|
|
BOOKS: What is a University For?
By Peter Berkowitz
Peter Berkowitz on Education’s End: Why Our Colleges and Universities Have Given Up on the Meaning of Life by Anthony T. Kronman
Anthony T. Kronman. Education’s End: Why Our Colleges and Universities Have Given Up on the Meaning of Life. Yale University Press. 320 pages. $27.50
For at least 20 years, since the publication in 1987 of Allan Bloom’s surprise bestseller The Closing of the American Mind, conservatives have seemed to own the critique of our universities and the
defense of liberal education. That progressives and left-liberals have largely
stood idly by as professors have politicized liberal education and as
universities have betrayed their obligation to furnish and refine students
’ minds is a sign of complacency, confusion, and complicity.
In part to overcome the complacency, confusion, and complicity, Anthony T. Kronman makes a powerful case for the
rededication of our colleges and universities, taking account of changed
circumstances, to their original mission. Kronman brings formidable credentials
to his task. Now Sterling Professor of Law at Yale Law School, he served as
dean of the Law School for ten years, until his second term ended in
2004. He is the author of The Lost Lawyer (Harvard University Press, 1993), which examines the traditional virtues and goods connected to a life in the
law and their demotion by the legal academy and corporate law practice. Before
that he published
Max Weber (Stanford University Press, 1983), a study of the legal dimensions of the great social scientist’s thought. He holds both a law degree and a Ph.D. in philosophy; he established
his scholarly name writing about the law of contracts; and, having made his
academic home for the past
30 years or so at Yale Law School, he could regularly be found offering ambitious
and unconventional classes with tempting titles such as
“The Tyranny of Reason” (a class I was fortunate to take as a law student in the late 80s). When he left the Dean’s office in 2004, Kronman took the remarkable step of choosing to teach freshmen in Yale’s great-books-based Directed Studies Program.
Kronman’s eloquent book does not disappoint. Although it barely notes the contributions
of Bloom, Roger Kimball, Dinesh D
’Souza, and many others, mostly conservatives, who have kept the argument alive,
it makes a substantial contribution in its own right to the important debate
about liberal education that they set in motion. The highlight of Kronman’s book is a compelling reconstruction of the moral and intellectual sources of
the culture of political correctness, coupled with an incisive analysis of the
severe damage political correctness has visited upon the humanities. To
properly appreciate the full power of Kronman
’s critique of political correctness, it is necessary to place it in the context
of his larger philosophical and historical argument.
Kronman begins with a question about a question: “Why did the question of what living is for disappear from the roster of
questions our colleges and universities address in a deliberate and disciplined
way?
” But before he undertakes to give an account of its disappearance from
university education, Kronman explains the question
’s importance.
The question of what living is for is not one that all people inevitably ask,
but it is always implicit in our lives. We cannot escape lesser questions:
Should I go to the ballgame or volunteer at the soup kitchen? How do I show
loyalty to my friends and respect for my parents? Should I marry for love or
for money or not marry at all? Should I accept or reject my faith
’s teachings about God’s commandments, or wrestle with some other faith, or embrace atheism? If we
press
— as we rarely do — even the humble questions we confront in our daily lives and follow the
argument where it leads, we eventually confront the question of the purpose and
value of life. Or, from a slightly different angle, we cannot avoid caring
about a multiplicity of goods
— our appearance, our jobs, our reputations, our beloveds, our friends and
family, our community and nation
— and establishing priorities among them. The inevitable effort to bring order to
the things we care about raises, though it does not compel us to answer, the
question of what we most care about and why
— or, again, what is living for? The all-important question, seemingly remote from
everyday life but implicated, whether we like it or not, in our routine choices
and decisions, can be dodged and ignored, ridiculed and denied, but its roots
in ordinary experience cannot be eradicated.
It was once thought that the aim of university education was to give students an
opportunity, after they had reached young adulthood but before they shouldered
the full array of adult responsibilities, to explore the purpose and value of
life. Within living memory,
many college and university teachers, especially in the humanities, believed
they had a responsibility to lead their students in an organized examination of
this question and felt confident in their authority to do so. They recognized
that each student
’s answer must be his or her own but believed that a disciplined survey of the
answers the great writers and artists of the past have given to it can be a
helpful aid to students in their personal encounter with the question of what
living is for
— indeed, an indispensable aid, without which they must face the question not
only alone but in disarray.
For at least 30 years, the humanities, that part of the university deputized to provide
instruction in the purpose and value of life, has abandoned this
responsibility. Humanities professors lost interest in the question of the good
life and lost confidence in the ability to provide authoritative guidance in
answering it, Kronman argues. He attributes this loss of interest and
confidence to two interrelated historical developments: the rise of the
research ideal in the last third of the nineteenth century and the ravages over
the past 30 years of political correctness.
For more than two centuries, from the founding of Harvard College in 1636 to the decades following the end of the Civil War, American colleges saw their
mission as providing instruction in the ends of human life. Since colleges
thought they knew what the best life was, and since instruction proceeded on
dogmatic assumptions grounded in Christian faith, Kronman calls this period
“the age of piety.” The curriculum derived from the “classicist tradition.” It was fixed from beginning to end and drew heavily on the Greek and Roman
authors. By the early part of the nineteenth century, colleges had introduced
into the curriculum astronomy, geology, chemistry, political economy, and
Enlightenment philosophy, but the spirit in which professors conducted their
courses remained steady. Faculty regarded themselves first and foremost as
teachers and saw no sharp separation between classroom studies and moral
education.
In the years following the end of the Civil War, a new understanding of higher
education took hold in the United States. Under the influence of the modern
German university, long-established American colleges and newly created
American universities alike increasingly embraced
“the research ideal.” Instead of putting the education of students at the center of the university’s mission, the research ideal gave pride of place to original scholarship and
the production of knowledge. This shift shook the intellectual underpinnings of
the classicist tradition. For the research ideal assumed that knowledge was
progressive, valued creativity over devotion to tradition and, through the
explosion in scholarship it set off, undermined the old belief that a single
individual could master the main areas of human learning. These changes,
combined with the growing sense in nineteenth-century America that the ends of
a human life were plural not singular and that reasonable people could differ
about the role of faith in a good human life, transformed higher education.
Faculty increasingly wished to teach courses and design curricula that
reflected their specialized research interests. And this desire fit
conveniently with the increasingly common belief that students were in the best
position to choose those among the proliferating variety of courses offered by
the university that best suited their interests and ambitions.
The advent of the research ideal put pressure on the study of the ends of human
life but did not banish it altogether. For almost
100 years, such study found refuge in the humanities. There it was protected, but
also revised, by another new ideal that emerged in the aftermath of the Civil
War. Kronman calls it
“secular humanism,” and his book is devoted to rescuing it. This ideal overlaps considerably with
Mill
’s high modern liberalism — and so will be familiar to readers of Isaiah Berlin’s writings on liberty — but in the end it owes most to Max Weber, particularly in the rigid strictures
Kronman advances about the unreasonableness of faith and the disenchantment of
the world.
Secular humanism, according to Kronman, rests on three assumptions. First, the
multiplicity of human ends
“is compatible with, indeed presupposes, the existence of a common human nature.” Second, this multiplicity is limited. History teaches that there are a number
of recurring patterns or types
— “the life of the warrior, for example, and of the thinker, the artist, the lover,
the scientist, the politician, the priest.
” And it is the task of the humanities to introduce students to these fundamental
alternatives through careful study of great works of history, literature, art,
and philosophy so that they will be in a better position to fashion for
themselves a life that reflects their own talents and aspirations. Third,
although the belief that human beings operated in a divinely ordered universe
could no longer serve as a common ground of inquiry, neither was it true that
people could create their own meanings out of whole cloth. Accordingly, secular
humanism
“emphasized our dependence on structures of value larger and more lasting than
those that any individual can create.
” And “it stressed the need for individuals to locate themselves within these
structures as a condition of their leading purposeful lives.
”
The “deeper truth,” Kronman insists, is that “the humanities destroyed themselves by abandoning secular humanism in favor of the research ideal, which for a century and a half now has been gaining ground.”
With these significant modifications in philosophical underpinnings, the
humanities carried on the classicist tradition
’s commitment to studying the ends of human life. Instead of presenting students
with a single right answer, the new humanities sought to acquaint students with
the variety of worthy answers. And for about
100 years they did so until humanities professors, weakened by the internalization
of the research ideal, succumbed to the culture of political correctness.
To be sure, “the turmoil of the 1960s and the resulting politicization of American academic life” proved a destructive force in higher education. Yet the “deeper truth,” Kronman insists, is that “the humanities destroyed themselves by abandoning secular humanism in favor of
the research ideal, which for a century and a half now has been gaining ground
as the principal arbiter of authority and prestige in American higher
education.
” Kronman is certainly persuasive that humanities professors’ embrace of the research ideal sapped their enthusiasm for guiding students’ inquiry into questions about the best life. But his own brilliant account in
the book
’s fourth chapter of the origins and effects of political correctness makes clear
that if the research ideal deflected humanities professors from their role in
keeping alive the ideal of secular humanism, political correctness nevertheless
dealt the ideal a crushing blow.
To conservative critics, political correctness is an unmitigated catastrophe. To progressives,
it is a vast exaggeration. To Kronman, it represents
“a new set of ideas” that arose in the 1970s, had roots in morally respectable convictions and intellectually respectable
opinions, and, taken to extremes by humanities professors, poisoned higher
education.
The new set of ideas comprises diversity, multiculturalism, and constructivism.
On the one hand,
“each draws its appeal from a feature it shares with secular humanism, which also
acknowledges the diversity of human values and the need to construct one
’s life by making a choice among them.” On the other hand, the culture of political correctness has done more than
throw the humanities into a state of crisis.
“They are in danger of becoming a laughingstock,” declares Kronman, “both within the academy and outside it. Looking to build a new home for
themselves, they have instead dug a hole and pitched themselves to its bottom.
”
Take, for example, the case of diversity. Commitment to it, Kronman points out,
is an outgrowth of the
1960s civil rights movement. Diversity acquired talismanic status in higher
education as a result of the Supreme Court
’s 1978 decision, Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, which held that universities could not use race in admissions in order to
correct for injustice
— slavery, Jim Crow, and persisting private racial prejudice. But universities
could use race as a factor, the Court suggested, to advance educational goals.
The Court highlighted diversity.
Although still motivated by a desire to advance social justice, proponents of
affirmative action quickly adopted the Court
’s diversity rationale, arguing anew for affirmative action on the grounds that
it improved the quality of higher education. Humanities professors in
particular
— but also, though Kronman doesn’t mention it, large numbers of law professors, whose discipline, after all,
comes closer than the other professions
’ to the humanities — avidly contended that African Americans, and eventually ethnic minorities and
women, brought distinctive experiences and perspectives to the classroom. Never
mind that such a contention justifies the presence at the university of blacks,
minorities, and women as an instrument for the education of others. Kronman
goes further, stressing that the diversity rationale denies the very
possibility of free inquiry to which secular humanism and liberal learning are
dedicated:
The belief that diversity is a pedagogical value starts with race and with the
claim that race is an important and appropriate criterion for the selection of
texts and teaching methods. By endorsing this claim the humanities helped to
strengthen the legal and political case for affirmative action. But their
enthusiastic affirmation of a deep connection between judgment and race
— the least mutable, perhaps, of all our characteristics — at the same time undermines the pursuit of the intellectual and moral freedom
which the humanities once made it their special business to promote. It
subjects the goal of self-criticism to tighter restrictions and makes
exhortations to reach it less credible. It strengthens the cynical and
despairing belief that we can never see the world from any point of view but
the one permanently fixed by our racial identities or escape the gravitational
pull of the interests and values these create.
The same dispiriting dynamic holds, he emphasizes, when the demand for diversity
focuses on ethnicity or sex.
Multiculturalism also begins with a respectable moral judgment and also ends at
war with genuine learning.
“Like the concept of diversity,” Kronman notes, “the idea of multiculturalism is motivated in significant part by political
concerns and functions as an instrument of corrective justice.
” Specifically, multiculturalism arises out of a sense of the injustices, real
and imagined, perpetrated by the West against non-Western cultures and
civilizations. The kernel of truth in multiculturalism is that an educated
person, and all the more now in the era of globalization, must study and
appreciate the achievements of non-Western cultures and civilizations. But it
is the stronger version of multiculturalism that is influential. According to
it,
“the ideas and institutions of the West, and the works that embody them, have no
more value than those of other, non-Western civilizations.
” This version is itself often motivated by, and occasionally slides into, the
still stronger view that liberal democracy in America is uniquely vulgar,
dangerous, and unjust.
The dominant version of multiculturalism, Kronman shows, misunderstands the
connection between education and tradition and promulgates warped opinions
about the culture of the West from which it springs and from which it derives
its moral appeal. Multiculturalism demands at least equal time in the classroom
for Western and non-Western civilization. However, humanities education
consists in large measure in studying the
“internally continuous conversation” in which great writers — Plato and Hobbes, Shakespeare and Machiavelli, Nietzsche and Socrates — debate the purpose and value of life. Of course, non-Western civilizations have
their internally continuous conversations. But the very condition for learning
about the faraway and foreign is understanding one
’s own situatedness, so it makes sense for our universities to begin with and
place at their core the conversation which constitutes the civilization of
which they are a part.
It makes sense for another reason. Contrary to the tenets of multiculturalism,
the moral and political principles of Western civilization have increasingly
and rightly come to be accepted as the proper basis for global civilization:
The ideals of individual freedom and toleration; of democratic government; of
respect for the rights of minorities and for human rights generally; a reliance
on markets as a mechanism for the organization of economic life and a
recognition of the need for markets to be regulated by a supervenient political
authority; a reliance, in the political realm, on the methods of bureaucratic
administration, with its formal division of functions and legal separation of
office from officeholder; an acceptance of the truths of modern science and the
ubiquitous employment of its technologial products: all these provide, in many parts of the world, the existing
foundations for political, social and economic life, and where they do not,
they are viewed as aspirational goals toward which everyone has the strongest
moral and material reasons to strive.
By rejecting these realities, multiculturalists have become the most authentic
reactionaries at our universities.
In treating the West as no better, and in many cases quite a bit worse, than
other civilizations, they also discredit themselves in students
’ eyes. For though Western civilization has committed its share of injustices,
students can
’t help but notice when they leave the classroom the priority of Western moral
and political principles in global civilization. Consequently, Kronman
observes,
“the classroom in which they are denied or disparaged is covered with a pall of
self-deception, of disingenuous pretense, and thereby loses its credibility as
a forum for the discussion of the deepest questions, which always demands the
greatest candor and the courage that candor allows.
”
Constructivism is the third pillar of political correctness. It, too, has a
modest and defensible version; namely, that perspective and the operations of
the human mind play a role in forming the intellectual frameworks through which
we understand. However, the extreme version, which has become a commonplace in
the humanities, proclaims that the world is a human artifact. And it emphasizes
that our moral and political principles are nothing but interpretations
constructed by our passions and interests and imposed on the world to achieve
control over events and over others. Like diversity and multiculturalism,
constructivism springs from and is intended to vindicate respectable moral
opinions
— that values are plural and that arbitrary authority is unjust. Indeed,
constructivism provides direct theoretical support for multiculturalism insofar
as it suggests that all moral and political principles are equally rooted in
the quest for domination.
But like multiculturalism and diversity, constructivism is an unstable idea.
Particularly in the crude form that contemporary humanities professors
champion, it subverts the study of history, literature, art, and philosophy by
extinguishing the freedom such study was meant to serve:
Constructivism condemns the idea of intrinsic value as a false “essentialism.” It derides the notion of a fixed set of perennial options for living. It mocks
the idea of a great conversation. It urges us to liberate ourselves from these
primitive and freedom-denying beliefs. But once we do, no limits remain on the
possibilities to be explored. The very idea of a limit becomes suspect and any
attempt to reimpose one is likely to seem an arbitrary exercise of brute power.
If constructivism is true, then no history, literature, art or philosophy is
worth studying because it all reflects false necessity and arbitrary power, all
the way down. And therefore, once again, nothing is true and everything is
permitted.
For all his criticism of the humanities, it is the successful part of the university,
according to Kronman, that is the cause of the deepest problems that afflict
contemporary America.
The natural sciences and, to a lesser but significant extent, the social
sciences are healthy, he says, deriving their confidence, prestige, and
authority from their genuine contribution to the advancement of knowledge and
the satisfaction of our desire to understand. However, following a path cleared
by Martin Heidegger, Kronman argues that the common identification of the
sciences with ever greater control of the world
— and the tremendous material prosperity that technological mastery has made
possible
— fosters the illusion that we can overcome all limits and causes forgetfulness
about those aspects of life that cannot be counted, measured or weighed. This
illusion, he maintains, pervades our secular civilization and has provoked a
spiritual crisis.
The rise of such diverse religious movements as evangelical Protestantism in
America and militant Islam worldwide, and the continuing global vitality of
Catholicism, represent, according to Kronman, a response to our civilization
’s “crisis in meaning.” These religions, Kronman emphasizes, rightly understand that we must recover an
appreciation of human limits and the grounds of human dignity. Thus,
they display a truer grasp of our predicament than is displayed by the “cosmopolitan observers, especially in our colleges and universities” who tend to view religious faith with “smugness,” “bemusement,” and “scorn.” But no religion can provide the answer we need, Kronman uncompromisingly
insists, because all religion is fundamentalist in the decisive sense that it
relies on beliefs it places beyond question. Our aim, therefore, should not be
to reestablish God
’s dominion but to restore our understanding of our own humanity. In the face of
this great challenge, Kronman dramatically proclaims that only our universities
can save us now.
Despite the grim picture he paints, Kronman concludes on an optimistic note. For
the humanities, he believes, are capable of restoring our appreciation of the
grandeur and the limits of the human condition. And it is not too late to
restore the humanities. Indeed,
“the prospects seem brighter at the present moment than even a decade ago.” This is because questions about the meaning of life are increasingly forced out
into the open by
“the rising tide of religious fundamentalism.” In addition, the culture of political correctness, Kronman judges, has become
stale and disreputable. And, as evidenced by the enthusiasm he has observed in
his students in the Directed Studies Program at Yale and which others have
observed in students at other universities offering core humanities programs,
young men and women, Kronman asserts, welcome the opportunity to explore the
treasures of history, literature, art, and philosophy with teachers capable of
lighting their way. What is needed, he counsels, is not the rejection of the
research ideal but to constrain its
“imperial sprawl,” which not a few professors in the humanities, he suspects, would greet as
liberation.
In fact, a great deal more will be needed than Kronman recognizes. For all of its virtues,
his philosophically sophisticated and historically grounded brief on behalf of
the humanities is not without its flaws. Attention to these flaws helps bring
into focus the daunting challenges to educating the university about its
mission.
Despite the grim picture he paints, Kronman concludes on an optimistic note. The humanities, he believes, are capable of restoring our appreciation of the grandeur and the limits of the human condition.
First, Kronman does not squarely confront the institutional obstacles to reform.
Currently, as his analysis implies, the criteria for hiring, promotion, and
tenure in the humanities and the incentives governing advancement in the
profession reflect an incoherent commingling of the research ideal and the
culture of political correctness. Until our universities alter the criteria and
provide effective incentives, they will not train professors interested in or
capable of teaching courses that introduce students to the conversation about
how to live well that constitutes Western literary and philosophical tradition.
Second, Kronman obscures one key consequence of the culture of political
correctness. Questions about the meaning of life have not been banished from
the humanities, as he suggests. It is more accurate to say that genuine inquiry
into the fundamental alternatives has been banished in favor of the
promulgation from lecterns and seminar tables of a single right answer. We have
entered, in other words, a new age of piety, but in this one our educators
present themselves as radically open to all human possibilities even as they
drastically curtail the domain of humane inquiry. In our new age of piety,
humanities professors often direct students to embrace an understanding of life
’s meaning that is cosmopolitan, in favor of greater government efforts to
redistribute wealth, pro-choice, pro-affirmative action, pro-same-sex marriage,
often anti-American, and generally indifferent to or disdainful of tradition
and religion. In other words, Kronman substantially understates the extent to
which classes in the humanities, far from abandoning the question of the
meaning of life, seek to indoctrinate students with a dogmatic and intolerant
progressivism.
Third, Kronman overlooks the contribution of the law schools, no small part of
the contemporary university, to reproducing the politically correct university.
Law schools are governed by the research ideal and have long been bastions of
political correctness, and their faculties have, for decades, been churning out
arguments and devising policies to advance the cause. Law schools inevitably
shape the sensibility of their students, many of whom go on to occupy positions
of power and influence in social and political life, including at our
universities.
Fourth, notwithstanding his acknowledgement that religion offers a deeper
insight into the contemporary
spiritual predicament than does our secular professoriate, Kronman inflammatorily characterizes all religions as
fundamentalist and dogmatically dismisses them all as ultimately wrongheaded.
Here he more or less faithfully follows Weber, but in so doing Kronman purports
to know what he cannot, is unfaithful to the pluralism and skepticism at the
heart of the ideal of secular humanism, and betrays the
“interpretive generosity” that he stresses must characterize humane studies.
Fifth, and subsuming the others, Kronman’s analysis of the university is insufficiently political in the broad sense.
This derives from his decision to understand universities and their mission
from the perspective of secular humanism rather than from that of the liberal
tradition and liberal education. Partly as a result, he does not recognize the
extent to which our universities and the liberal education to which they ought
to be devoted are products of liberal democracy and ought to serve liberal and
democratic ends. Fortunately, liberal education serves liberal and democratic
ends by remaining true to its highest ideals, which means, among other things,
protecting the classroom from politicization. Students must be free to read,
discuss, and write without pressure to conform to the party line. Liberal
education, however, is not closed to political thought. To the contrary, it
welcomes conservative as well as progressive points of view. From such an
education students learn lessons in toleration and moderation that will serve
them, and the liberal democracies of which they are citizens, well.
Accordingly, the restoration of liberal education should provide a common ground
on which conservatives and progressives of good will and understanding can come
together.
Peter Berkowitz is the Tad and Dianne
Taube Senior Fellow at Stanford’s
Hoover Institution and teaches at
George Mason University School of
Law. His writings are posted at
www.PeterBerkowitz.com.
|
QUICK LINKS:
EMAIL ALERT
CONTACT US
TOOLS:




|