WEEK 1: AN INTRODUCTION TO LIBERAL LEARNING
- Reading: A Student’s Guide to Liberal Learning (pp. 1–25)
- Intro: In an age that views education merely as the prerequisite to a good career, the idea of “liberal learning” has fallen to the wayside. Even among those familiar with the liberal arts tradition, many question its value in an increasingly technological society. In this first reading, James V. Schall offers an account of learning centered in the pursuit of truth and the fulfillment of intellectual curiosity. His advice to students seeking to cultivate an active life of the mind will enable you to make the most of these next few months as you explore the Great Tradition.
- Discussion Questions:
- Schall says that we are in an “age of doubt” in which we have “talked ourselves out of knowing what we can know” (p. 2). Do you think this is true?
- What does it look like to live an “intellectual life open to the truth” (p. 8)? Is it possible to live such a life in higher education today? Is it likely?
- Schall says that we must start by recognizing what is lacking in our own education. What do you think has been lacking in your own education?
- What does it mean to say that knowledge is an “end in itself”? Is some knowledge more valuable than other knowledge?
- Is there such a thing as an outdated idea?
- What are the liberal arts? Is a liberal arts education fundamentally opposed to a technical education aimed at teaching career skills?
- Further Reading:
- Check out C.S. Lewis’s essay “On the Reading of Old Books” (excerpt) to learn why you should read one old book for every new book.
- Want to know what is meant by the “Great Tradition”? Check out Richard Gamble’s introduction to The Great Tradition (pp. xv–xix).