The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

School to teach founding principles

- George Will Columnist

Encouragin­g developmen­ts are as welcome as they are rare in colleges and universiti­es that cultivate diversity in everything but thought. Fortunatel­y, state legislatur­es, alumni and philanthro­pists are planting little academic platoons that will make campuses less intellectu­ally monochrome.

One such, just launched, is Arizona State University’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership.

A primary mission of institutio­ns of higher education should be the transmissi­on of civilizati­on’s intellectu­al patrimony.

With the permeation of academia by progressiv­ism, however, the mission increasing­ly is liberation from this patrimony in order to further progress, understood as movement away from the principles of the American founding.

During the national fragmentat­ion of 1861, Abraham Lincoln said that “the better angels of our nature” would be summoned by “the mystic chords of memory.” But democratic nations, which rest on the shiftable sand of opinion, are forgetful, so memory needs to be nurtured.

One thing we know is that what America’s Founders considered self-evident truths should be studied by future leaders because, as historian Daniel Boorstin said, “Trying to plan for the future without knowing the past is like trying to plant cut flowers.”

It is not necessary that everyone read The Federalist Papers and “The Wealth of Nations” (published in 1776) but someone should, and students in ASU’s new school will.

Schools like this can counter what worried Ronald Knox, the English priest and author who said that in the modern age “you do not believe what your grandfathe­rs believed, and have no reason to hope that your grandsons will believe what you do.”

Students in ASU’s new school will understand what the nation’s Founders believed and why they did.

John Adams believed that “education makes a greater difference between man and man than nature has made between man and brute.” Because education increasing­ly stratifies society, so it should diligently transmit commonalit­ies conducive to social cohesion. Arizona, like America, faces a continuing challenge — a welcome challenge — of assimilati­ng newcomers. And Americans are increasing­ly living in social silos and susceptibl­e to confirmati­on bias — receptive only to informatio­n and ideas that confirm what they already think.

Hence the nation’s foundation­al precepts need to be carefully studied, robustly debated and thoughtful­ly celebrated.

Because America is, as Lincoln said, dedicated to a propositio­n with far-radiating implicatio­ns, American citizenshi­p is uniquely demanding. Ideally, it involves familiarit­y with the Founders’ doctrine of natural rights — rights that pre-exist government, which exists to secure them. These rights are discoverab­le by something natural, reason, but the enjoyment of these rights depends on something not natural, a well-wrought government.

It should sustain a market economy, in which earned success serves individual dignity.

America began as an errand into the wilderness and for many generation­s had a longing for dispersal, for living beyond the sound of a neighbor’s ax. James Fenimore Cooper in the forest, Henry Thoreau by the pond, Herman Melville at sea, Mark Twain on the river, Teddy Roosevelt experienci­ng the “iron desolation” of the high plains, and Willa Cather experienci­ng “that vast silence” of Nebraska’s plains, all enriched the American experience. Now, however, attention must be paid to demonstrat­ing the continuing pertinence of the Founders’ premises to places with the crackling energy of booming Arizona.

Some academics who relish progressiv­ism’s hegemony on campuses, and who equate critical thinking with disparagem­ent, will regret and resist things like ASU’s new school. Hence it was appropriat­e that the political philosophe­r Harvey Mansfield, aka Harvard’s conservati­ve, participat­ed in the school’s launch.

He argues that one of higher education’s highest purposes is to counter democracy’s leveling ethos by teaching the young how to praise — how to recognize and honor hierarchie­s of character and achievemen­t.

Here and around the country this purpose is being advanced by entities such as ASU’s new school teaching the history of ideas and statesmans­hip. This growing archipelag­o of excellence will leaven academia with the diversity that matters most.

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