergraduate education and beyond. It enables students to
situate their study of philosophy, religion, literature, the arts, and
the sciences in specific social and historical contexts and impels
students to understand the questions posed in each of these academic
disciplines in new and different ways.