Culture & Religion
mercoledì 10 marzo 2010
One of the topics discussed this last week has been the content and shape of the “education reform” that everyone agrees is needed in the United States. President Obama has made his proposal and the politicians of course are, already debating it according to their ideological and partisan interests.
The latest issues of The New York Times Magazine and Newsweek dedicated their cover stories to the subject of education reform, but I want to discuss the issue in terms of an earlier article by Lisa Miller, the religion editor of Newsweek, concerning curriculum reform at Harvard University, where so many of the next generation of leaders in the country are being educated (cf. “Harvard’s Crisis of Faith: Can a Secular University Embrace Religion Without Sacrificing its Soul?” in the issue of February 22, 2010).
The story begins in 2006 when a select group of Harvard professors prepared a “curriculum reform” proposal for the University. The project was led by Louis Menand, the Pulitzer Price winning literary critic and professor of English. As part of their proposed reform, the group concluded that undergraduate students should be required to take at least one course in a category called Reason and Faith. The professors argued that any future leader in today’s world needs to know something about religion, since most of the domestic and international conflicts that are shaping the future of this country are religious in nature.
When their conclusions became known, a fierce fight followed between supporters and opponents of the core curriculum reform proposal concerning the teaching of religion. The opposition was led by Steven Pinker, an evolutionary psychologist and widely popular professor. Pinker argued that “the primary role of a Harvard education is the pursuit of truth through rational inquiry, and that religion has no place in that.” A course in Reason and Faith, he insisted, would create the impression that the two are equal paths to truth. Instead, he said, “faith is a phenomenon, reason is what the university should be in the business of fostering.”
Harvard’s motto is indeed Veritas, adopted in 1843, and prior to that it had been Christo et Ecclesiae (“For Christ and the Church”). The separation of faith from reason at Harvard took place in the early part of the 19th century, and Pinker insists that this secularization of the University was an achievement that should not be compromised in any way. Indeed, as Ms. Miller writes, all of Pinker’s work “coheres under the broad notion that a scientific, rational world view is the highest achievement of the human mind.” According to Miller, Pinker’s wife, novelist Rebecca Goldstein, said to him: “All forms of irrationality irk you, but religion is the irrationality that irks you most.”
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