C. Terry Warner

C. Terry Warner is an American academic, author and business consultant. He wrote the book Bonds That Make Us Free and founded the Arbinger Institute which does consulting and training based on his academic work on the foundations of human behavior and self-deception. In writings and seminars, Warner argues that we are responsible for our own actions and even negative emotions which we often use to accuse others rather than responding to their needs. We therefore have the power to free our relationships with others from negativity.

Warner holds a Ph.D. from Yale University and is a professor emeritus of philosophy at Brigham Young University.[1] In 1967 he joined the faculty at Brigham Young University, where he served as chair of the Philosophy Department, director of the Honors Program, and dean of the College of General Studies.[2] He was a visiting senior member of Linacre College, Oxford University.

Bonds that Make Us Free

Warner's book Bonds that Make Us Free: Healing Our Relationships, Coming to Ourselves is a self-help book that focuses on repairing damaged relationships and finding joy. In a review in Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, Tom Milholland says that Warner "uses an amazing blend of philosophy, theology, and psychology to provide insight and solutions..."[3] The key concept underlying the book is faith-based—"to do exactly what we sense is right toward all living creatures, including God...pursuing a life of goodness." (p. 319) Warner says that individuals must reconcile conflicts between their beliefs and their actions to find peace within themselves and reconciliation with others.[3] When people respond openly to the needs of others, rather than justifying their own position, these new bonds make them free.


The Education in Zion Project

Dr. Warner was the founding curator and exhibit director of the Education in Zion Gallery at Brigham Young University until he retired in 2009. The permanent exhibition, Education in Zion, tells the history of education in the LDS Church, beginning with the spiritual and secular education of Joseph Smith, and continuing through the foundation of educational institutions throughout Church's Kirtland and Nauvoo years, its migration to the Mountain West, and its ultimate worldwide expansion.

The gallery also has rotating exhibitions. The current staff works with various departments and professors on campus to integrate topics and materials that can be used across campus by multiple disciplines.

The exhibition opened in the summer of 2008 and is in the Joseph F. Smith Building on Brigham Young University campus. For more information on the gallery, visit educationinzion.byu.edu.

Publications

References

  1. Philosophy Faculty.
  2. Bergin, 2002
  3. 1 2 Tom Milholland (2004), "Review," Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, Vol. 30, No. 2, p. 248.

External links

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