Thomas Aquinas College Lectures & Talks
Thomas Aquinas College Lectures & Talks
Excellence in Catholic liberal education
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 11, 2026 • 4min
The Transcendentals
Original score for the YouTube limited series "The Mind and the Machine" a production of Thomas Aquinas College, original score composed by Richard Goforth, produced by Douglas Cummins and executive producers Chris Weinkopf and John Goyette.
Watch the series at ThomasAquinas.edu/Mind

Feb 11, 2026 • 3min
An Unknown Quantity
Original score for the YouTube limited series "The Mind and the Machine" a production of Thomas Aquinas College, original score composed by Richard Goforth, produced by Douglas Cummins and executive producers Chris Weinkopf and John Goyette.
Watch the series at ThomasAquinas.edu/Mind

Feb 5, 2026 • 1h 29min
AI Will Never Think — Thinking Requires Life - The Mind and the Machine, Episode 9
Why does Thomas Aquinas believe that thinking and understanding require life itself? And what does that imply about the limits of artificial intelligence?
In this ninth episode of The Mind and the Machine: Aquinas on AI, philosopher Dr. Michael Augros (Thomas Aquinas College) develops a causal explanation—rooted in Thomistic metaphysics—for why AI systems cannot truly perform cognitive acts such as thinking and understanding.
Building on the previous episode’s deductive arguments, this lecture goes deeper by asking why, in principle, cognition must belong only to living beings. Drawing on Aquinas’s philosophy of life, unity, immanent action, and cognition, the video argues that genuine thought cannot arise from machines because machines lack the kind of substantial unity and self-movement proper to living things.
This episode explores:
Aquinas’s definition of a living thing as a self-moving being
What it means for something to be “one being absolutely” rather than an aggregate
Why living beings possess a unity machines lack
The difference between immanent operations (like thinking) and transitive actions
Why cognition presupposes life, not mere computation
Why AI systems, even highly complex ones, are not genuine subjects of thought
Using examples from biology, metaphysics, and philosophy of mind, Dr. Augros shows that cognition is not something that can emerge from collections of parts acting together, but must belong to a single, unified, living subject.
This episode is a key installment in the series, connecting intelligence, life, and being, and preparing the ground for the final conclusions about why artificial intelligence can simulate thought without ever truly thinking.
Whether you’re interested in AI consciousness, philosophy of mind, metaphysics, neuroscience, ethics, theology, or the future of artificial intelligence, this lecture offers a deep and rigorous account of what it truly means to be a thinking being.

Feb 3, 2026 • 53min
“The Eucharist and Typology”
“The Eucharist and Typology,” the 2026 St. Thomas Day Lecture at Thomas Aquinas College, New England, by Dr. Matthew Levering

Feb 3, 2026 • 1h 6min
"Aquinas and Consequentialism"
"Aquinas and Consequentialism", a lecture given by Dr. Thomas Cavanaugh of the University of San Francisco, for Thomas Aquinas College on St. Thomas Day 2026.

Jan 29, 2026 • 45min
Why AI Will Never Truly Think - The Mind and the Machine: Episode 8
In this episode of The Mind and the Machine, philosopher Dr. Michael Augros explores what Thomas Aquinas can teach us about artificial intelligence, consciousness, and human thought.
Can AI truly think or understand, or does it merely simulate intelligence? Drawing on Aquinas’s philosophy of mind, Aristotle’s theory of cognition, and careful analysis of cognitive acts vs computational processes, this video examines whether machines can ever possess real understanding, awareness, or consciousness.
We investigate:
Whether thinking is fundamentally different from computation
Why sensation and understanding may require life itself
The difference between cognitive acts and mechanical processes
How medieval philosophy sheds new light on modern AI debates
This lecture is part of a 10-part series on artificial intelligence, philosophy, and the nature of mind, produced in collaboration with Thomas Aquinas College.
If you’re interested in AI ethics, philosophy of mind, consciousness, cognition, neuroscience, and classical philosophy, this series offers a rigorous and thought-provoking exploration of what it truly means to think.

Jan 22, 2026 • 1h 19min
The Gödel Problem: A Mathematical Argument Against AI Thought, The Mind and the Machine, Episode 7
The Gödel Problem: A Mathematical Argument Against AI Thought, The Mind and the Machine, Episode 7 by Thomas Aquinas College Lectures & Talks

Jan 15, 2026 • 1h 6min
Does Ai Understand? - Mind and Machine: Episode 6
Does Ai Understand? - Mind and Machine: Episode 6 by Thomas Aquinas College Lectures & Talks

Jan 8, 2026 • 51min
Does AI Understand? - Mind and Machine Episode 5
The discussion dives deep into whether AI can genuinely think and understand. Key points include the distinction between true cognitive acts and figurative language. The host critiques several arguments for AI's understanding, highlighting flaws in reasoning, ambiguity, and misinterpretations. It’s argued that AI's outputs don’t reflect true cognition, as they merely manipulate symbols without the essence of willful thought. The exploration raises important questions about the nature of intelligence and challenges Turing's assumptions.

Jan 6, 2026 • 1h 1min
“The Noble Due: Aquinas and Debitum Morale”
“The Noble Due: Aquinas and Debitum Morale,” a lecture by Rev. Patrick Carter, O.S.B. (’05), given at Thomas Aquinas College, New England, on November 21, 2025.


