{"id":10290,"date":"2010-01-11T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2010-01-11T05:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/thenewatlantis.com\/publications\/the-technocratic-american-university"},"modified":"2020-09-26T14:06:26","modified_gmt":"2020-09-26T18:06:26","slug":"the-technocratic-american-university","status":"publish","type":"article","link":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/publications\/the-technocratic-american-university","title":{"rendered":"The Technocratic American University"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>D<\/span>ue to the emphasis the modern Enlightenment places on the popular dispensation of reason and the rational triumph over superstition, its primary advocates always afforded a central place to the university. Modernity\u2019s principles of science and politics, in particular its newly discovered science of politics, required enlisting the university as a weapon against a calcified tradition that was ripe for final and decisive replacement. The victory of human reason could only become complete when the traditional university, the bearer of a now-obsolete intellectual heritage, was transformed into an agent of philosophical liberation.<\/p>\n<p>Given the university\u2019s indispensability to the success of the Enlightenment project, and its remarkable revision in the image of modern principles, the problems and contradictions that plague the university today can provide an instructive portal into the failings of modernity as a whole. The modern university\u2019s mission to promote the rational autonomy of the individual is in tension with its charge to cultivate the virtues necessary for civic life. This conflict, between the rejection of philosophical authority and the concession to the need for moral authority, reflects modernity\u2019s sanguine optimism regarding the coincidence of intellectual and moral virtue. In this respect, both the university and the modern theory out of which it was born take quite literally Socrates\u2019 ironic identification of virtue with knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>The modern American university proves especially illuminating in this regard for two reasons. First, our universities are not merely dedicated to the popularization of the scientific worldview, but also to a specific regime: democracy. If democracy is the only regime that can be defended by unassisted human reason, then a university that promotes the unfettered exercise of scientific rationality also, by extension, promotes an attachment to democracy and the civic virtues and obligations that are the requisite conditions of its health. John Dewey argued that education should be wholeheartedly devoted to both democracy and the sciences; Dewey\u2019s progressive faith that the \u201ccure for the ailments of democracy is more democracy\u201d made him confident that \u201cwhatever changes may take place in existing democratic machinery\u201d in the future would only serve to \u201cmake the interest of the public a more supreme guide and criterion of governmental activity.\u201d His rosy assessment of democracy, a radical departure from the more critical analysis common in classical philosophy, has everything to do with the ascendancy of modern science and its enthusiastic reception. It is in this vein that Leo Strauss could <a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/gp\/product\/0226777138?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=0226777138\">once proclaim<\/a>: \u201cThe difference between the classics and us with regard to democracy consists exclusively in a different estimate of the virtues of technology.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>However \u2014 and this is the second reason for the special significance of the American university \u2014 America is only ambiguously devoted to modernity, having sprung as it were not only from modern philosophical science but also from the classical republicanism and Christian morality that modernity precipitously rejected. The Founders considered the emergence of the United States as a real world power dependent upon the creation of its own centers of higher learning. Washington, Jefferson, Madison, and others argued forcefully for the creation of a national university that would teach both classical republicanism and modern science, cultivating both rational independence and a moral devotion to the regime. This Enlightenment view of the popularization of reason \u2014 that traditional morality and the scientific view that undermines it can be taught in tandem free from contradiction \u2014 is the hallmark of the contemporary university. Our universities, like our nation as a whole, both embrace and resist the scientific ardor that diminishes those aspects of human life it fails to capture.<\/p>\n<p>It should be no surprise to us now that contentious disputes regarding the distance between our American ideals and the reality of American culture necessarily take the university as one of their primary points of departure. The university has become a mirror we use to scrutinize ourselves at our best and worst, reflecting the fidelity with which we approximate our founding principles. Depending on how one ultimately judges the American tradition, the university is either an instrument of its grateful conservation or its angry deconstruction.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-Z1hFxKA wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tAmerica, Technocratic Republic?\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>T<\/span>he Founders\u2019 frequent appeals to science and the laws of nature, as well as their appropriation of scientific vernacular to describe the essential premises of the founding, indicate that America was from the outset intended to be a kind of technocratic republic. In Federalist No. 1, Alexander Hamilton argued, somewhat hyperbolically, that the new republic was founded on the desire to replace \u201caccident and force\u201d with \u201creflection and choice\u201d as the ground of proper self-governance. While the phrase \u201caccident and force\u201d is evocative of tyranny, it is also aimed at the contingent character of rule by ancestral tradition \u2014 in a way, tradition is a tyranny of accidental circumstance. Even the discussion in the Federalist Papers of the United States as an <em>experiment<\/em> in self-governance borrows from the conceptual architecture of science, just as the central notion of the separation of powers seems vaguely modeled on an understanding of energy and force derived from physics. The sentiment, articulated by George Washington, that the \u201cfoundation of our empire was not laid in the gloomy age of ignorance and superstition\u201d but rather based on the \u201cresearches of the human mind\u201d is echoed throughout the Founders\u2019 writings. Similarly, Hamilton confessed that he was reluctant to mine the classical texts of antiquity for guidance, since their speculations could not draw from the \u201cgreat improvement\u201d exacted in modernity by the new \u201cscience of politics.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, the rational universality of the American republic was tempered by the concession that there was something historically particular and idiosyncratic about the circumstances of its birth; James Madison wrote that \u201cno other form would be reconcilable with the genius of the American people.\u201d And the formation of the nation was infused with a humble sense of man\u2019s insuperable moral and intellectual failings. Instead of the celebration of human reason characteristic of Enlightenment science, Madison endorsed less hubristic expectations \u201cas long as the reason of man continues fallible,\u201d and cautioned against the idea that the right bureaucratic contrivances could defeat the \u201cdepravity in mankind.\u201d He countered the scientific conceit that politics itself could be overcome through asymptotic progress with the realization that even the best form of government presumed an inexpugnable frailty at the heart of humanity: \u201cIf men were angels, no government would be necessary.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>If Madison is correct that \u201cthe latent causes of faction are &#8230; sown in the nature of man\u201d and that government is a \u201creflection on human nature,\u201d then any republic must take seriously the cultivation of the virtue necessary to counteract that depravity. John Adams considered civic virtue so central to the health of the American republic that he justified a strong, coercive role for the government regarding its promotion, advocating \u201csumptuary\u201d legislation that restricted excessive luxury, compulsory military service for the sake of engendering discipline and patriotism, and government-funded moral education. Adams\u2019s preoccupation with moral fortitude as the \u201cprinciple and foundation\u201d of any prosperous and secure republic is reminiscent of classical republicanism, hinting at the American nation\u2019s genealogical roots in ancient political morality.<\/p>\n<p>However, the apparent deference to classical republicanism can obscure more than it clarifies. While the Founders shared with the ancients a concern for virtue, their starting point was not a dependent, radically flawed though rational animal whose life was dominated by the burden of public duty but rather the independent, radically autonomous individual whose political life is centered on his inviolable sphere of private liberty. Following Locke, the Founders tended to begin by postulating equality and freedom; they often characterized the celebration of the noble life as unacceptably aristocratic, submission to authority as inconsistent with individual liberty, and deference to tradition as a surrendering of intellectual independence. The replacement of \u201caccident and force\u201d with \u201creflection and choice\u201d demands not that virtue is the elusive ground of the best regime but rather the reverse: that the best regime can be willfully productive of virtue through political and educational institutions. Thus, Adams seemed to believe that the general progress of scientific reason would generate similar innovations and accomplishments morally: The Constitution, he <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=XFJ3AAAAMAAJ&amp;lpg=PA423&amp;ots=CLWy_pJAFi&amp;dq=\">wrote in 1790<\/a>, was \u201cevidently founded in the expectation of the further progress and extraordinary degrees of virtue&#8230;. It is allowed that the present age is more enlightened than former ones.\u201d Likewise, it would not have struck many as strange in 1787 that, in a single speech, Noah Webster could inspire young students to \u201cunshackle your minds and act like independent beings\u201d and also implore them to use their \u201cwisdom and virtues\u201d in patriotic service to the republic.<\/p>\n<p>In contradistinction to Plato\u2019s view that democratic freedom has a tendency to undermine the requisite conditions for virtue, the American Founders argued that democratic forms armed with scientific reason would conduce to a general dispensation of it. Moreover, unlike Plato, who adhered to a strict division between civic and philosophic education, the Founders often understood the perfection of the latter as the guarantor of the former. Washington forcefully advocated the creation of a national university that would ensure that \u201cthe arts, Sciences and Belles lettres, could be taught in their fullest extent\u201d and that open-ended intellectual inquiry, even one dominated by the sciences, would produce the \u201cliberal knowledge which is necessary to qualify our citizens for the exigencies of public, as well as private life.\u201d Washington seemed confident that such a curriculum would not only generally inspire patriotic fervor but even that it would spark the \u201cassimilation of the principles, opinions and manners\u201d specific to Americans. The fullest consummation of the Enlightenment project is the inauguration of the new higher learning that seamlessly combines the theoretical and the practical, America as real nation and as democratic ideal.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-17B5qb wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tLockean Education and Rational Autonomy\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>A<\/span>lthough John Locke\u2019s theory of education tends to emphasize childhood development over university instruction, it is important to examine because of the indelible influence it had on early American pedagogic theorists, particularly Jefferson. In sharp contrast to the classical suspicion regarding the family\u2019s stewardship of a child\u2019s education (Plato famously abolished the family entirely to avoid its corrupting influence on the young), Locke demanded that parents function as the primary educational influence. While Lockean education, as described in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/gp\/product\/0872203344?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=0872203344\">Some Thoughts Concerning Education<\/a><\/em> (1693), certainly has a political end \u2014 the \u201cwelfare and prosperity of the nation so much depends on it\u201d \u2014 it is not entrusted to political maintenance and supervision; it is almost entirely the \u201cduty and concern of parents.\u201d The preference for the family over a school, public or private, is meant to avoid the herd mentality produced by the homogenizing effects of common institutions. In other words, the centrality of the family in Lockean education is dictated by the priority of liberty rather than an attraction to the family as the proper stage for the cultivation of our natural, social virtues.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, so singularly is Locke\u2019s view of education directed towards producing a reflexive contempt for authority that even the family is not spared aggressive critique. Parental authority is only \u201cbut a temporary one\u201d demanded by the vulnerability of a child in his youth, dispensed with once he achieves \u201cage and reason.\u201d Furthermore, while Locke assigns parents the obligations to \u201cpreserve, nourish, and educate\u201d their progeny, he also reduces the natural family to a nexus of self-interested contracts between husband and wife, parents and children. The ultimate goal of education, liberation from the tutelage of nature and authority by rational self-exertion, begins with the gradual liberation from the first of our natural tethers, the family. In short, Locke considers the family as an educationally valuable hurdle to be overcome.<\/p>\n<p>The central object of Lockean education, the rational control of nature, begins with the defective natural constitution that originally plagues all children, \u201ctheir natural wrong inclinations.\u201d So while Locke seems to follow the Aristotelian view that education requires the inculcation of proper habits of action, he denies that this is a perfection of their natural potential. While we certainly are guided by \u201cprinciples of actions,\u201d Locke writes in <em>An Essay Concerning Human Understanding<\/em> (1690), they are not moral principles but are found in appetites that if \u201cleft to their full swing &#8230; would carry men to the overturning of all morality.\u201d The advantage of any child\u2019s natural disposition is that it pines for liberty, but too easily that craving is overtaken by a concomitant desire for \u201cdominion,\u201d the \u201cfirst original of most vicious habits.\u201d The natural disorder of children expresses itself in the tyrannical will to power over others, and the conventional response of parents is to subdue this desire with the discipline of the traditional virtues.<\/p>\n<p>However, Locke counsels avoiding feckless appeals to duty, sacrifice, or God, instead suggesting that the only sure route is an appeal to desire \u2014 more specifically, an appeal to reward and punishment or pleasure and pain, the only objects that naturally arouse fear. In place of the classical teaching that emphasized the disciplined flourishing of our natural potential, the Lockean approach attempts to contravene nature, to overcome our natural infirmity through natural aversion. The \u201cmost powerful incentives,\u201d the only ones that count as the \u201ctrue restraint belonging to virtue,\u201d are \u201cesteem and disgrace.\u201d The natural desire to dominate others can be sublimated into a desire for honor or prestige, transforming the anti-sociability of natural tyranny into the sociable desire for reputation. Moreover, children can be taught to want to be esteemed for their reasonableness above all things, although at a young age they actually have very limited rational powers. Thus, the Lockean educational program honors children for their reasonableness long before they really are reasonable: children \u201clove to be treated as rational creatures sooner than is imagined\u201d and sooner than is warranted. The ultimate fruition of a pupil\u2019s schooling generates a paradox: he learns the gregarious desire to be honored for his rational self-sufficiency.<\/p>\n<p>Even more iconoclastic than Locke\u2019s view of the family is his virtual elimination of religious instruction. Locke was deeply worried about the impact a \u201cpromiscuous reading of the Scripture\u201d would have on impressionable minds, favoring its replacement by a catalogue of \u201cmoral rules\u201d and a \u201cgood history of the Bible.\u201d The problem of traditional Biblical study, according to Locke, is threefold: First, it replaces a rigorous rational scrutiny of all things with a credulous acceptance of miraculous and supernatural events. Second, it engenders a passive submission to paternalistic authority as our natural condition, rather than the natural freedom and equality of all rational beings. Finally, it preaches that a bountiful nature is the providential bequest of a personal and loving God, as opposed to the provider of \u201calmost worthless materials\u201d that only obtain value from the human labor that transforms them into something useful. The comprehensive human liberation Locke aims for requires the decisive repudiation of the Biblical description of the human condition. The authority of God, once taught, is much harder to unseat than the authority of a human father, whose imperfections diminish the respect he can demand, and whose flattery fans the flames of independence. The eternity of God creates a specter of authority recalcitrant to revision. We outgrow the necessary and gentle tyranny of our fathers to become fathers ourselves, but God is a constant reminder of our insuperable limitations.<\/p>\n<p>Locke\u2019s precipitous dismissal of religion anticipates its gradual expulsion from the modern university as little more than ancient and benighted prejudice. Furthermore, Locke\u2019s obsession with rational productivity is a clear precursor to the careerist turn the university would eventually take, becoming something more like a credentialing center than a place of higher learning; Locke disdained belletristic study long before it was fashionable to do so. The ultimate goal of education, for Locke, is the generation of businessmen and scientists. He says very little directly about civic or political virtues, since the real advancements in a free society are made by private citizens rather than public representatives. In fact, he says almost nothing about philosophic education. The passive and noble contemplation of eternity is exchanged for the active and productive transformation of the here-and-now world.<\/p>\n<p>Still, Locke is keenly aware that rational autonomy is not an unproblematic goal, and his enthusiasm for it is somewhat tempered by a recognition of the obstacles in its way. He begins with the family in part because it seems to be such an inveterate article of nature, the original stage for our impressionable experience of dependence, limitation, and legitimate authority. He sees education as crucial to the conquest of our given nature; he essentially wants children to be taught to pine for their father\u2019s station. The university today is far too homogenous and institutionalized for Locke to approve of it, and far more Platonic in that it sees its role as replacing the education of the parent and even remedying its ill effects. The American university aims at a kind of rational autonomy and sees an education in reason as identical to an education in morality; however, it no longer draws upon the reflections of those Enlightenment thinkers on the great tension between moral authority and rational self-sufficiency. Locke promoted the facile harmony between rational independence and moral dependence with so much success that modern higher education does not fathom that there ever was a tension in the first place, that reason and morality aren\u2019t simply identical, that rational freedom does not exhaust the whole of virtue. We are far more Lockean than even Locke was and far more confident that, with the university\u2019s expert assistance, we can happily complete the process of educative self-construction.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-Z2pvaue wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tJeffersonian Education in Natural Rights\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>T<\/span>homas Jefferson\u2019s understanding of education is indebted in many ways to Locke\u2019s. On one hand, Jefferson viewed education as a tool for the advancement of Enlightenment principles and so conceived of the university as devoted to the various branches of modern science, including modern political science. On the other hand, he also considered education, especially at the university level, as an indispensable organ for disseminating civic virtue. Jefferson exacerbates the Lockean problem of the tension between rational autonomy and authority by assigning a more explicitly political role to education and more institutional means for its achievement. For Jefferson, the paradoxical goal of education is to produce rational citizens who are both devoted to their country and zealously protective of their natural rights: they are patriotically attached to the state yet compulsively sensitive to its potential encroachments upon their liberty.<\/p>\n<p>For Jefferson, then, education is a certain kind of rational enlightenment that equips us against tyranny \u2014 the goal is to \u201cenable every man to judge for himself what will secure or endanger his freedom.\u201d Where Locke conceives of rational autonomy as an aggressive mastery of nature, Jefferson, despite his enthusiasm for the modern natural sciences, sees education as awakening a protective awareness of our natural moral condition, freedom and equality. While natural rights are individually held, they can only be reliably secured through collective action. \u201cLiberal education,\u201d as Jefferson wrote in his Bill for the More General Diffusion of Knowledge (1778), must teach men to be \u201cable to guard the sacred deposit of the rights and liberties of their fellow citizens.\u201d Instruction begins with an awareness of our moral inviolability as individuals and ends with the recognition of necessarily cooperative action.<\/p>\n<p>While Locke makes education an almost entirely private matter, Jefferson devoted himself to the creation of a \u201cnational\u201d university and advocated for state-subsidized elementary schools. The odd consequence is that, in Jefferson\u2019s vision, the government contributes to the defensive strength of the citizenry against its own authority: the task of government-sponsored education is to fortify the people against the potentially abusive tyranny of their representatives. The central tension within Jefferson\u2019s view of education between autonomy and authority is sharply expressed in the conflict between two apparently antagonistic goals: the cultivation of self-sufficiency for individuals, and a moral attachment to one\u2019s fellow citizens and the state. To an extraordinary degree, Jefferson wants to combine solitary suspicion and gregarious ardor \u2014 we must be both distrustful and loving of the same object.<\/p>\n<p>This tension can also be seen in the description Jefferson gives of the natural \u201cmoral sense\u201d that makes happiness, education, and political life all possible for human beings. He frequently defines this moral sense as the source of our basic sociability \u2014 we are fundamentally drawn to moral conduct \u201cbecause nature hath implanted in our breasts a love of others, a sense of duty to them, a moral instinct, in short, which prompts us irresistibly to feel and to succor their distresses\u201d (<a href=\"http:\/\/memory.loc.gov\/cgi-bin\/ampage?collId=mtj1&amp;fileName=mtj1page047.db&amp;recNum=512&amp;itemLink=\/ammem\/collections\/jefferson_papers\/mtjser1.html&amp;linkText=7&amp;tempFile=.\/temp\/~ammem_nVhm&amp;filecode=mtj&amp;next_filecode=mtj&amp;prev_filecode=mtj&amp;itemnum=12&amp;ndocs=10\">as he put it in an 1814 letter<\/a>). Contrary to Locke, who argued that whatever principles of action are innate to us are largely inconsistent with morality, Jefferson makes the natural moral sense the foundation of all moral and political life. Jefferson\u2019s account of real moral experience is also markedly less abstract than Locke\u2019s: Jefferson at least pays deference to the whole moral spectrum of obligation, sacrifice, and even love. He goes as far as to articulate moral life as premised not only upon the entitlements of defensive rights but the selfless devotion to others: self-love, the narrow concern for one\u2019s own, is \u201cthe antagonist of virtue.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Paradoxically, Jefferson paints the same moral sense in strikingly individualistic strokes. The moral sense accounts for our social bonds with others and the fashioning of community, but moral action is also a useful good for the actor. Jefferson goes as far to call \u201cutility\u201d the \u201cstandard and test of virtue\u201d rather than a good in itself. His conception of happiness as the ultimate goal of virtue is colored by a Stoic sense of self-sufficiency: true morality reveals, Jefferson argues in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/etext.virginia.edu\/toc\/modeng\/public\/JefVirg.html\">Notes on the State of Virginia<\/a><\/em> (1784), that happiness \u201cdoes not depend on the condition of life in which chance has placed [us], but is always the result of a good conscience, good health, occupation, and freedom in all just pursuits.\u201d In some of his writings, his lionization of self-sufficiency as the apex of virtue and happiness is self-encapsulating, as in <a href=\"http:\/\/memory.loc.gov\/cgi-bin\/ampage?collId=mtj1&amp;fileName=mtj1page006.db&amp;recNum=474&amp;itemLink=\/ammem\/collections\/jefferson_papers\/mtjser1.html&amp;linkText=7&amp;tempFile=.\/temp\/~ammem_8zSS&amp;filecode=mtj&amp;next_filecode=mtj&amp;prev_filecode=mtj&amp;itemnum=2&amp;ndocs=100\">this 1786 letter<\/a>: \u201cThe most effectual means of being secure against pain is to retire within ourselves, and to suffice for our own happiness. Those, which depend on ourselves, are the only pleasures a wise man will count on.\u201d Instead of an active participation in politics demanded by the small-scale republicanism Jefferson typically subscribes to, the consequence of genuine virtue would be the Epicurean tranquility and contemplative peace that comes with solitude. On other occasions, however, Jefferson seems to claim that the height of human happiness is captured by ceaseless industry or the avoidance of the indolence that so often issues from impractical contemplation and the arts.<\/p>\n<p>Jefferson\u2019s account of the university is dominated not only by the sciences but specifically the practical sciences to encourage a sense of rational independence and productivity. He generally permits for religious instruction, but a decidedly non-sectarian approach, one that treats its supernatural elements as didactic myth rather than genuine metaphysics, and only to be introduced into the curriculum after a student has been thoroughly steeped in scientific method. The university is also intended to promote patriotism and civic duty by disciplining the natural moral sense, to inspire a decent respect for art and culture, and to open up new theoretical vistas for those rare students of superior philosophic aptitude. Jefferson envisions the university as a conduit for transmitting Enlightenment liberation, but also a means for embracing one\u2019s political dependence \u2014 it must free us and bind us at the same time. He vehemently advocates for academic freedom for his professors but also argues that their teaching, especially on religious matters, be tightly controlled. Similarly, he extols the virtues of student liberty to engineer their own educational plan but also subjects them to the most austere discipline and supervision.<\/p>\n<p>While Jefferson is less impressed by the abstractions of Locke\u2019s account of a radically autonomous, detached individual, he struggles to base his educational program on a fuller account of human experience. He is far more attentive than Locke to that part of the human soul that is not entirely satisfied by either productivity or politics but sees recourse to religion as foreclosed by the modern repudiation of it. And unlike Locke, Jefferson distinguishes between civic, scientific, and philosophic education, but he is also pulled by the modern scientific tendency to reduce a manifold complexity of phenomena to an overly simplistic and monolithic account. While Jefferson could palpably sense the contours of human life that defy its reduction to a featureless scientific view, he finally succumbed to the narrative of Enlightenment victory as he could discover no scientifically legitimate theory to capture it. It is unsurprising that Jefferson read his own highly idiosyncratic political preferences into the university mission, an anticipation of the vulnerability our universities today have to aggressive politicization. Generally speaking, the schizophrenic character of the modern university, incoherently aimed at both moral collectivism and individual rational liberation, owes much to Jefferson\u2019s own irreconcilable tendencies and his finally fractured account of the human person.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-Z2rUCfk wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tHobbes and the Scientific University\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>U<\/span>nlike Locke and Jefferson, who both struggled to determine what role religion should play within the educational system, Thomas Hobbes was unblinkingly certain that its effects could only be pernicious. Hobbes argued that the universities of his day were pervasively corrupted by the influence of Christian Aristotelianism, which he derisively called \u201cAristotelity.\u201d Instead of struggling to reconcile the rarified heights of rational liberation with the advantages of traditional moral authority, Hobbes mocked religious virtue and ridiculed the conception of a univocal moral good espoused by the classical philosophers as \u201cbut a description of their own passions.\u201d Hobbes was unyieldingly enthusiastic about the success of modern science to render transparent the whole panoply of human affairs. In place of a sustained reflection on the tension between Enlightenment principles and the moral demands of political life, he announced (in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/dp\/0684842955?tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;camp=213381&amp;creative=390973&amp;linkCode=as4&amp;creativeASIN=0684842955&amp;adid=1HJ2FDGKWE8V8NG7FZMQ&amp;\">Leviathan<\/a><\/em>, 1651) the discovery of the one \u201ctrue moral philosophy\u201d whose superiority consists in its thoroughly scientific character.<\/p>\n<p>In place of Christian Aristotelianism, which Hobbes calls \u201crather a dream than science,\u201d he substitutes a radically materialistic metaphysics and mechanistic psychology that reinterprets political life through the prism of modern scientific doctrine. The superstitious postulation of \u201cinvisible spirits\u201d is replaced by empirically observable matter in motion. A rationally defensible account of political experience, one that has never before been available, should be modeled on the deductive and axiomatic structure of geometry: \u201cThe skill of making, and maintaining commonwealths, consisteth in certain rules, as doth arithmetic and geometry.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Hobbes\u2019s criticism of the scholastic university is not merely that it continued to function as the bearer of an intellectual tradition that had become obsolete, but rather that it should no longer understand its mission in terms of the transmission of any tradition at all. Hobbes can reconcile the devotion of the university to uncompromised reason and its devotion to the principles of the Enlightenment movement because the two are perfectly identical \u2014 the science of politics and the politics of science have been finally rendered theoretically compatible. One of his most fundamental criticisms of Christianity is that its staid interpretation of virtue tends to \u201clessen the dependence of subjects on the sovereign power of their country.\u201d Following Machiavelli and anticipating Rousseau, Hobbes complained that the prospects of worldly political success are diminished by the detouring of citizens\u2019 allegiances to other-worldly sources of authority.<\/p>\n<p>According to Barry Bercier in his insightful 2007 book <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/gp\/product\/1933859350?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=1933859350\">The Skies of Babylon<\/a><\/em>, the modern university largely owes its shape to Hobbes\u2019s radical critique of its medieval predecessor. Now purged of its Christian influence, its educational mission has entirely succumbed to the \u201cirresistible force\u201d of the Enlightenment. The despotism of the Church is traded for the Leviathan of the state, with the university as the principal tool for the popularization of its modern premises.<\/p>\n<p>Following Hobbes\u2019s lead, the university has been transmogrified into a center of Enlightenment science that rests upon the \u201cpresumed intellectual superiority of mathematical natural science over properly human understanding and judgment,\u201d Bercier writes. However, the \u201crelativistic methodology appropriate to the technological sciences\u201d is entirely inappropriate for comprehending the \u201cproperly human world,\u201d or the \u201cworld of persons.\u201d Bercier explains that the language of science, suited to the irreverent transformation of nature instead of its dispassionate comprehension, precludes access to those \u201crelationships named by our ancient and still whole and living speech,\u201d those pre-political ties that constitute the family, which is the \u201cseedbed and womb of our nature.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Liberated from the twin tutelage of heritage and nature, the university is now untethered in its zealous pursuit of social justice, understood as the achievement of equality and peace. Bercier artfully dissects the language of political correctness, the primary device for the application of \u201cmoral pressure\u201d in the service of these aims. In a chapter entitled \u201cThe Language of Anger,\u201d he argues that diversity, now accepted as the <em>summum<\/em><em> bonum<\/em> of our educational institutions, is really a febrile response to a caricature of the West as a \u201creactionary, repressive, and monolithic center.\u201d In order to impose the uniformity of thought that a moral re-education in diversity paradoxically requires, the university calls on the social sciences to transform every natural human relationship into an arbitrary construct that rests on a political misdistribution of power. As Bercier notes, \u201ca kind of synergy arises between the anger and the sciences as they are blended together into a single language.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Bercier seems to suggest that the ultimate problem of the modern university as an instrument of Enlightenment science is its goal of individual autonomy via the rational control of nature. This goal is at tension with itself: on one hand, it puts man in a posture of mastery toward nature; on the other, it shares the Lockean denigration of nature, <em>of which we are a part<\/em>, to worthless material for productive labor. Our elevation to mastery requires a debasement from our status as purposeful beings once understood as the peak of glorious creation. Those who follow Hobbes in remaking the university, Bercier writes, \u201cobliterate reference to what in us transcends any of our institutions and thereby block our access to the interior and substantive sources of freedom.\u201d Even our desire for mastery, much like our desire to \u201cexercise governance,\u201d Bercier writes, is evidence of our \u201cdesire for immortality achieved through works and deeds that endure in the world and in human memory.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>For all his rhetorical bombast, even Hobbes still evinced some sensitivity to the problem that obsession with scientific method would produce a shallow, denuded anthropology that trades a serious and deep appreciation of lived human experience for deductive rigor. Despite frequent claims that the categories of modern science exhaust the totality of human life, he conceded in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/gp\/product\/0199549702?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=0199549702\">The Elements of Law<\/a><\/em> (1640) that the formulation of scientific hypothesis was parasitic upon a reflection on prior experience. Hobbes also argued in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/dp\/0521437806?tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;camp=213381&amp;creative=390973&amp;linkCode=as4&amp;creativeASIN=0521437806&amp;adid=19NT7G5P5VRXVZRRAXZY&amp;\">De Cive<\/a><\/em> (1642) that unlike the axiomatic rules of physics, civil philosophy is \u201cgrounded on its own principles sufficiently known by experience.\u201d Hobbes denied Socratic political philosophy the status of science, but admitted that some kind of self-knowledge acquired through introspective reflection on the experience of our own passions and desires is absolutely necessary to political science. He was clearly aware that science does little to aid genuine and deep self-reflection, and even that such intense scrutiny of ourselves is \u201charder to learn than any language, or science.\u201d Unfortunately, Hobbes\u2019s most lasting bequest to the modern university is not this circumspect admission but rather the intemperate promotion of a scientific ideology that, in reducing man to his material parts, forecloses any such access to the self.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"lazyblock-section-break-Z2vTUWK wp-block-lazyblock-section-break\"><div class=\"block-tna-section-break mt-12 pt-2 mb-6\">\r\n  <div class=\"mb-12 pb-2 flex justify-center\">\r\n    <svg class=\"fill-current\" height=\"1\" width=\"91\" viewBox=\"0 0 91 1\">\r\n      <path d=\"M91 .5L62.706 1H28.447L0 .5 28.447 0h34.259L91 .5z\"\/>\r\n    <\/svg>\r\n  <\/div>\r\n\t<h5 class=\"leading-none font-callunasans font-bold text-center text-almost-black text-lg\">\r\n\t\tConservatives and the Technocratic University\t<\/h5>\r\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap\"><span>C<\/span>onservative commentators proffer two entirely reasonable but not obviously compatible criticisms of the modern university today. First, they admonish administrators and faculty alike for creating an intellectually oppressive environment; instead of inspiring an open exchange of ideas through Socratic inquiry, they impose speech codes, a stifling regime of political correctness, and a heavily politicized program of moral indoctrination designed to recruit students to the favorite causes of leftist activism. On the other hand, conservatives reprimand the same crowd for being excessively permissive, even libertine, when it comes to issues of morality, especially the realm of sexuality. Hyper-liberal universities today are simultaneously too restrictive and too indulgent, seamlessly if incoherently vacillating between the two extremes.<\/p>\n<p>The two criticisms only seem contradictory, though, when viewed in isolation from the modern university\u2019s historical context. Today, the university still claims to champion the perfection of reason, even if the idea of rational liberation, following the postmodern deconstruction of it, has been whittled down to the virtue of nonjudgmental tolerance. Moreover, the university still claims to function as the shepherd of young students\u2019 souls, although its latent Hobbesianism prevents it from using such old-fashioned and overly religious terminology. It still claims the moral authority of <em>in loco parentis<\/em>, going so far as to radically reform \u2014 rather than merely reinforce \u2014 the moral teaching provided by inexpert parents. Today\u2019s college administrators actually do break from their intellectual inheritance in no longer being haunted by a worrisome skepticism that their institutions are not properly suited to the tasks assigned to them, or that the tasks themselves are mutually exclusive.<\/p>\n<p>While conservative critiques chastise the university for its opposition to free and unimpaired philosophical exchange, they also censure it for no longer taking seriously its commitment to civic education \u2014 the task of inculcating not just the virtue necessary for democratic participation but also the patriotic attachment to the nation that is its precondition. In effect, conservatives are duplicating the Enlightenment tension between authority and rational liberation that generated the precipitous decline of the university in the first place. Essentially, conservatives want to combine the rational and erotic elements of the human soul but often without a clear idea of what this means. They instinctively and rightly understand that the disciplines have become disordered and disconnected, and that, in turn, the curricular requirements at even the best of institutions no longer abide by any unifying principle.<strong> <\/strong>However, they are no longer certain what could offer such a unity of either man or the disciplines that would serve him.<\/p>\n<p>Much of the conservative critique\u2019s confusion is a symptom of its intellectual debt to the most influential book written on the topic, Allan Bloom\u2019s <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/gp\/product\/0671657151?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=the-new-atlantis-20&amp;linkCode=xm2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creativeASIN=0671657151\">The Closing of the American Mind<\/a><\/em> (1987). For Bloom, the dampening of our erotic longings, or the woeful flattening of our souls, can be diagnosed in the symptomatic decay of university life and the crisis of confidence in its general mission. Where Bercier attempts to rescue the medieval Christian version of the university as a conduit of tradition, Bloom\u2019s objective is to defend the Socratic essence of the university against the effects of promiscuous egalitarianism. Despite his influence on the conservative critique of the university, Bloom\u2019s motivation cannot be considered truly conservative: the Socratic university, like Socratic philosophy, is radically detached from political and moral life and so a vehicle of liberation from tradition. For Bloom, the de-Christianization of the modern university would not be evidence of decline <em>per se<\/em> as long as it resulted in the triumph of the life of reason over faith. In Bloom\u2019s view, the only true community is the community of philosophers \u2014 which is tantamount to casting doubt on all real, historical communities, including the university itself.<\/p>\n<p>Classical political philosophy culminates in the view that the highest human wisdom is the recognition of one\u2019s ignorance concerning the good life, and therefore a life singularly devoted to the pursuit of this wisdom is the only life worth living. However, the life devoted to such a thoroughly theoretical pursuit is necessarily at the expense of our non-theoretical attachments, which become permanently subject to suspicion. The Socratic lionization of detached philosophic eros effectively produces the same dismissal of tradition as does the Cartesian version of hyperbolic doubt. Consider Bloom\u2019s statement to the effect that the life of the philosophers amounts to \u201cparticipating in essential being and &#8230; forgetting their accidental lives.\u201d Bloom extols philosophic eros and bemoans its absence from university life, but he de-eroticizes human life by disconnecting it from genuine moral and political obligation. Just as nature is only worthless material for rational manipulation in Enlightenment science, politics and morality provide the intrinsically meaningless experience that philosophy is to transcend.<\/p>\n<p>Bercier \u2014 who quotes that line of Bloom\u2019s in his own book \u2014 suggests that classical philosophy might collapse into nihilism alongside modern philosophy, if not in exactly the same manner. If modern philosophy sacrifices genuine transcendence to win individual autonomy, classical philosophy surrenders the meaningfulness of our lives for the sake of the unfettered transcendence that comprises the autonomy of philosophic life. Bercier further suggests that there is a real kinship between classical philosophy and multiculturalism: both rest upon a \u201cuniversality and abstraction\u201d that preclude the capacity to \u201cdiscern the <em>identity<\/em> of a person or body of persons.\u201d But, Bercier argues, \u201cpersonal or national or political identity\u201d are not universals that can just be abstracted away; they are \u201cessentially particular and singular,\u201d and the uniqueness of individual human life \u201celudes all science, both ancient and modern.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Bercier not only acknowledges the Christian beginning of the university as a historical fact but also argues that it should be the university\u2019s rightful source of purpose: Man, understood as that part of creation made in the image of God, is \u201cthe point of orientation by which the university should chart its course.\u201d Man becomes the rightful measure of the university precisely because his own imperfection demands political life for the stewardship of his social inclinations, while his likeness to God points to the transcendent good which limits political life itself; man understood in this way is the \u201chighest meaning of politics.\u201d This dual account of man \u2014 incorporating both the political and that which transcends politics \u2014 might suggest that the longstanding contradiction at the heart of the post-Enlightenment university is still present in Bercier\u2019s account of the purpose of the university: Does the university exist to \u201cchallenge students in the most serious and life-transforming ways\u201d or to \u201cpreserve, cultivate, and transmit Western civilization\u201d?<\/p>\n<p>However, Bercier resolves this seeming contradiction by arguing that the university is meant to preserve a <em>particular<\/em> human tradition and even foster attachment to it. In our case, the university \u201cshould be dedicated\u201d to the preservation of America itself and to engendering the \u201cresponsibility required to exercise governance.\u201d For Americans, a \u201csound education in American history must be the central concern of their education from beginning to end.\u201d (This stands in contrast, again, to Bloom. While Bloom certainly recognizes the grand significance of America \u2014 he calls our time \u201cthe American moment in world history\u201d and suggests that \u201cjust as in politics the responsibility of the fate of freedom in the world has devolved upon our regime, so the fate of philosophy in the world has devolved upon our universities\u201d \u2014 he nevertheless could not himself be dedicated to any regime except, like Socrates, one that recognized philosophers as kings. Bloom also seems to echo rather than correct a fundamental deficiency of the modern university: in the place of the respect and gratitude that serve as the requisite conditions for the rational scrutiny of our cultural inheritance, the university has adopted a version of Cartesian doubt that presumptuously equates tradition with obsolescence.)<\/p>\n<p>In defending the exceptionalism of the American regime, we defend both a particular regime and one founded in an understanding of universal human rights, the modern articulation of our equality as beings created in the image of God. To grasp man\u2019s simultaneous universality and particularity \u2014 his transcendence and his immanence, the \u201cright ordering of his nature and the right ordering of his community\u201d \u2014 a \u201csound science of man himself\u201d must become the \u201ckeystone of a university education,\u201d Bercier writes. Such a science of man can rehabilitate the university mission against the impersonal and inordinately universal character of both Socratic and modern Cartesian science. The unity of the university mission, which is in fact the original goal hidden within its modern transformation, is dependent upon the unity of man, or the devotion to his dignity as a full human person. Conservatives today should join with Bloom in lamenting the de-eroticization of the university\u2019s soul, but depart from Bloom by affirming an account of human eros that includes the whole spectrum of our soul\u2019s desires and obligations.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Due to the emphasis the modern Enlightenment places on the popular dispensation of reason and the rational triumph over superstition, its primary advocates always afforded a central place to the university. Modernity\u2019s principles of science and politics, in particular its newly discovered science of politics, required enlisting the university as a weapon against a calcified tradition that was ripe for final and decisive replacement. The victory of human reason could only become complete when the traditional university, the bearer of a now-obsolete intellectual heritage, was transformed into an agent of philosophical liberation. Given the university\u2019s indispensability to the success of&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"template":"","article_type":[13],"noteworthy_people":[],"topics":[2281],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article\/10290"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/article"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article\/10290\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=10290"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"article_type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/article_type?post=10290"},{"taxonomy":"noteworthy_people","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/noteworthy_people?post=10290"},{"taxonomy":"topics","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/topics?post=10290"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}