Friday, November 4, 2016

364. Reversing the Great Shift in Higher Education


The shift within our universities, as I've explained in preceding posts, is from neutrality to advocacy, or, from a teleological view, from knowledge to goodness.  The enablers, as I will explain here, are Germans, scholars who were so expert and thorough that they captured the imagination of every young American scholar who in the nineteenth century came to them — and then, models of expertise and thoroughness, went home and captured the imagination of everybody building or expanding an American university.

In universities formed on that model the standard is competence within a field, with fields represented by departments — which, with the primacy of competence, might as well have been called compartments.  Examining, hiring, tenuring, promoting, and judging publications were pretty well walled off from the rest of the university.  If they weren't, there was constant pressure on administrators to treat them as if they were.

That compartmentalization, for all that it furthered the advancement of knowledge and the reputation of the university, hindered the solution of a recurring problem: bad department behavior — departments "getting away with things," as members of other departments might put it.

The correction of bad behavior depended, in the end, on the ability of the dean to break in and give orders.  Cease and desist.  That was never going to be easy, but when a department had a couple of Nobel winners, and had given the university a worldwide reputation, and enabled the university president to enjoy that reputation when he (male in those days) sat with other presidents, and solicited gifts from alumni, it was extremely hard.  So universities generally went along with the Germanic tide. 

Now we have departments sliding into advocacy of good causes — racial justice, gender equality, ethnic pride.  That's good behavior.  Good behavior out in the world, that is.  In a university it is bad, and we can't let any department get away with it.

So how do we deal with a famously good department?  With difficulty.  Its goodness is, in our Germanic university, sheltered behind the walls of expertise.  Who are you, inexpert dean, to tell us to change the way we teach?

Suppose the dean calls on a faculty council, maybe the faculty senate, for backup.  Have a debate, get this out in the open, lay the weight of its conclusion on the offending department.

I wish such a dean luck.  In the Germanic university the members of any university council will be too eager to get back to their research, the way you get ahead in a place like this, to give such a debate the time and energy it takes.  Besides, back the dean in this case and pretty soon he'll be on yours.  If he (or she) wants to spend time stiffing departments let him go after the ones hogging the budget and the grants.

If you remember a lingering pre-Germanic university the ease of correcting sheltered error there will occur to you.  It went with the ease of college-wide or university-wide debate.  Before my university became a research university it regularly held general-interest debates, with broad attendance and lively post mortems.  In the early days faculty preparation for them was so important that the library provided special rooms for it, the Philomathean and the Athenian.  It was the way you got ahead in a place like that.  It was also the way you, forced to defend your position, got tested and exposed.

Well, that would be one way to deal with our walled domains, going back to the grand debates of Greece and Rome that would force their lords to come out and defend themselves.  "Question: Is fiat lux the only acceptable fiat in a college of liberal arts?  Moderated by the chair of the philosophy department.  Open to audience participation."  A wonderful way, this Roman way, to solve our problem.  But we can't take it.  We're stuck in old, expert Germany and all we can do is find a way around, or through, the walls it built for us.

And there's a limit to the time we have.  If goodness advances very far into the upper administration knowledge will never have the defender it needs most, a clever and strong dean willing to fight for it.  Cleverness as seen maybe in a proposal to just have little debates, with a dean's agent sitting on promotion and tenure committees, on publication review panels, inside oral examinations, asking the old Socratic questions.  Strength as seen in backup by the provost and president.

The agents of the dean will have to be clever and strong too.  Clever enough to see that goodness never shows itself in universities in outright declaration but in tendencies, selection of subjects of study, questions asked, shadings of vocabulary.  Members of goodness-oriented departments can't be counted on to detect these things, or if they do, sound an alarm. 

Further, the agents will have to be clever enough to see through internal debate, and reject it, however lively it is, as a check on parochial standards.  There's nothing to prevent whole departments, even whole disciplines, from going wrong (that is, going good).  The frame for their debates will be wrong.

That's worth picturing, though those in closer touch will have to tell me how accurate the picture is.  I see in it a test of deans' agents beyond anything you'll find in the movies.  The agents come in politely.  They see debate, all the way up to the highest journals.  They see peer review.  They see a flourishing program, with graduates finding jobs, and newcomers demanding more courses, promising better jobs.  And right away they face a curtain of language.  "These unfamiliar words are needed in our special study.  It's a technical vocabulary," says their guide.  To a casual or unclever agent the department will be off the hook.  Nobody in a Germanic university can object to a technical vocabulary.  It's the mark of special competence. 

But to the conscientious agent from Greece it will be a challenge.  "Maybe so, but let's look into it."  She (we can make the agent female now) digs into the vocabulary in the way of Socrates — or Ockham or a linguistic philosopher or an Oxford tutor.  She may return to the dean saying, "Yes, it's technical."  But she may return saying, "No, it's not technical; it's a tendentious jargon that conceals failure to examine assumptions and first principles."

 I obviously see a high probability of the latter but those closer may not.  Though the reader will have to trust his or her own eyesight here, everybody should see that there's nothing in the Germanic university to keep departments from going this far.  If they do their internal debate, no matter how high it goes, loses weight.  As does peer review.  Reviewers question only inside their own frame, which itself has gone untested.  The great frame-questioner is Socrates, who questions anything, recognizes no walls, and requires answers in plain language.  No jargon-answers, as from sophists, will do.  Peer reviewers here are not peers of Socrates.

If the Socratic model is too distant for us we Americans may look to Emerson.  His ideal, Man Thinking, is exactly the Socratic inquirer.   The whole world of thought is his province.  Try to wall him off and you're just a "thinker."  No matter how great a German you are, how expert and thorough, you, you mere thinker, must bow to Man Thinking, and submit to his questions.

So there she is, the dean's agent, clever and brave, appearing in your committees, listening in on your oral examinations, going through your publications, sniffing out goodness.  A perfect example of a thought policeman.  But only to the inattentive.  She's a freedom-of-thought policeman.  If you're not curbing thought, requiring that it be correct in your own good way, you have nothing to fear.  Open your publications to general criticism, take on destructive critics, place yourselves in the larger arena, prepare your graduate students to fight there, and you have nothing to fear.

 But what, then, will happen to goodness?  Nothing, if it is known.  And only open test and trial will let us know it, the goodness that can defend itself.  "I cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary," said Milton, famously.  "That which purifies us is trial, and trial is by what is contrary."

Translate that classic of the academic enterprise — and of Western parliaments, and courts, and science — into advice for today's lovers of the good and you get, I think, something like this: "Knowledge comes first.  Here it's knowledge of the good. First you make sure you know the good.  If you believe that it can't defend itself you get out in the world and defend it, standing on the most reliable ground you can find, that determined by disinterested inquiry in universities."


You can see what will spoil this advice: professors, having assumed success in gaining knowledge of the good, pursuing it in universities.  That reduces their reliability and weakens the fight for good in the world.


No comments:

Post a Comment