A Human Education

From Pope Benedict XVI's Address to Young University Professors: "Where will young people encounter those reference points in a society which is increasingly confused and unstable? At times one has the idea…

From Pope Benedict XVI’s Address to Young University Professors:

“Where will young people encounter those reference points in a society which is increasingly confused and unstable? At times one has the idea that the mission of a university professor nowadays is exclusively that of forming competent and efficient professionals capable of satisfying the demand for labor at any given time. One also hears it said that the only thing that matters at the present moment is pure technical ability. This sort of utilitarian approach to education is in fact becoming more widespread, even at the university level, promoted especially by sectors outside the University. All the same, you who, like myself, have had an experience of the University, and now are members of the teaching staff, surely are looking for something more lofty and capable of embracing the full measure of what it is to be human. We know that when mere utility and pure pragmatism become the principal criteria, much is lost and the results can be tragic: from the abuses associated with a science which acknowledges no limits beyond itself, to the political totalitarianism which easily arises when one eliminates any higher reference than the mere calculus of power. The authentic idea of the University, on the other hand, is precisely what saves us from this reductionist and curtailed vision of humanity.”

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A stack of three Local Culture journals and the book 'Localism in the Mass Age'
Patrick Deneen

Patrick Deneen

Patrick J. Deneen teaches political theory at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of several books, most recently Why Liberalism Failed.

2 comments

  • Marion Miner

    Indeed. The choice of college or university (if one should attend), for that reason, is all the more important.

  • Barry A. McCain

    Hear, hear!

    Does the Holy Father have any advice to employers, too? My twin frustration to the decadence and degradation of the University, is the increasing view that an post-secondary degree is merely a box to be checked–not so much a period of growth and discovery.

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