“Tyrants forbid citizens to do their duty as free men.
Free government permits them to do it.
Liberal education enables them to do it.”
Stringfellow Barr, Co-founder of St. John’s College Great Books program, 1941
In Andrew’s post on Jacob Klein, he briefly quotes Scott Buchanan’s essay entitled “The Last Don Rag.” Drawing on the St. Johns tradition of don rags, a discussion with your tutors (professors) regarding a specific text or idea, the essay (speech) is a serious of questions. I have yet to find a more compelling call for the role of education as it relates to a free society:
“Have you recognized that you are and always have been your own teacher? Amidst all the noise and furor about education in this country at present, I have yet to hear this question raised. But it is basic. Liberal education has as its end the free mind, and the free mind knows that he knows nothing, and then goes on to add: I know what it is that I don’t know. My question then is: Do you know what you don’t know and therefore what you should know? If your answer is affirmative and humble, then you are your own teacher, you are making your own assignment, and you will be your own best critic. You will not need externally imposed courses, nor marks, nor diplomas, nor a nod from you boss….in business or politics.”
“Under the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, have you persuaded yourself that there are knowledges and truths beyond your grasp, things that you simply cannot learn? Have you allowed adverse evidence to pile up and force you to conclude that you are not mathematical, not linguistic, not poetic, not scientific, not philosophical? If you have allowed this to happen you have arbitrarily imposed limits on your intellectual freedom, and you have smothered the fires from which all other freedom arise. Most of us have done this and come short of what that threadbare slogan, human dignity, really means… We are willing to become cripples in our minds and fractions of men in our lives.”
When Tom Palmer, eminent libertarian and St. Johns alumnus, asked me to take some of his students on a tour of Annapolis these quotes were on the short list of stops. The Barr quote at the top of this page and most of the second Buchanan quote are listed on the wall of one of the college’s buildings.
Liberty and the liberal arts are intricately tied. But why? What is it that “St. John’s stands for” that without which ”this country is not worth defending against the Nazis.”
A true education creates a free mind, a mind that is constantly searching, evaluating, and learning in the most honest and authentic way. We commonly believe that if a child can recite the correct answer when queried, that he has, obviously, has a knowledge of it. The problem lies in the fact that you cannot impart knowledge, you can only model the process of acquiring it and encourage an honest examination that leads to understanding. Free society requires those who promote it to model free thinking. It asks us to be critical of our beliefs and our actions. If we are to have a free society we must be self governed and a liberal arts education fosters the ability to do this.
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“…have you persuaded yourself that there are knowledges and truths beyond your grasp…
It’s not humorous how many people hold this to be true for themselves. They allow this belief, a lack of trust in the powers of their creative mind, to hold them back from their potential- potential intellect, and potential education.
So many people look to me and say they wish they could be me, but what am I? I love, and I search, that is all.
Why do so many fear responsibility, why do they tell themselves they are not enough?
And why, have I found myself doing the same?