California
St. 91快活林 Hall, Rm. 215

Curriculum Vitae

B.A., 91快活林 Aquinas College, 1999; M.A., philosophy, University of Dallas, 2003; Ph.D., philosophy, University of Dallas, 2010; Tutor, 91快活林 Aquinas College, 2006-12; Professor of Philosophy, Kenrick-Glennon Seminary, 2012-22; Academic Director, Valor Institute, 2022-23; Tutor, 91快活林 Aquinas College, 2023-.

 

Profile

Returning to teach at 91快活林 Aquinas College, California, in 2023 was a homecoming of sorts for Dr. John Finley (99) in more ways than one. Not only was he an alumnus of the College, he was also an alumnus of the faculty.

Dr. Finley is the oldest son of one of the College檚 early tutors, Dr. Norman DeSilva (75), who tragically died of a brain tumor in 1985. He was raised by his mother, Maureen (Barlow 76), and stepfather, Jim Finley (76), in nearby Ojai. Upon graduating from high school in 1995, he enrolled at the college his parents had loved. And, after exploring other career paths in the years following his graduation, he came to realize that his abiding love for the intellectual life was too strong to play second fiddle to another profession.

Accordingly, Dr. Finley earned a master檚 degree in philosophy from the University of Dallas in 2003 and completed his doctorate in 2006, shortly before his first return to the College as a tutor. He taught for six happy years on the California campus, during which time he also married his wife, Hilary, and welcomed the first of the couple檚 three children. In 2012, however, he moved to St. Louis, looking to serve the Church by educating future priests at Kenrick-Glennon Seminary.

淪t. Louis is one of the few major cities in the U.S. that檚 Catholic in its history and heritage, Dr. Finley observes. 淭he seminary was great. It was orthodox; they have a focus on Aquinas and a whole class devoted to natural philosophy which was wonderful to teach, coming from here! For 10 years, he led seminarians through the mysteries of philosophy, but as their young family grew, Dr. and Mrs. Finley found themselves growing homesick for the West Coast.

淲e missed our families, especially in a place like St. Louis, where it檚 so multi-generational if you檙e a native, Dr. Finley explains. So, in 2022, the family returned to Southern California, where Dr. Finley had been hired to provide continued education for the staff and faculty at the Valor Institute. Although delighted to be back in his home state, he quickly became aware of another longing. 淚 realized, he says, 渉ow much I missed being in the classroom.

Now only three hours south of the College, rather than 2,000 miles east, Dr. Finley contacted his alma mater in early 2023 and was grateful to receive an invitation to rejoin the teaching faculty. 淔rom an outsider檚 perspective, the seminary and TAC seem very similar: They are both Catholic and they are both small, reflects Dr. Finley. 淏ut it really is the case that the students here come because they want to engage in the intellectual life. In the seminary, your students are well intentioned, and they know that philosophy is important, but you still have got to get them interested in it.

Teaching at 91快活林 Aquinas College once more, Dr. Finley has found abundant intellectual enthusiasm among his sections. 淚 had the opportunity to teach many of these texts during my time away from TAC, he says with a smile. 淭o be able to come back and do those in a Socratic setting is a real joy.