By Michael Brendan Dougherty
Wednesday, April 03, 2024
Colleges are the closest thing we have to
progressive societies fully realized, and they increasingly exist as ends unto
themselves. The decline of conservative representation among the
professoriate is a decades-long phenomenon and has reached its terminus. Like
medieval monasteries, progressive universities take it upon themselves to
create an image of the perfect society and bring through themselves the
blessings and moral transformation that will redeem the rest of the world. Many
of them now invest more resources in managing student life than in educating
young people and forming them to take up leadership roles in society, which was
their original purpose. Johns Hopkins has 7.5 administrators for every
professor. Yale has 5,000 managerial and professional staff even though it
enrolled only 4,703 undergraduate students in a recent academic year. Every
potential problem a student may have is met by not only a counselor but an
entire bureaucracy. It’s as if the progressive blob wishes students to expect
enormous and lavish bureaucracies to manage social interaction as a way of
life, so that, when students leave campus, they recreate such authorities
through human-resources departments and DEI offices in the corporate world, in
the civic space, or in noncollege education.
So what does it say that, even with the enormous legal
and financial preferments for their existence and success, these progressive
utopias are dying faster than the society around them? College enrollment
peaked and started to decline a decade ago. There was a variety of causes.
Students were more skeptical about the value of college after the financial
collapse and as tuition continued to soar above the general rate of inflation.
The pandemic drove down enrollment even more. And now a bureaucratic snafu —
the botched rollout of new federal financial-aid forms —
is likely to kick off another plunge as students cannot figure out where they
can afford to go. This story won’t end anytime soon. The population of
college-aged students has begun to shrink in real terms as America settles in
its long demographic slide toward where Japan is today (where a diaper-maker
recently abandoned the infant market to focus on seniors).
On one level, the shrinking of the college sector is not
to be mourned. The colleges in the very bottom tier, and many night-and-weekend
programs led by more established universities, are plainly predatory
operations. They do a poor job at education and social advancement. They may
advertise using outdated statistics about college graduates earning $1 million
more than nongraduates. They maintain abysmal five-year-completion rates, often
below 35 percent. Students are recruited from the ranks of low-five-figure
service workers. Federal mandates enable these students to be loaded up with
debt, which then finances the ranks of mediocre six-figure professors and
administrators who return to service jobs. Good riddance.
But there is something else at work. Is it possible that
colleges are dying because the intellectual well on which they rely for
sustenance has been poisoned? When radicals made their great march through the
institutions — bringing with them theories from postmodernists such as Michel
Foucault and deconstructionists such as Louis Althusser and Gilles Deleuze —
entire fields and the institution itself came to be run by people who believe
not in truths to be discovered by intellection but “regimes of truth” that
disguise the naked and selfish exercise of power.
This kind of conspiratorial worldview not only robs
intellectual pursuit of its noble purposes, it also demoralizes its adherents
in every sense of the word. It banishes hope and undermines moral agency. Worst
of all, by holding that all political ideals are mere cover stories, it
licenses everyone to act always in his self-interest or set aside ethics
whenever doing so would be advantageous. In other words, academia has
surrendered to a profound cynicism that leads to its intellectual and moral
corruption. In this world, it’s no surprise that we find serial intellectual
fraud, and even blatant acts of plagiarism, among so many senior academics. The
worldview they preach would predict as much, not as a consequence of fallen human
nature but as the ineluctable outworking of an inveterate and incurable
selfishness.
We are likely underrating how corrosive this intellectual
cynicism has been to knowledge work and to our civilization as a whole. It’s
not a surprise that colleges are dying when their constituents are essentially
devouring their moral and intellectual resources for themselves rather than
replenishing them for the future. Students know that higher education is a
racket — even a knowing racket, just as the rest of our society now expects
most intellectual discourse to be — nothing more than propaganda and demagogic
manipulation.
The idea of the university has been hollowed out, and
with it the primary formative institution of our elites has been corrupted and
made unfit for purpose. We are left to wait for radical reform, reformation, or
revolution — maybe a bit of all three.
No comments:
Post a Comment