Posted on 04/10/2015 11:29:46 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
Believe it or not, it is possible to make a conservative case for academic freedom without mixing opposites. In fact, one of the conservative movements sages, Russell Kirk, made the case quite eloquently more than half a century ago.
The principal importance of academic freedom is the opportunity it affords for the highest development of private reason and imagination, the improvement of mind and heart by the apprehension of Truth, whether or not that development is of any immediate use to [society], Kirk wrote. This put him somewhat at odds with one of the movements other great thought leaders William F. Buckley, Jr., who wrote, I believe it to be an indisputable fact that most colleges and universities, and certainly Yale, the protests and pretensions of their educators and theorists notwithstanding, do not practice, cannot practice, and cannot even believe what they say about education and academic freedom.
Yet and still, as Luke Sheahan of the National Humanities Institute (NHI) makes clear, Kirk was describing an ideal to strive for while Buckley was excoriating the abuses committed by academe, using academic freedom as an excuse.
Nevertheless, as Sheehan shows, Kirks idea of academic freedom was one practiced under a metaphoric big tent. [B]oth the conservative bent and the liberal bent should not only be tolerated, but encouraged, Kirk wrote. If there were no liberals, we should find it necessary to invent some; if there were no conservativesbut perish that thought.
He was indeed great.
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