By Thomas Sowell
Wednesday, April 1, 2015
An op-ed piece titled “Conservatives, Please Stop
Trashing the Liberal Arts” appeared last week in the Wall Street Journal. But
it is not conservatives who trashed the liberal arts.
Liberal professors have trashed the liberal arts, by
converting so many liberal-arts courses into indoctrination centers for
left-wing causes and fads, instead of courses where students learn how to weigh
conflicting views of the world for themselves. Now a professor of English, one
of the most fad-ridden of the liberal arts today, blames conservative critics
for the low esteem in which liberal arts are held.
Surely a professor of English cannot be unaware of how
English departments, especially, have become hotbeds of self-indulgent, trendy
fads such as trashing classic writings — using Shakespeare’s works as just
another ideological playground for romping through with the current mantra of
“race, class, and gender.”
Surely he cannot be unaware of the many farces of the
Modern Language Association that have made headlines. And when our English
professor uses a phrase such as “critical thinking,” he must be at least dimly
aware of how often those words have been perverted to mean uncritical
negativism toward traditional values and uncritical acceptance of glittering
catchwords of the Left, such as “diversity.”
Diversity of political ideas is not to be found on most
college campuses, where the range of ideas is usually from the moderate left to
the extreme left, and conservatives are rare as hen’s teeth among the faculty —
especially in English departments. Academics who go ballistic about an
“underrepresentation” of ethnic minorities in various other institutions are
blissfully blind to the underrepresentation of conservatives among the professors
they hire. On many campuses, students can go through all four years of college
without ever hearing a conservative vision of the world, even from a visiting
speaker.
The problem is not political, but educational. As John
Stuart Mill pointed out back in the 19th century, students must hear opposing
views from people who actually believe them, not as presented by people who
oppose them. In the 18th century, Edmund Burke warned against those who “teach
the humours of the professor, rather than the principles of the science.”
During my years on the lecture circuit, I liked to go
into college bookstores across the country and see how many of their courses
assigned The Federalist among the books students were to buy, as compared with
how many assigned the Communist Manifesto or other iconic writings on the left.
The Federalist is a classic, written by three of the men
who were among those who wrote the Constitution of the United States. It is a
book of profound thoughts, written in plain English, at a level aimed at the
ordinary citizen.
It might even be called The Constitution for Dummies.
There are Supreme Court justices who could benefit from reading it.
My survey of college bookstores across the country showed
the Communist Manifesto virtually everywhere, often required reading in
multiple courses — and The Federalist used virtually nowhere. Most college
students will get only the Left’s uncritical negativism toward the American
form of government, under the rubric of “critical thinking.”
The liberal arts in theory could indeed make valuable
contributions to the education of the young, as our English professor claims.
But the liberal arts in practice have in fact done the opposite, not just in
the United States but in other countries as well.
The history of the 20th century shows soft-subject
students and their professors among the biggest supporters of extremist
movements, both fascist and communist — the former in central and eastern
Europe before World War II and the latter in countries around the world, both
before and after that war.
Those who want the liberal arts to be what they were
supposed to be will have to profoundly change them from what they have become.
Doing that will undoubtedly provoke more denunciations of critics for
“trashing” the liberal arts by criticizing those who have in fact already
trashed the liberal arts in practice.
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