Ethics and Public Policy Center
About EPPC Contact EPPC Support EPPC My EPPC
  Find:    
Home News & Updates Conferences & Events Programs Publications Fellows & Scholars
Publications
Publication Series
Blog Posting
Books
Center Conversations
Event Transcripts
Speeches
The Catholic Difference
The Gathering Storm
Browse by:
- Author
- Title
- Date
- Type


Please fill out the form below to receive our e-mail newsletter.

Your E-mail Address:
Your Name (Optional):
Submit
Home  >  Publications  > 
Sandboxes and Seminar Rooms
By George Weigel
Posted: Wednesday, March 5, 2008


THE CATHOLIC DIFFERENCE

Publication Date: February 27, 2008

Driving through the Cleveland suburbs recently, I had a great life-imitates-art moment: a sign on Interstate 271 announcing two impending exits, one for "Harvard Rd." and the other for "Chagrin Blvd."

Bingo.

Please don't get me wrong. Some of my best friends went to Harvard; one of my best friends teaches at Harvard; I've even lectured at Harvard. But for too many undergraduates, four years on the Harvard road will likely lead to one form of chagrin or another. Why? Because Harvard College doesn't take undergraduate education seriously.

It will, of course, tell you that it does and point you toward the recently released Final Report of the Task Force on General Education, the result of years of labor by the Harvard faculty. One acute observer, himself a denizen of the academy, notes that as a result of that heavy-lifting, "we now have a useful, readable constitution for postmodern undergraduate education in America. The only problem is that it is a constitution for an intellectual and moral banana republic."

Too harsh? Try this, from the aforementioned report: "The aim of a liberal education is to unsettle assumptions, to defamiliarize the familiar, to reveal what is going on beneath and behind appearances, to disorient young people."

No doubt Socrates thought he was doing something vaguely akin to that. But Socrates "disoriented" young people with all of those probing questions in order to get them to grasp the truth of things. The basic assumption of the Harvard faculty report is that there is no truth-of-things; it's all "appearances," all the way down. And for this parents are paying more than a quarter of a million dollars?

No doubt there are honorable exceptions on the Harvard faculty -- teachers who believe that their responsibility is to introduce some of the brightest young people in the world to the riches of the intellectual life, understood as reason's quest for truths worth believing because they are, well, true. But for those members of the Harvard professoriate whose views dominated the Task Force on General Education, reason can't get at the universal truth of things, for there are no such universal truths.

The report says that one of the goals of a Harvard undergraduate education is to empower students to "choose for themselves what principles will guide them." But isn't the question of what those principles are important? Apparently not, if you're comfortably perched, with tenure, in the intellectual sandbox of postmodernism.

My general rule for parents who care is that, in the main, it's better to save the prestige American universities for your son's or daughter's graduate education. The undergraduate years are a privileged moment in which students should drink deeply from the wellsprings of western culture, while being formed into mature Christians who have integrated the life of faith with the life of the mind. Nothing does this better -- and nothing prepares students better for any professional career -- than a classic liberal arts education at a Catholic college or university that takes both learning and Catholicism seriously.

Parents and students looking for just that kind of intellectual, cultural and spiritual experience at the undergraduate level might well have a look at the Cardinal Newman Society's new publication, Choosing a Catholic College: What to Look For and Where to Find It.

As with any such guide, reasonable people can differ about some of the judgments made about the 22 schools profiled, or the selection (or omission) of certain schools; I, for one, would certainly add Providence College in Rhode Island to the list of schools-well-worth-considering. Overall, though, I found the book fair, judicious and chock-full of useful detail about every facet of life on the campuses studied.

Guides like this are gold and frankincense compared to rubbish like the annual U.S. News & World Report ratings. The colleges profiled are also signs of hope that the intellectual sandbox won't prevail -- which is no small thing. Nothing less that the future of the West is at stake in our continued ability to make rational arguments on behalf of freedom lived for excellence, freedom lived in truth, freedom fulfilled in goodness.

-- George Weigel is a senior fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C.

Support EPPC's Work

The work of the Ethics and Public Policy Center is made possible by the generosity of our donors. Please consider supporting EPPC. 

Religion and the Media
Faith Angle Conference -- Dec. 2007

Michael CromartieEPPC Vice President Michael Cromartie moderated a series of discussions in December at the biannual Faith Angle Conference sponsored by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life and held in Key West, Florida. Transcripts of  the informative talks are now available online.

 Religion and Secularism: The American Experience -- EPPC Senior Fellow Wilfred McClay, a distinguished professor of intellectual history, speaks on the historical relationship between religion and secularism in America and argues for a distinction between two types of secularism.

 The Religion Factor in the 2008 Election -- John Green, author of The Faith Factor: How Religion Influences American Elections, analyzes recent surveys and suggests that the line dividing more observant and less observant voters - so pronounced in the 2004 election - may be blurring.

 Religious Literacy: What Every American Should Know -- Stephen Prothero, chair of the Department of Religion at Boston University and the author of Religious Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know -- and Doesn't discusses the issue of religious illiteracy in the United States. 

Liberating the Limerick

God's plan made a hopeful beginning
But man spoiled his chances by sinning
We trust that the story
Will end in God's glory
But at present, the other side's winning
-- Oliver Wendell Holmes

In his new book Liberating the Limerick, EPPC Senior Scholar (and founding President) Ernest W. Lefever collects, and organizes by theme, 230 limericks that "reflect facets of truth and virtue wrapped in the garments of irony and caricature." Click here to read more.