You are here:   Academia > Universities Must Be Freed from Meddling
 

But the best reply is to say that universities become communities by way of their extra-curricular life as well as their formal work of education. This is the dimension of their being that will be most difficult to reproduce in the virtual and digital global "learning communities" of the future. 

Burke again: 

To be attached to the subdivision, to love the little platoon we belong to in society, is the first principle (the germ as it were) of public affections. It is the first link in the series by which we proceed towards a love to our country and to mankind. 

British universities matter and are to be cherished not least because they are little platoons, now recruited from across the world, that create local attachments which sow the seeds of public service and what Burke calls "love of mankind", for which another word is philanthropy.

View Full Article
 
Share/Save
 
 
 
 
eamonn harris
April 17th, 2012
9:04 PM
Despite a keen awareness of my own obvious limitations and your very eminent position, your inspiring essay prompts me to add a few remarks. We made space for slide rule and clip board management because too many all-rounders became degenerates who peopled and presided over debauched academies. They fostered slovenly habits of thought and cultivated the demotic. That disintegration was the result of poor leadership; a failure to inspire, to cherish talent and secure high standards. Yet the demand for more “qualified workers” was growing and the unions/associations clamoured for all graduate entry. The sector was to be expanded and improved. The elixir was “management by numbers”. A remedy that had the added merit of boosting the political ambition to promote more “ordinary” people. Thus from this present-moment-in-time, our quality was measured, controlled, assured and total, going –forward. Our masters bought the nostrums in the belief that they would sweep away the fusty gowns and infuse the thrust and rigour of business into academia. Clip boards and slide rules were present when some inspired leaders led their outfits to the heights, but it was the leadership that was decisive, the mechanics incidental. The habits of thought, quality of judgement, the care for language, the passion for quality have been steadily replaced by the lists, the scales, the benchmarks, the milestones and the acronyms. Sadly your argument , “The long-term future of the humanities is bright because the training in critical thinking provided by the humane disciplines” rests uncomfortably on an inference. Remember, ab posse ad esse non valet illatio. It is not enough to shout “stop meddling”, there needs to be a mechanism which points to success and praises it and points to mediocrity and condemns it. Oh dear! That’s elitism.

Post your comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.