Harvard's
Chickens Come Home to Roost?
Harvard is taking flak. First, The
Harvard Crimson reported
that the median grade for undergraduates is an A-, with an A being the most
common grade awarded. Next, the Crimson's Sandra Korn, a humanities
student, wrote an article disparaging the "liberal obsession with
'academic freedom,'" for which she has received withering criticism.
Korn's critics are misdirecting much
of their ire. Hers is not an act of anti-intellectual rebellion. It is not
rebellion at all. She merely advocates what is taught in too many humanities
classes. And not only Harvard's.
Her "Doctrine of Academic Freedom" takes recent humanities scholarship to its logical limits,
asking, "If our university community opposes racism, sexism, and
heterosexism, why should we put up with research that counters our goals simply
in the name of 'academic freedom'?" In freedom's place, she offers
"academic justice," according to which "research promoting or
justifying oppression" should "not continue."
The resulting conflagration compels
us to reexamine academic freedom, whose justification looks to Socrates'
declaration that "the unexamined life is not worth living." The
deepest defense of free inquiry highlights it as the means to the highest
freedom of which humanity is capable -- the freedom of the mind. On this older
view, liberal education, as the term suggests, promises to liberate us from
unconscious bondage to conventional opinions, e.g. partisan politics and
ideology. Liberty at its peak, the "examined life," was therefore
viewed as identical with both the pursuit of truth and the good life.
Today, Socrates' quest for wisdom
has been replaced in too many humanities departments by dogmatic relativism, by
the certainty that all visions of the "good life" are rationally
groundless "values," or "commitments." Relativism's
defenders intend that their denial of absolute truth will produce a more
tolerant society -- not only open to, but celebrating, "diversity."
Judging no way of life better than any other, they argue, guarantees
"openness."
Initially, today's openness (what
Allan Bloom labels
the "openness of indifference") seems immune to intolerance of
anything. One might think that, in an "open" society, Harvard
professor Harvey Mansfield would be allowed to utter his out-of-season thoughts
freely. However, relativism is ultimately impotent when it comes to resisting
intolerance, because it destroys genuine, Socratic openness, which, Bloom
argues, "used to be the virtue that permitted us to seek the good by using
reason," but "now means accepting everything and denying reason's
power." Thus, today, "openness to closedness is what we teach."
Korn, who would "stop" Mansfield's "publishing," is the latest example
of the humanities' openness to closedness. Of course, few if any humanists
approve of her book-burning agenda. But is their decency justified by their
principles? When relativism toppled reason, "power" or will filled
the vacuum. Much of contemporary humanities scholarship seeks to
"unmask" the workings of power behind (illusory) claims to objective
knowledge. Past claims to "truth" are "deconstructed" to
expose their real role in perpetuating hegemonic oppression over race, class,
and gender relations. In contradictory fashion, they both deny absolute truth
and affirm the truth of the injustice of hegemony.
Hence Korn's challenge: If Harvard
"opposes racism, sexism, and heterosexism, why should we put up with
research that counters our goals simply in the name of 'academic
freedom'?" Will having replaced reason, the uncommitted life is not worth
living. How, then, can humanists, dependent on academic freedom, dissuade her
from her commitment to "unprivilege" it? Reminding her that
relativism intends to open her to competing opinions won't suffice, because
that same relativism has closed her -- and all credulous students -- to the
possibility of authoritative knowledge of the end -- the best life -- to which
academic freedom serves as means. Nor will introducing Korn to Plato's Apology
of Socrates move her to esteem Socratic openness, because Socrates, like
all thinkers up until recently, was less the truth-seeker and more the
power-servant.
In sum, according to today's
humanities, reason is impotent, objectivity a pretense, and race/class/gender
struggle the irreducible drivers of "all hitherto existing" history. Is it surprising that "free inquiry" now
appears an intolerable sham?
Mindful of this, and to its credit,
a Harvard humanities committee recently penned "Mapping the Future," addressing intolerance, at least in part --
"Mapping's" primary concern is students fleeing the humanities. Since
1966, completed humanities majors have fallen from 14 to 7 percent of degrees
nationally. In asking why, Harvard confesses to driving off independent-minded
students who perceive that faculty's overwhelming focus on uncovering the
power-serving agendas of past thinkers brings censorship of heterodox views
(read: political correctness). "Mapping" concedes, "We sometimes
alienate" humanities students who perceive "that some ideas are
unspeakable." "Mapping" urges faculty to "encourage real
debate rather than the answers ... we want to hear."
Well said, but will this message get
to students?
Critics doubt it, because
"Mapping" simultaneously embraces reason's fall and power's rise in
praising (as "immensely precious") the "most powerful"
humanities research of "the last thirty years," which "unmask[s]
the operations of power," exposing how "domination and imperialism underwrite
cultural production." Harvard, critics argue, wants to have its relativist
cake and eat its academic freedom, too. How can recommending "real
debate" be reconciled with praising humanists' "precious"
unmasking of the power-driven pretensions of past thinkers? After all, Korn
serves hemlock to academic freedom precisely because it allows scholarship
"promoting or justifying oppression." Obedient to humanities teaching
"over the last thirty years," she "unmasks the operations of
power" driving allegedly "objective" defenses of free inquiry.
Speaking justice to academic power, she pierces freedom's façade.
What to do? Given the esteem Harvard
enjoys among universities nationwide, we can hope it will continue and deepen
the indispensable conversation "Mapping" begins. To this end, rather
than worry over students fleeing the humanities, Harvard needs first to
confront the graver problem -- what happens to the minds of those humanities
students who stick around.
Thomas K. Lindsay directs the Center
for Higher Education at the Texas Public Policy Foundation and is editor of SeeThruEdu.com. He was deputy chairman of the National Endowment for the
Humanities under George W. Bush. He recently published Investigating American Democracy with Gary D. Glenn
(Oxford University Press).`
Poster’s comments:
1) I
went to Georgia Tech.
2) The Georgia Institute of Technology is a
good school to educate our young engineers. Our lives and even our business
success often depend on it.
3) I knew a Mechanical Engineer graduate from
Georgia Tech who stated that that degree was more difficult to achieve than her
MBA degree from Harvard.
4) A century ago, sending our children to the
Ivy League Schools made more sense than it does today. Said another way, there
are many good schools for educating our children that are more local in
nature. That idea even includes making
connections for future business and life in general.
5) It seems like too many present day
instructors at schools like Harvard are just living off the good reputations of
earlier good instructors. There was a time when an “Ivy League Education” meant
more than it does today. Said another way, my ancestors benefited during their
time.
6) What’s wrong with being ‘average’, which is
often pretty good these days. Now I even understand grade point inflation and
the reason for doing so, but at what cost to our new world USA society I also ask. After all, the selection process to even
attend an Ivy League School is pretty tough these days.
7) I have been a college professor, too. And I also
once ran a major hunting plantation (23,000 acres) where most of the hunters
were professionals, to include doctors, dentists, and college professors.
8) There is a big difference between educating
our children and indoctrinating our children. To me it is a “sacred”
responsibility to educate our children before they enter the decision making
stage of their own lives. Often our own business success depends on ideas just
like this principle. And often their decisions will be different than ours
decisions might be.
9) Most of my survival skills were learned
between the 6th grade and the 10th grade. Now the Marine
Corps and the sport of orienteering taught me a lot of skills, too. As to a college
education, most of my education is not well appreciated in the USA these days,
like a Masters in killing people in an organized way. I think I am OK using
that education, too.
10) Obviously, to me, I should not run for
public elected office in the USA these days. I have bigger fish to fry, so to
speak. Mostly it is oriented around just surviving.
11) Once in Olongapo, Philippines, I observed a
kid trying to rip the wrist watch off of a tourist. Well, the constabulary shot
him dead, the crowd applauded, the carcass was left on the ground, and all went
back to shopping, etc. Not quite like my
USA I would say. Now I did also say “yes sir” more often for a day or two in
that area.
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