Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Hibbs on the state of universities
Thomas Hibbs is a Catholic, a philosopher, and the dean of Baylor University's Honors College. Here is a provocative opinion piece by him, about the state of our universities. A taste:
In his classic statement The Idea of the University, John Henry Newman argues that liberal education can be justified only if "knowledge is capable of being its own end." Although Newman defended professional training, he argued forcefully that universities ought to develop in students a philosophical habit of mind, a habit of wonder and an ability to trace the relationships among different parts of knowledge. One of the reasons for the inclusion of all branches of knowledge in the university curriculum is that even though students "cannot pursue every subject, they will still gain from living among those who represent the whole circle."
There are manifold obstacles to realizing Newman's idea in today's university. Given the increasing emphasis on specialization in faculty research, few if any faculty can be said even to approximate representing the "whole circle." And of course students do not "live among" the faculty anyhow. The shared libertarianism of faculty and students results in a diminishing number of contact hours between students and faculty, and even between faculty, who rarely know colleagues outside their departments.
Specialization breeds an inevitable individualism and elevates narrow expertise over breadth of learning. Clearly a university cannot do without rigorous, specialized knowledge in its faculty. The challenge Mr. Lewis and others pose is whether universities can create incentives to balance focus with breadth.
This would entail another sense of liberalism. Such a liberality or generosity of spirit would revive a proper appreciation of amateurism – not in the sense of an absence of serious training but in the etymological meaning of the word "amateur," from the French for "lover."
A thought: It is a mistake to ask and fret about whether a university can remain, or become, "great" if it insists on remaining, or becoming, "Catholic." The real question is, can a university be great -- really -- if it is not -- really -- "Catholic"?
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2006/08/hibbs_on_the_st.html