Stopping Ourselves from Mattering Less

Stopping Ourselves from Mattering Less

Oh boy, was I wrong. “Who needs these humanities requirements?” I asked as a college student. I was going to be a scientist and wanted to place my attention on (what I thought was) my ultimate goal.

?Sure, I learned to appreciate the genius of Shakespeare and enjoyed the scrum in my political science classes. But I loaded up on the hard not the social sciences. I bought the promise that technology had the answers to everything. One couldn’t be a whole person without a rock solid background in math, chemistry, physics, biology.

?Whole person, huh? I said I was wrong, right? I’m not sure I can say it enough. I’ve come to hate mutual exclusivity and false equivalencies and yet, there I was. It took me years to figure out (with no small contribution from my wife) that interesting people, valuable people, are a package. We should have an appreciation – a facility, even – with a multitude of subjects spanning STEM subjects to the liberal arts.

?We need to know enough about both the humanities and science to be capable citizens. With the politicization of so many topics – vaccines, evolution, climate change, stem cells – a more roundly educated public is essential.

?We need to expect and demand more of our leaders, too. I wonder how many of them read books like David McCullough’s 1776 or John Adams that chronicled how the founding fathers built a nation on progressive values; Peter Watson’s Ideas with two million years worth of language, thought, and invention; Constantine’s Sword by James Carroll on the evolution of faith and systematized prejudice; Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of Time to make your head ache when contemplating the enormity of our universe, or Abe by David Reynolds to show us how personal evolution and compromise gave rise to one of our greatest presidents.

?Social media and cable news echo chambers have made it all too easy to receive what the algorithms are trained to feed us. We suffer from inertia, from a lack of curiosity, from what used to be the common practice of debating the issues (and not the facts). If the facts don’t fit the person’s worldview or “frame,” as the cognitive linguist George Lakoff termed it, the facts bounce off like bullets shot at Superman’s chest. Your opponent deflects all the data, swears on what they believe to be true, while you get blue in the face.

?But now comes the latest assault on holistic education. The New York Times recently reported that West Virginia’s “flagship school will no longer teach world languages or creative writing — a sign, its president says, of the future at many public universities.” What the WVU administration is calling a “transformation,” others are calling a “blood bath.” It’s frightening to think this could be the beginning of a very dangerous spiral.

?The questions of how to educate, what to teach, and with what money are not new. But this is different. We’re looking at institutional changes that could take years, generations to repair. If we’re not careful, if we don’t invest in expansive, accessible education, we will be less able to govern, less capable of informed, civil discourse, and less capable of maintaining our competitiveness on the world stage. The hollowing out of education, and the under-budgeting and the reversal of opportunity are as grave a threat as any facing our country.


Author of Camelot, Inc.: Leadership and Management Insights from King Arthur and the Round Table.

#education #STEM #history #humanities #liberalarts #investineducation #leadership

Andrew Cherriman

Regional Head of Operational Risk Oversight for Wells Fargo APAC

1 年

By the time you get to undergraduate level, you are an adult under most laws and so shouldn’t we trust those young adults to know what subjects they want to pursue into higher education? I was a pretty good computer science student with a real talent for spotting the bugs in other peoples code. It turns out that I was also a competent, if not inspirational writer, but I had zero aptitude for a foreign language, in fact I dropped french with the support of my parents and teachers at age 15 so I could focus on the things that I thought mattered. The result I graduated with a first class honors in computer science. If I had been forced to add humanities to my degree at that time it would simply have undermined the talents I did have and resulted in a lower grade. Forcing students to take subjects they don’t like undermines the outstanding mono-talented individuals and benefits the moderately good multi-talented individuals. We want both outstandingly deep narrow people along with broad shallow people in our society to get the best from it. That is why we are a society to work together using the talents of everybody to move us to a better place.

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Jeff Mangum

Principal at Mangum Media Training

1 年

You’ve provided some important insights here, Paul. Thanks. Another book for your list: “First Principles: What America's Founders Learned from the Greeks and Romans and How That Shaped Our Country” by Thomas E. Ricks.

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