A liberal education
I wrote something three days ago that I realized later sounded anti-intellectual, and I am writing this in part to correct a misimpression left by that earlier post.
To begin with, there are certain kinds of reductionisms that only the highly educated are prone to fall into. For example, there is a crude Marxism that reduces the complexity of human social relations to a simplistic conflict model pitting oppressors against oppressed. Or a Freudian approach that traces all motivations to psycho-sexual dynamics. The average farmer or handyman is unlikely to buy into these -- unless, that is, he is deliberately subjected to "consciousness raising" by the Marxist, Freudian, &c. In this respect, the nonintellectual may be more attuned to the genuine complexity of human experience in a way that the ideologue, who is forced by her theory to suppress this experience, is not.
That said, education can and does open up vistas to the person pursuing it. This is not the sort of education that quickly narrows the focus, thus seeing the student concentrating so heavily on a single pursuit, e.g., engineering or quantum physics, that she loses the larger picture. It is an education that attempts to give students a sense of who they are and where they are situated within the flow of their civilization. Such an education aims truly to educate and not merely to train in some technical skill. Students who are broadly educated should be conversant in the works of the great philosophers, the literary giants, the great composers, the seminal scientists, the important theologians and so forth. They should have a sense of how the various academic disciplines interconnect and how similar issues are raised within a number of them. And, as Gideon Strauss would put it, they should learn to ask big questions.
My first semester as a university undergrad I took introductory courses in both psychology and philosophy. I remember the excitement I felt at noticing the relationships between the two fields. The readings in each course raised issues that were taken up in the other, albeit in a slightly different way. Thirty years later I can no longer recall why this was such a revelation to me. At the time I did not know I was heading towards an academic career. But in retrospect I think I was coming to understand the coherence of God's world and that this very coherence pointed to him as the principle of unity.
In the US in particular there are scores of christian liberal arts colleges and universities. The adjective christian is not just an add-on to the liberal arts. In fact, I am inclined to think that studying the liberal arts inevitably tends to point students beyond themselves and their studies to the principle of unity behind the disciplines. This is why I am so committed to what we are doing at Redeemer University College. Redeemer is an unique institution here in Canada for a variety of reasons. But when all is said and done, I venture to say that we are more likely than the provincial universities to produce the sorts of renaissance men and women that Mr. Greydanus writes about.
31 December 2003
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Followers
Blog Archive
-
▼
2003
(596)
-
▼
December
(75)
- A liberal education I wrote something three days ...
- Today's lesson: the governor general's duties Spe...
- American Kulturkampf? Read this article from The ...
- Canada's monarchy I wonder whether the owners of ...
- Pressure on for Cyprus settlement According to th...
- Course syllabuses on line This is mostly for the ...
- For ever loyal On the northeast corner of Aberdee...
- A reductionist renaissance man? Writing about fam...
- Turks and Greeks: why can't we just get along? Un...
- Severe case of mistaken identity This afternoon T...
- Conversion story This must surely be one of the m...
- A pro-life movie? Yesterday my wife and I went on...
- Terminated church continues The congregation of H...
- Nativity of our Lord Courtesy of Holy Transfigu...
- Pro-lifers to inherit the earth Given that pro-ch...
- A unique dream I wonder: am I the only person eve...
- Alarming Anglican development This sort of thing ...
- Lessons and carols Last evening our family attend...
- Christendom: the shifting centre Lest we think th...
- France, Turkey and headscarves This was fairly pr...
- Thoughts on procrastination Coming tomorrow. . . ...
- Shariya law in Canada: another perspective At the...
- New design for WTC site Here is the revised desig...
- La France chrétienne Ten years ago my sister, who...
- Headscarves, continued Here is Jacques Chirac def...
- Blasts from the past Robert Stanfield, the "best ...
- Liberté, égalité, fraternité pour tous, sauf. . . ...
- The law, marriage and sex Here is Jennifer Roback...
- Judicial overreach revisited yet againThe followin...
- No headscarves: More news from France Today Presi...
- Hope for Cyprus? There is a mood of uncertainty i...
- Russian elections, once more Here is an excellent...
- Headscarves controversial in France Incredibly, i...
- Too hasty judgement: the TRNC electoral system I ...
- A trustworthy face? Would you buy a used camel ...
- Stalemate due to electoral system Once again a co...
- A tie in the TRNC After a hard-fought election in...
- A day to celebrate Today is the birthday of my be...
- Crucial election Turkish Cypriots go to the polls...
- The latest from Iraq Saddam Hussein has been capt...
- A mixed legacy: evangelicalism's puritan roots
- Top ten political leaders For our student newspap...
- Hail to the chief Today Canada has a new prime mi...
- American evangelicals: looking for community in al...
- At long last Some six weeks after an initial abor...
- Cyprus and the EU The European Union is keeping a...
- Newbigin on liberation theology Some years ago on...
- Google (or Blog*Spot or AdSense) condones cheating...
- New Dooyeweerd website Dr. Glenn Friesen of Calga...
- Russian election results unfair? What? We are sh...
- Turkish Cypriot election There are only four days...
- The Swiss Christian Democrats Here is an article ...
- Today's lesson: Russian urban geographyLeningrad, ...
- Joe Clark: a tribute During a long and distinguis...
- Nightmare? Dream on Has the Conservative Party of...
- Russian election: preliminary results According t...
- The Psalms in ScotsAs heirs of the Calvinist Refor...
- Another book review Rich Greydanus has published ...
- Wilberforce Forum pushes psalm-singingWell, this i...
- Teaching at semester's end This is from Eddie Tho...
- End of an era Here is Don Martin's eulogy for the...
- Russia's 'managed' democracy Those in the Bush ad...
- Mistaken identity What does it say about me that ...
- A north Cyprus reverie For some time now I have h...
- Feminists discover mothering Today I received a p...
- Illness, at last After two and a half weeks of il...
- Catholic and protestant worship Our family had ho...
- David L. Schindler Our mini-conference last week ...
- Shariya law in the true north What? Could this b...
- Mother discovers blog I must admit to responding ...
- Bush and the Europeans Here is an insightful comm...
- Koyzis' law revisitedI don't know whether Peter Le...
- Evangelicalism and the academy Some days ago I wr...
- Faith and reason One of the sessions last thursda...
- Romanian folk music Although I know best the trad...
-
▼
December
(75)
No comments:
Post a Comment