The 2024 programs

Spring program: May 23 - June 3

Summer program: August 1 - August 12

Fall program: October 10 - October 21

About our Programs

What we offer

We are running three, 10-day pilot programs in Spring, Summer, and Fall of 2024.  We will provide up to five individuals with the opportunity to spend ten days in residence to learn, think, read, and write, by themselves and in community, unencumbered by the distractions and pressures of daily life.

Who can apply

Adults, 22 and over, from any and all academic backgrounds.

Prospective participants will not be required to specify a tangible goal or project in order to apply. Admission will be based exclusively on the unique qualities and experiences that applicants can bring to the community.  

What we provide

We will provide local transport (from and to Hudson, NY, train station), room and board, and all learning activities free of charge. This is, in Matthew’s words, “to create an even playing field and to instill in participants a sense that the experience is a gift that it is their responsibility not to squander”.

What is expected of the participants

Participants are required to maintain a sincere commitment to living the  life of the mind, taking responsibility for active participation in their own learning and that of their peers. They will also be required to engage in 2  hours of labor per day and to take part in all communal meals and activities. 

What we will do differently

The Matthew Strother Center is a “low technology environment” (see FAQs to learn more about what this means). We will be a refuge from the worlds of commerce and social media, to encourage presence and a deeper connection to the immediate environment, our lives, and the planet.

What we will read

By taking part in our programs, participants do not choose a subject to study, but rather an activity—learning for its own sake. We will engage with books of richness, depth, and lasting value, from both philosophical and literary traditions. One program may focus entirely on Sappho’s poetry. Another may take on Freud and psychoanalysis. A third may consist of reading Gandhi’s biography, or Virginia Woolf’s novels. Or something else entirely.

How will we read

Each of the three programs will have a faculty member to lead daily seminars. All participants will be required to lead the seminar discussion for at least one session out of the ten.

A day in The Examined Life

A typical day at the Matthew Strother Center for The Examined Life will involve:

- At least one hour of solitary time to read and write every morning;

- A daily three-hour seminar with a faculty member (seven days a week);

- Two hours of manual work focused on food production and maintenance of the Center’s facilities, (seven days a week);

- At least three hours of free time to read, study, dance, hike, reflect and contemplate, alone or in community;

- Three communal meals. 

“I must build a system of my own or be enslaved by another man’s.” 

— William Blake