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Peter Christian Vardy (born July 1945)[1] is a British theologian. The author or co-author of 18 books about religion and ethics, Vardy was vice-principal of Heythrop College, a Jesuit college in London, from 1999 to 2011.[2] He is known for the religious-studies conferences he runs in the UK for schools.[3][4]
Vardy was born to Mark Vardy[1] and Christa Lund Vardy; his mother was Danish.[5] He attended Charterhouse, an independent school in Godalming, Surrey.[1] In 1974 he married his first wife, Anne Vardy, née Moore; the couple had two sons and three daughters before divorcing in 2004.[1] Vardy remarried in 2009; he and his wife Charlotte, née Fowler, have one daughter.[6]
Vardy trained as a chartered accountant, becoming a fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants (FCA) in 1967.[1] He ran management-training sessions for the National Westminster Bank and Swiss Bank Corporation,[6] and was the chairman of H. Young Holdings plc from 1979–1983. At the age of 30, Vardy began to study theology, receiving a BA from the University of Southampton in 1979 and a PGCE (a teaching qualification) from the West Sussex Institute of Higher Education in 1980. He was awarded a master's degree in theology from King's College London in 1982,[1] and a PhD in theology in 1984, also from King's, for a thesis entitled The concept of eternity.[7]
Vardy taught philosophy of religion at King's College London and the Institute of Education.[8] He began lecturing at Heythrop College in 1986[5] and in 1999 became the vice-principal,[8] a position he held until his retirement in 2011.[9][10]
Whilst at Heythrop, he served on the University of London's Board of Theology (1990–1993).[6] Vardy served as President of the London Society for the Study of Religion from 1996 to 1998[6] and remained a member until at least 2007 when the Society celebrated its centenary.[11]
Vardy's primary academic interest is in the philosophy of Søren Kierkegaard, whose work he taught at Heythrop for 25 years.[5] From 1987 he organized annual dinners in London on the anniversary of Kierkegaard's death,[12][13] and in 1996 his book Kierkegaard was published,[13] later published as The SPCK Introduction to Kierkegaard.
Vardy served as chair of the governors of Shebbear College, a Methodist school in Devon.[14] He has also worked as a member of the Methodist Schools Committee,[15] and has been a keynote speaker at conferences in the field of education, including for UNESCO and UNHRC.[16] While at Heythrop, Vardy served as an editorial adviser for Dialogue,[17] a journal of religion and philosophy aimed at sixth-form students, and made a series of teaching videos through Dialogue Education.[18] He began running day conferences for sixth-form students in the mid 1990s and set up Wombat Education Ltd in 1998.[19] In 2002 he and Julie Arliss of Richard Huish College, Taunton, organized a conference there and several others around the UK.[3] In 2009 Vardy and his second wife, Charlotte Vardy, set up Candle Conferences Ltd,[20][21] and in 2012 Candle Education Ltd,[22] through which they run day conferences for schools.[23]
Since 2010 Vardy has campaigned against the introduction of the English Baccalaureate, which he argues has led to a decline in numbers taking religion studies.[24] He views philosophy of religion as an exercise in exploring the terms left undefined by theology (such as "God" and "soul") and encouraging humility.[25] Education is a way to help young people become fully human, in his view, or good in the Aristotelian sense.[26] He described the approach in his books "What is Truth?" (2001) and "Being Human" (2003), and in a paper, "Becoming Fully Human", for Dialogue Australasia in 2007.[27]
In 1999 Vardy worked as a consultant for an Australian school, Geelong Grammar School, in Geelong, Victoria.[28] Later he helped to set up the Dialogue Australasia Network,[29] promoting the "five strands" approach to religious studies in schools that he proposed at the inaugural conference of Dialogue Australasia Network in 1997.[30][31] This was implemented in a number of Australasian Independent Schools.[32] He also served as an editor and occasional author for the journal Dialogue Australasia.[27]
Vardy has served as an editorial adviser for BBC and Channel 4 documentaries,[33][34][34] has been interviewed by ABC Radio in Australia,[35] and has written for several publications, including Times Higher Education,[36] Eureka Street,[37] and The Age.[28] Vardy's Introduction to Kierkegaard was recommended in 2003 by the BBC Radio 4 Open Book's Reading Clinic.[38]
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