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91猫先生 Remembers Longtime Professor of Philosophy and Religion Ken Bradt

The former assistant professor of philosophy and religion in what was once 91猫先生鈥檚 School of Humanities and Arts .

Before joining 91猫先生, Bradt taught at Earlham College as a Danforth intern and at the University of Virginia. He earned a B.A. in philosophy and an M.A. in theology from Notre Dame and an M.A. in philosophical theology from Yale. After leaving 91猫先生, he earned a Ph.D. from Yale in philosophical theology.

鈥淗e was a brilliant teacher with an intelligence I鈥檝e rarely met,鈥 says graduate Bill Schockner 81F. 鈥淗is classes were challenging 鈥 intense but exhilarating. We would have classes in the evening, and there were many times when the class would go well after midnight. His lectures were utterly absorbing and felt so profound. As my Div III advisor, he was exacting, but it was some of the best work I鈥檝e done.鈥

Bradt taught at the College for 15 years. His lecture and seminar classes comprised close studies of major texts in Western and Asian philosophy and religion. In addition, he offered an interdisciplinary class he鈥檇 developed at the University of Virginia called The Divine Comedy of Man, which took its structure from Dante鈥檚 Divine Comedy. Through 20th-century literary and philosophical readings and film, the course traced a passage through despair, beginning in the hell of the Shoah; to a purgatory of suffering, struggle, and hope; and culminating in works reflecting the experience of joy.

听鈥淚 first met Ken on a spring day when I wandered into his What Is Philosophy? class,鈥 says alum Justin West 75S. 鈥淗e was the kind of teacher that 91猫先生鈥檚 original philosophy embraced: creative, inquiring, dedicated, and original. He would re-create philosophical thought right in front of students rather than lecturing about it. He was a real teacher who valued student learning above all else. We remained the best of friends for more than 50 years. I lack Ken鈥檚 eloquence to say what he meant to me. Suffice it to say that 91猫先生 and its students were privileged to have had the sun that was Ken Bradt shine upon them.鈥

Ken Bradt with student on 91猫先生 campus


Colleague and friend Professor Emeritus Robert Meagher remembers, 鈥淐o-teaching on numerous occasions with Ken and serving as his colleague for so many years was a rare privilege and joy. Ken and I were close friends since student days at Notre Dame almost 60 years ago. Ken's passing is a great loss to me and so many others who revered and learned from his deep learning and wisdom.鈥

91猫先生 gave Bradt the keen pleasure of teaching students who delighted, as he did, in rigorous and imaginative intellectual exploration. He often prepared for class by walking in the hills above campus, carrying a volume of, say, Heidegger, or Aristotle, or Lao Tzu, rereading and rethinking.

鈥淚 took every course he taught. While I lived in NoHo for three years after graduating, I continued studying with Ken,鈥 says alum David J. Stern 77F. 鈥淗is mind was vast 鈥 and it was a mind filled with heart. It was also filled with an encyclopedic knowledge of the world鈥檚 wisdom traditions. He was an original and creative thinker. Sitting in a class with Ken, I felt held in that vast and warm mindspace. I鈥檝e always said that Ken was the midwife to my thinking Self 鈥 a thinking Self that was, because of Ken鈥檚 midwifery, infused with spirit and heart. I鈥檓 so grateful to have had Ken as my teacher and mentor. He was my friend and, years later, the best man at my wedding.鈥

Bradt was known for his warmth, gentle manner, and reflective way of speaking; his lengthy advising sessions; his integrity and his independent spirit; and the mighty splash his 6'5" frame made when he dove into the pool and freestyled across.

鈥淗e was a kind, generous, and compassionate human being,鈥 says Professor of Film Abraham Ravett. 鈥淎t our Robert Crown Center, Ken taught me how to swim utilizing rhythmic breathing, suggested much appreciated dietary supplements, and with infinite patience introduced me to his work on Hegel.鈥

After he left 91猫先生, Bradt taught in Yale鈥檚 summer school and then turned back to the dissertation he鈥檇 begun before teaching consumed his energies. In 1995, he finally completed his doctorate from Yale, with a dissertation on Hegel鈥檚 theology entitled Hegel鈥檚 Word 鈥淕od.鈥 The years following were spent with his partner of 32 years, Margaret Smith F70, in Alabama, Indiana, and Connecticut, where Smith taught English and he continued writing. In 2003, in the journal Soundings, Bradt published an article entitled 鈥淭he Radical Christian Orthodoxy of John Milbank: The Historical Contextuality of Its Development.鈥 He also left behind a handful of poems, an unfinished work of fiction, called 鈥淭he Day Was Long in Coming,鈥 and hundreds of pages of the central writing project of his life, an unfinished work of original theology titled The Discourse of the Divine Word / Ludus Theologicus / A Non-Theontological Articulation of the Divine Being of God: An Incarnational Theontology.

In his last eight years or so, Bradt lived with Alzheimer鈥檚, and five years before he died, he and Smith moved back to Amherst. One of his greatest pleasures in this last chapter of his life was walking in the woods, where he delighted in the branches moving in the wind, the squirrels, the birds, the other walkers who would stop to chat, and the dogs he would pat and pat and pat.

Family and friends are invited to a celebration of Ken鈥檚 life, to be held on Sunday, June 29, 1-4 PM, at the Unitarian Universalist Society of Amherst, 121 N Pleasant St, Amherst MA. A program of remarks and readings will be followed by finger food, looking at photos, and visiting. If you would like to speak at the gathering, or play a musical instrument, please contact Margaret Smith at msmith4@bsu.edu. If you have a digital photo of Ken to share or would like to speak through a short video (less than 3 minutes), we鈥檒l need that material by May 1.听Please email Margaret (msmith4@bsu.edu), who will send you instructions on how to prepare and deliver your material.

Ken Bradt in the woods

Photographs courtesy of Margaret Smith 70F and Robert Meagher

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