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Where Have All the Big Questions Gone?

Some months ago I started asking friends, colleagues from my teaching days, researchers in higher education, faculty members of various ages and ranks, deans, provosts and presidents, and focus groups of students: “What’s the status of the Big Questions on your campus?” Quite deliberately I avoided defining “Big Questions,” but I gave as examples such questions as “Who am I? Where do I come from? What am I going to do with my life? What are my values? Is there such a thing as evil? What does it mean to be human? How can I understand suffering and death? What obligations do I have to other people? What does it mean to be a citizen in a democracy? What makes work, or a life, meaningful and satisfying?” In other words, I wanted to know what was happening to questions of meaning and value that traditionally have been close to the heart of a liberal education.

Some of what I found puzzled me. People pointed out quite properly that some Big Questions were alive and well in academia today. These included some questions about the origin of the universe, the emergence of life, the nature of consciousness, and others that have been raised by the scientific breakthroughs of the past few decades.

In the humanities and related social sciences the situation was rather different. Some friends reminded me that, not all big questions were in eclipse. Over the past generation faculty members have paid great attention to questions of racial, ethnicity, gender and sexual identity. Curricular structures, professional patterns, etc. continue to be transformed by this set of questions. Professors, as well as students, care about these questions, and as a result, write, teach and learn with passion about them.

But there was wide agreement that other big questions, the ones about meaning, value, moral and civic responsibility, were in eclipse. To be sure, some individual faculty members addressed them, and when they did, students responded powerfully. In fact, in a recent Teagle-sponsored meeting on a related topic, participants kept using words such as “hungry,” “thirsty,” and “parched” to describe students’ eagerness to find ways in the curriculum, or outside it, to address these questions. But the old curricular structures that put these questions front and center have over the years often faded or been dismantled, including core curricula, great books programs, surveys “from Plato to NATO,” and general education requirements of various sorts. Only rarely have new structures emerged to replace them.

I am puzzled why. To be sure, these Big Questions are hot potatoes. Sensitivities are high. And faculty members always have the excuse that they have other more pressing things to do. Over two years ago, in an article entitled “Aim Low,” Stanley Fish attacked some of the gurus of higher education (notably, Ernest Boyer) and their insistence that college education should “go beyond the developing of intellectual and technical skills and … mastery of a scholarly domain. It should include the competence to act in the world and the judgment to do so wisely” (Chronicle of Higher Education, May 16 2003). Fish hasn’t been the only one to point out that calls to “fashion” moral and civic-minded citizens, or to “go beyond” academic competency assume that students now routinely achieve such mastery of intellectual and scholarly skills. We all know that’s far from the case.

Minimalist approaches — ones that limit teaching to what another friend calls “sectoral knowledge — are alluring. But if you are committed to a liberal education, it’s hard just to aim low and leave it at that. The fact that American university students need to develop basic competencies provides an excuse, not a reason, for avoiding the Big Questions. Students also need to be challenged, provoked, and helped to explore the issues they will inevitable face as citizens and as individuals. Why have we been so reluctant to develop the structures, in the curriculum or beyond it, that provide students with the intellectual tools they need to grapple thoughtfully over the course of a lifetime with these questions?

I see four possible reasons:

1. Faculty members are scared away by the straw man Stanley Fish and others have set up. Despite accusations of liberal bias and “brainwashing” no faculty member I know wants to “mold,” “fashion” or “proselytize” students. But that’s not what exploring the Big Questions is all about. Along with all the paraphernalia college students bring with them these days are Big Questions, often poorly formulated and approached with no clue that anyone in the history of humankind has ever had anything useful to say about any of them. There’s no need to answer those questions for students, or to try to fashion them into noble people or virtuous citizens for the republic. There is, however, every reason to help students develop the vocabularies, the metaphors, the exempla, the historical perspective, the patterns of analysis and argument that let them over time answer them for themselves.

2. A second possible reason is that faculty are put off by the feeling they are not “experts” in these matters. In a culture that quite properly values professional expertise, forays beyond one’s field of competence are understandably suspect. But one does not have to be a moral philosopher to raise the Big Questions and show some of the ways smart people in the past have struggled with them. I won’t pontificate about other fields, but in my own field — classics and ancient history — the Big Questions come bubbling up between the floor boards of any text I have ever taught. I don’t have to be a specialist in philosophy or political science to see that Thucydides has something to say about power and morality, or the Odyssey about being a father and a husband. A classicist’s job, as I see it, is to challenge students to think about what’s implicit in a text, help them make it explicit and use that understanding to think with.

3. Or is it that engaging with these “Big Questions” or anything resembling them is the third rail of a professional career. Senior colleagues don’t encourage it; professional journals don’t publish it; deans don’t reward it and a half dozen disgruntled students might sink your tenure case with their teaching evaluations. You learn early on in an academic career not to touch the third rail. If this is right, do we need to rewire the whole reward system of academia?

4. Or, is a former student of mine, now teaching at a fine women’s college, correct when she says that on her campus “It tends to be that … those who talk about morality and the big questions come from such an entrenched far right position … that the rest of us … run for cover.”

Some of the above? All of the above? None of the above? You tell me, but let’s not shrug our shoulders and walk away from the topic until we’ve dealt with one more issue: What happens if, for whatever reason, faculty members run for the hills when the Big Questions, including the ones about morality and civic responsibility, arise? Is this not to lose focus on what matters most in an education intended to last for a lifetime? In running away, do we not then leave the field to ideologues and others we cannot trust, and create a vacuum that may be filled by proselytizers, propagandists, or the unspoken but powerful manipulations of consumer culture? Does this not sever one of the roots that has over the centuries kept liberal education alive and flourishing? But, most serious of all, will we at each Commencement say farewell to another class of students knowing that for all they have learned, they are ill equipped to lead an examined life? And if we do, can we claim to be surprised and without responsibility if a few decades later these same graduates abuse the positions of power and trust in our corporate and civic life to which they have ascended?

W. Robert Connor is president of the Teagle Foundation, which is dedicated to strengthening liberal education. More on the foundation’s “Big Questions” project may be found on its Web site. This essay is based on remarks Connor recently made at a meeting of the Middle Atlantic Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa, at the University of Pennsylvania.

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Comments

Perhaps...

Perhaps the reluctance to address the big questions is due to the fear of getting assaulted by ignorant Kansans. It is with great restraint that I avoid considering the latter description a redundancy.

David, at 8:45 am EST on December 12, 2005

Self-serving terminology

“Despite accusations of liberal bias and ‘brainwashing’ no faculty member I know wants to ‘mold,’ ‘fashion’ or ‘proselytize’ students.”

Of course not, if that’s how you phrase the question.

Instead, professors teach “the facts” of issues (translation: MY interpretation of the facts), “critical thinking skills” (translation: an in-depth examination of the flaws in my opponents’ arguments), “both sides” of issues (translation: strongly-worded endorsements of my side balanced against an eye-rolling caricatured presentation of few things that I read somewhere that my opponents say), and “the history of the controversy” (translation: how the forces of Truth, Justice, and Reason, who all agree with me, have struggled against benighted fanatical monsters, who all agree with my opponents, since time immemorial).

The author asks what can be done. My solution is transparency. Stop pretending to be objective truth-dispensers, holy crusaders, or The Voice of Logic In A World Gone Mad. Admit that it is entirely possible for someone to be an intelligent, sane, compassionate, noble human being... and still disagree with you. When presenting multiple sides of issues, put together the strongest possible argument that you can in favor of perspectives with which you disagree. Admit to students that your personal inclinations are exactly that... your personal inclinations, and that other equally rational and competent individuals have taken other points of view.

Charles Hackney, psychology professor at Redeemer University College, at 8:58 am EST on December 12, 2005

“...other equally rational and competent individuals have taken other points of view.”

Equally rational and competent? That’s a heck of an assumption. Especially coming from a faculty member at Redeemer University College, the web page of which states that:

“The overall purpose of the College is to equip students to fulfil their callings in the Kingdom of God by providing them with a post-secondary education that is grounded in the Scriptures.”

Now explain how you ground anything in the firmament. And how the Scriptures and a “rational” post-secondary education have any connection.

I will roll my eyes and will have no qualms doing such.

David, at 9:37 am EST on December 12, 2005

Isn’t that what churches are for?

With all due respect to the writer — just making sure the majority of students meet minimal educational objectives can be back-breaking. IMHO, leave most of the “big questions” to the churches — isn’t that their job?

A.D., at 9:47 am EST on December 12, 2005

unfair assumptions

it is quite unfair to be pre-emptively rolling your eyes because the writer is from a christian college. note that redeemer is part of the christian reformed church. note further still that the crc is based in calvinism. note further that the calvinists, when they came to the americas, were rather active in establishing schools, including colleges. the path between faith and reason, though leaning towards faith, has been part of the heritage of crc.

i’m not at all a christian and not pre-emptively defending everything about redeemer or the crc. but your comments were patently unfair.

gkd, at 11:26 am EST on December 12, 2005

Big Subjects

Did not John Henry Newman adequately address this topic in THE IDEA OF A UNIVERSITY? Must academics be constantly rehashing the topic as though it as never been addressed before?Gabriel Austin

Gabriel Austin, at 11:27 am EST on December 12, 2005

The Big Questions Haven’t Gone Anywhere

I’m puzzled by the claims made in this article — without a shred of substantiation. Look at the syllabus of any Introduction to Philosophy and you will find the Biggest of the Big Questions: “Why Should I Be Moral?", “What are the Limits of Human Knowledge?", “Do We Have Free Will?", “What Makes Me the Same Person Over Time?", “Does Science Reveal the Structure of Reality?", “Does God Exist?", and so on. Philosophers have never stopped asking and teaching these questions.

J. David Velleman, Professor ofPhilosophy at NYU, at 1:09 pm EST on December 12, 2005

LCSR Program at Lynchburg College

Colleagues and Friends:

I just wanted to add to this discussion that the Lynchburg College Symposium Readings Program also addresses themes and major questions across disciplines at our institution. From the website of the LCSR Program:

Our History:The LCSR concept initially began in 1976, with the Senior Symposium, a senior course encouraging the reading of good books, the asking of meaningful questions, and reflections on great ideas. Using the Lynchburg College Symposium Readings — Classical Selections on Great Issues, the College’s own ten-volume set of classical readings published by the University Press of America, the course addresses themes representing continuing concerns for humanity such as Poverty and Wealth, Tyranny and Freedom, and The Nature of the Universe. Through lectures by visiting scholars on related current issues and small-group discussions based on the lectures and reading, students grapple with great issues facing humanity from the perspectives of Western civilization and thought from other traditions. In 1989, the College created a bold approach to general education by extending the use of the symposium readings across the curriculum and engaging students in the discussion of these texts from the freshman year. LCSR is an integral part of every student’s experience at Lynchburg College.

In this program, faculty in a variety of disciplines have discuss major issues with their students through readings in this program (our 10-volume series is now in its third edition). I have used such LCSR themes as Society and Solitude, Tyranny and Freedom, Poverty and Wealth, and Creativity and Imagination themes to teach Composition I and II (the latter with service learning, to reflect on issues related to volunteer work in the community), Humanities Seminars in the Honors Program, and Medieval Literature.

I was not aware that “Big Questions” had gone out of the discourse in academic institutions.

Elza C. Tiner

Elza C. Tiner, Professor of English at Lynchburg College, at 3:21 pm EST on December 12, 2005

where have all the big questions gone?

Where Have All the Big Questions Gone?

Bob Connor’s essay puts me in mind of my reaction when a group of Ursinus faculty asked me if I would support a required two-semester course for all first-year students that would address the question: What does it mean to be human?

I said while I loved the idea, I had enough battles here—other fish to fry as it were. I explained that I assumed the faculty as a whole, what with their scholarship, their promotion of student scholarship and scholarly presentations at professional meetings etc., would never support such a course. So I told them they were on their own. Well, as you have seen, the course has been here since 1999; it is the one Peter Gomes suggested Harvard emulate; it is featured in this fall’s AGB Priorities (p.4); it was covered in a three page story in the Chronicle of Higher Education the month before and in a full page story by Jay Mathews the Washington Post the month before that. And it helped be named for “hottest freshman year,” as one of NEWSWEEK/Kaplan’s “Hottest 25 Colleges.”

All the publicity has led to three discoveries: 1)there are more courses like ours out there than one might think—we hear about them regularly: 2)despite Professor Gomes’ recommendation to his colleagues there, Harvard is not about to copy Ursinus, and 3) as all the stories suggest, there is great interest in, even eagerness for, such courses on the part of non-academics. People seem to be yearning for the sort of courses that Columbia and Chicago made famous, and that were commonplace fifty years ago.

So I hope your essay produces more dialogue. We count our course a big success at elevating the level of discourse and sense of intellectual community across the college, including within the faculty. And as the new AGB story suggests, we believe it has had a positive impact on retention as well.

Sorry if this sounds too much like an ad; I am just trying to be a faithful reporter.

john strassburger, president at ursinus college, at 4:47 pm EST on December 12, 2005

Dialog

A class openly about big questions would seem to invite a dialog between students and professors. In the modern era, many professors at various universities are more interested in hearing their own views on the big ideas slipped into all their courses.

The other major problem is that the “answers” to the big questions are largely opinional, rather than proven facts (otherwise they wouldn’t be big questions anymore). It would be hard to keep out the other viewpoints in a class about discussion of viewpoints.

Kevin, Undergraduate, at 8:16 pm EST on December 12, 2005

First, it seems, you have to talk about ‘talking’. That is, consensus must be reached among a particular group about what the question means, i.e. defining the boundaries of the answers and the other sufficient conditions that might apply to resolving them (the Big Questions). Then maybe a group could order the questions in rank so that they could find a ‘biggest’ question and explore how the possible answers to the ’smaller’ ones follow.

Arguing about what the question really ‘is’ may be the most useful exercise.

The aim for the professor should be steering the Big Questions away from any known political, economic, or social destination. This is invariably the urge for most people and that is why great professors are so great and so important.

charles gray, at 8:17 pm EST on December 16, 2005

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