Nathan Schmidt: This is two transcription of an interview with Dr. Adler with some thoughts about education.
first interview website
I have gone through and highlighted some good information in red ans some I put in bold this is mostly Adler's ideas about education.
Dick Cavett Interviews Dr. Adler (A transcription of Dick Cavett's delightful television interview with Dr. Adler in 1978.)
DICK CAVETT: I can always see one face that looks disappointed when I walk out. I don't know what it is. Good evening, and philosophy today -- don't touch the dial -- is generally a pretty technical and academic matter. And philosophy is a pretty remote figure, as I would say, to most of us, including me.
My guest tonight and tomorrow night, Mortimer Adler, believes that is all wrong. He thinks philosophy should be for everybody, that it should be a part of ordinary, daily life, that a philosopher belongs in the marketplace. And in a long career of writing and teaching, he has not been above a little salesmanship of a bestseller here and there. He is Chairman of the Board of Editors for the EncyclopaediaBritannica, Director of the Institute for Philosophical Research in Chicago, and he has turned out a long line of almost, let's say, evangelical works that actually try to bring great books, great ideas to the people. You have seen him over the years in the advertisement -- pipe. He is a familiar face. And he was an editor, for example, of the famous 102-volume set called GreatBooks of the Western World. His latest work is something called Great Treasury of Western Thought.
He'll be here for two nights. I'll bring that out tomorrow night. I forgot to bring it with me tonight. There are some people who do feel that in his zeal, Mr. Adler goes to far in boiling down, packaging, and selling the classics. But as you are about to see, he has no trouble dealing with that criticism or with anything else that is tossed his way. Will you welcome, please, then a fascinating man, Mortimer Adler?
You upset some people somewhere once by saying that you had only been educated in the last twenty-five years. I think that is a quote from an address you gave somewhere. MORTIMER ADLER: But indeed. CAVETT: This, of course, because of your age being -- is it seventy-five? ADLER: Seventy-six. CAVETT: Seventy-six, left out your -- there is always an appreciative moan from the audience when someone like you or Bob Hope, who is that age, appears to be fifty. That left out, of course, the years of your formal education and -- ADLER: I call that schooling, not education. CAVETT: Oh, please tell us the difference. ADLER: Well, schooling is what goes on in institutions. It is only a preparation for education. No one ever gets educated in school.One of the troubles with the educational system is the wrong supposition that school is a place where you get an education, so that when you get a degree, that certifies you are an educated man or woman. That is far from the truth. CAVETT: So now, yes, there is the phrase, "My son just completed his education." ADLER: Utterly crazy. Utterly crazy. CAVETT: Whereas, in fact, you wouldn't even assume that he had begun it? ADLER: No, he hadn't begun it. But schools are not at their best, I assure you. And they aren't doing what they should be doing. But if they were doing what they should be doing, if they were at their best, the best they could do would be to prepare the young to become educated in their adult life by their own means -- by reading, by discussion, by travel, by thought. And when I say that I have ever been educated or become educated in the last twenty-five years, I mean that quite seriously. Only a really mature person has enough depth of soul to have ideas to take root and understand things. And the joke of that is that though I now think I am educated, I have forgotten most of the things I have learned in school. CAVETT: Is that bad? ADLER: No, good. CAVETT: Uh, huh? Okay. ADLER: Because most of the things you learn in school, you only learn to pass examinations with. And they aren't worth -- they aren't very important. CAVETT: That depends on the school, doesn't it? I mean, there are schools where you simply learn the dates of the Dred Scott Decision and the Hanseatic League, and memorize them for the test, and then throw them out happily forever. But if you are asked to write on the following quotation everything you know about the phrase, "the poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling," or something, isn't that a little different? ADLER:The most important things that you learn in school that you don't forget are the skills you acquire -- the skills of writing and reading, of good speech, even of good behavior in some sense -- CAVETT: Yes. . . and typing I would add. ADLER: Well, typing is a very fun skill. I learned that before I went to school. CAVETT: Typing is the best thing I ever had. It saved my life a few times. Ten dollars a day. ADLER: It's very important. CAVETT: You were quite a kid. I think I would like to have known you as a kid, but I am not entirely sure. ADLER: You would have liked to have known me if you hadn't been one of my teachers. CAVETT: If what? ADLER: If you had not been one of my teachers. My teachers didn't like to know me because I was a nuisance to them. CAVETT: Apparently you drove them up the blackboarded wall occasionally. ADLER: I did indeed. I had a very kindly professor at Columbia. He was a professor of psychology. I was very fond of Professor Poffenberger. But I would walk into his office about fifty minutes before class. There was a list of twenty-five questions for him to answer. CAVETT: For him to answer? ADLER: Yes. CAVETT: And if he hadn't prepared, did you grade him? ADLER: And John Dewey, who I had studied at Columbia in the early 1920s -- CAVETT: The John Dewey? ADLER: The John Dewey. He was, again, a kindly gentleman, who lectured very slowly so that I could take his lectures down in longhand. I would go home to my study and type the lecture out. I collected these lectures that I wrote about. And I noticed that what he said on Tuesday was inconsistent with what he said the previous Thursday. So I would write him a letter, and say, "Dear Professor Dewey, last Thursday you said . . . " and I would quote. "But this Tuesday you said . . . and that does not seem quite consistent to me. Would you please explain?"
Well, he came to class and said, "A student in class wrote me a letter." He read the letter and then tried to explain. I wrote the answer down. And the answer didn't solve the problem. So I wrote him another letter. And this went on for three weeks. And he finally had his assistant come to me, and say, "Dr. Dewey wishes you would stop writing him letters." CAVETT: Does that show the proper attitude on the part of an educator? ADLER: No, I was a nuisance. I admit I was a nuisance. I was a very persistent student. CAVETT: Uh huh, you admit that. ADLER: In fact, one teacher I had a Columbia that you probably know the name of -- Irwin Edman, he wrote a book called Philosopher's Holiday, I would argue with him so vigorously in class that one day I came to class at two-thirty. He was standing outside the door, and said, "Mortimer, I think you had better take the afternoon off. You get too excited in class." CAVETT: Yes, I read about that. And he actually thought you were in some danger of getting hyper or whatever. Well, when I say is that the proper educational attitude, I wonder what should be the limit of a teacher's involvement with a student who is rigorously questioning him? ADLER: I think the teacher should be complete. But that depends upon the students -- the teacher's having enough time for an individual student. CAVETT: Yes, uh huh. ADLER: And my, I think, my failure was to recognize the limits of the teacher's time. CAVETT: Yeah. ADLER: I was more of a burden than I should have been. CAVETT: So somewhere between you and the student who falls asleep in class is the ideal. ADLER: I think that many of my teachers did not resent my pertinacity in pursuing the question. CAVETT: Uh huh, you never had the poor taste to correct the teacher's spelling in fourth grade as I did once? ADLER: No. CAVETT: Good. I barely survived that, even with my alleged friends. There was a man once named John Stuart Mill who couldn't remember a time when he couldn't read Greek. ADLER: Well, he couldn't read Greek before the age of three. CAVETT: Oh, is that it? ADLER: You know, his father, who is James Mill, was a great English philosopher. And his father's friend was Jeremy Bentham, an even greater English philosopher. And Mill had other children. He must have had maybe half a dozen children that he sent to ordinary schools. But when John Stuart was born, he decided that he and Jeremy Bentham would bring this child up according to their own ideas of schooling. So they taught John Stuart Greek in the cradle. And as John Stuart reports in his autobiography, he could speak and read Greek at the age of three. He had read The Dialogues of Plato in Greek at the age of five, "And could distinguish," he said, "between the Socratic method and the substances of Platonic philosophy." Between five and eleven, he had read most of the books that I really came to know as the Great Books. At eleven he edited his father's History of India. At twelve, he edited Bentham's Rationale of JudicialProof. And at eighteen, he had a nervous breakdown. CAVETT: Well, I am certainly glad to hear it. Now, could you imagine what W. C. Fields would have done with that? ADLER: I read John Stuart Mill's autobiography when I was fifteen. And, my God, I said, "I'm fifteen. I don't know Greek. I never read any Plato." In fact, I didn't even know who Socrates was at fifteen. CAVETT: So you were five years behind on Aristotle probably, and then how many on Virgil? ADLER: Well, at that time I was working on the editorial page of The New York Sun. And I took an advance on my week's salary, which was four dollars -- I got four dollars a week -- CAVETT: Wow! ADLER: I got four dollars a week, which was a large salary in those days, and I went down to a secondhand bookstore on John Street and bought a secondhand set of Plato and started to read the Dialogues of Plato. And that is what ruined me. CAVETT: Ruined you? ADLER: I stopped -- I decided that up to that point I had planned to become a journalist. But I decided I wanted to become a philosopher. And I went back to college as a result of reading John Stuart Mill and Plato. CAVETT: Did your parents think this was a little peculiar, that this was a phase, and pretty soon he'll start playing baseball and noticing girls and forget all this junk? ADLER: I had a German father who took study rather seriously. My mother had been a schoolteacher. So they were a little less inclined to say that kind of thing. CAVETT: Yeah. ADLER: But, you see, I had left high school -- no, I shouldn't say that. I had been expelled from high school. CAVETT: Leaving a grade. ADLER: No, I had a disagreement with the principal. And he won the argument. But he did suspend me from all -- I was editor of the school paper, and he suspended me from all activities. And I decided to leave school, I guess. So I went to work on The New York Sun, and I had only finished two years of high school. So going to college wasn't easy. I had two years of high school preparation to make up. So while I was working as an office boy to the president of the Worthington Pump and Machinery Corporation down at 115th and Broadway, I did all the studying I had to do, take the regent's examinations, and entered Columbia. So I went to Columbia. CAVETT: Yes, aren't you one of those rare birds who has a Ph.D. but not a B.A.? ADLER: I have a Ph.D. but no M.A., no B.A., and no high school diploma. CAVETT: Has the statute of limitations run out on this? Is it all right to admit this? ADLER: I have been given by the University of Seattle an honorary B.A. I have been given by St. Mary's College an honorary M.A. But no one has given me a high school diploma. CAVETT: I hate to ask such a square question, but isn't it a requirement in getting a Ph.D. in every school to have had an -- ADLER: No, no. CAVETT: I didn't realize that. ADLER: I had more than enough credits to graduate from Columbia. In fact, I think you needed 130 points of credit, and I had a 145. They were all As. CAVETT: Yeah, so you were -- ADLER: I had no problem with that at all. The reason why I didn't get the diploma was that not only did I not swim, I refused to go to -- CAVETT: You did say swim? ADLER: Swim, I didn't take the swimming test. CAVETT: Had you failed to study for it or what? ADLER: Well, worse than that. At Columbia in my day, maybe it is still true, physical education was required for all four years. And I cut all four years. I cut physical education. I never went to gym. And my reason for not going to gym was that I hated to dress and undress in the middle of the day. You see -- CAVETT: Once a day is enough, yes. ADLER: And it was just before graduation, just after I had gotten my Phi Beta Kappa key, the dean called me, and said, "Mortimer, I have looked at your record, and you haven't been to gym for four years. Is that true?" I said, "Yes." He said, "Well, you can't get your diploma." So I marched in the procession at Columbia but didn't get my diploma. CAVETT: Dressed, I assume. ADLER: Yes, of course, I paid twenty dollars, which I never got back by the way. CAVETT: Now, what do you think about that? In retrospect do you still hold that you were within your rights? What about the Greek idea of the trained body and the trained mind? ADLER: No, I was not within my rights. He was within his rights to withhold my diploma because physical education was a requirement, and I didn't do it. CAVETT: Yeah, eventually did you miss something valuable? Are you still against physical education? ADLER: Well, you know that I share Mr. Hutchins's view about physical education or exercise in general. CAVETT: Uh huh. ADLER: Hutchins used to say, "Whenever I feel the impulse to exercise, I lie down until it passes away." CAVETT: Yes, Dr. Jonathan Miller, on this show, put running and jogging where some people think it should be put, although I am a practitioner of it, and I think he is wrong. But not to dwell on this too much, but, you know, there is, along with an intellectual tradition in some societies, a parallel physical tradition of -- seriously, I think there is perhaps some link between a well-tuned body and an alert mind. ADLER: Well, yes, I don't look with contempt upon a well-tuned body. But I don't enjoy tuning it. CAVETT: You can get people to do that. You've had the temerity, I think -- oh, let's go back a bit to your -- I am still fascinated with you as a kid. You were not only, from what I read about you, content simply to study avidly but began to educate your own sister, I think, at a very tender age. ADLER: Yes, I had become an avid student of Darwin's Origin of Species and the theory of evolution. So I gave her lectures on evolution and the origin of the human species when she was about ten. CAVETT: And you were older? ADLER: Yes, I was fourteen. CAVETT: Were you ever chosen for the baseball team as a kid? ADLER: No, no. I did start writing very early. One of the reasons why I was able to get that job on The New YorkSun, though I was only fifteen years old, was that because when I was ten years old or eleven in public school, I won an essay contest and a silver medal from The New York Sun for writing an essay on Napoleon. So I marched down -- I wanted a job and marched down and showed them my silver medal. And I got the job. CAVETT: You had the right credentials. You wrote -- some of the things I want to get to with you -- you wrote a book called How to Read a Book. ADLER: In 1940. CAVETT: Of course, presumably, people who need to know how to read a book couldn't read it, could they? ADLER: No. CAVETT: So is there a previous book that should be written? ADLER: No. You are right. People have said, "How do I learn how to read a book?" But the book teaches you how to read as you read it. And say, that if you begin with real little skill, as most people will begin with little skill, since most people have acquired the skill of reading up to the fourth grade and not beyond -- I mean most Americans have fourth grade reading abilities. Even when they graduate from college, they are not much better than fourth grade reading abilities. The book is an attempt to show what the art of reading, the skill of reading should become as one develops beyond that elementary level. CAVETT: Yes, uh huh. ADLER: They obviously -- most Americans are functionally literate. They can read the newspaper, Time Magazine, the advertisements, directions on signs. CAVETT: Yeah. ADLER: But give them a difficult book -- a lot of reading consists in taking a book that is over your head -- if it isn't over your head, if there is nothing in the book that you can't understand as soon as you see the words, you don't need any skill in reading, obviously, except the ordinary elementary school, fourth-grade level. But if a book that is over your head, and no books -- none of your heads can possibly lift your head up, can they? If a book that is over your head puzzles you, the art of reading -- and if you don't fully understand it as you read the words, the art of reading consists in the skill of being able to -- without any help from outside -- find out what that book is saying and to state it better. I almost say that it is the skill of being able to lift your own mind up from understanding less to understanding more. CAVETT: And in your book you tell how to do that? ADLER: Yes, another important thing to say about it is that I once had to write a slogan for an ad, I think, about the book, but it was a bestseller. And I what I suggested with it was that the art of reading consists -- the art of staying awake while reading. Most people don't stay awake. CAVETT: As many people say, "Oh, that is a wonderful book for going to sleep." ADLER: And those books, I don't call that reading. I mean, the books you read to go to sleep with, the books you read on airplanes, the books you read while waiting to pass the time are like movies. They are the time killers, the enjoyment. I am talking about serious reading, which is profitable to the mind because it improves your understanding. And here I would guess, Dick, that I don't read more than five books a year. I read a great many to go to sleep with. I must scan hundreds that come into my office that I put on shelves and classify or make notes about if I want to go back to them. CAVETT: Someone saw you on a plane reading a thriller, The Vicar of Christ, was it? ADLER: Yes, it is. That is right. I went to Australia with The Vicar of Christ. CAVETT: That is escapist reading for you? ADLER: It occupied two long flights to Auckland and back from Sydney. CAVETT: Yes. ADLER: But that is not reading. CAVETT: But when you consider books, do you only read five a year? ADLER: I seldom read a book except at my desk or at a table with a pencil and pad, marking the book, writing notes. That is what I mean by reading. CAVETT: Librarians just fainted all over the country when you said that. ADLER: Yes, but I only mark my own books, not library books. CAVETT: Okay, yeah. ADLER: And unless reading is a very intense activity, unless it is sufficiently fatiguing so that you get tired after you do an hour or two of it, you aren't doing it. And most people, I think, do not have the experience of reading this way. CAVETT: My wife reads at least a book a day, which gives me a terrible inferiority complex. ADLER: Do you know what Thomas Hobbes said about that? You might tell your wife. CAVETT: I will. ADLER: He said, "If I read as many books as most men do, I would be as dull-witted as they are." CAVETT: I think maybe you had better tell her that. And here she is now. She is quite sharp-witted. And it is amazing that she has managed -- she can go into Foyles's Bookstore in London and not find anything she hasn't read in whole sections of the store. And it just gives me the -- ADLER: Are we talking about reading for pleasure or reading for profit now? CAVETT: Both, but see, she has also made the mistake of trying to read to go to sleep and once finished the entire Memoirs of Cardinal Wolsey without falling asleep. ADLER: Oh, no. CAVETT: That was the price of making that mistake. Some people might see your book, How to Read a Book, and say, "Oh, good, a book on speed-reading." ADLER: Oh, no. CAVETT: Perish the thought. ADLER: Perish the thought. In the revised edition, which came out in 1974, we made the point that the theory of speed-reading is entirely wrong. One should not be able to read quickly. We should be able to read at variable speeds. Some things we want to look at and be able to scan very quickly. And some things they are opposite. We want you to be able to read as slowly as possible. In fact, as the book becomes more difficult and more important, I would say ten pages an hour is the maximum. It depends on what you are working at. If the book becomes something that is inconsiderable, insubstantial, you can scan it in fifty minutes or thirty minutes. CAVETT: Yes, there was a friend of mine who stomped out of the famous lady's speed-reading course, when they said, "When you are just reading for fun like a novel," but he said, "But I take novels quite seriously. I consider those important reading." ADLER: I think the claim, the famous Evelyn Wood's claim is quite wrong. I think you can increase a person's speed in scanning a book. I don't think you can increase the speed of comprehension. CAVETT: Yes, I taught a speed-reading course on cassette one time. I mean, that some companies use. And it is based on a sound principle that our muscles can be trained to move infinitely faster. It is not literal, of course. Never is it faster than we think it can. And so for people who just have to quickly digest a lot of stuff, you can do it at lightning speed with a little practice. One of the things that you get a kind of grudging respect from your colleagues on is what I guess you might call your utter faith in learning and self-improvement. And some people question whether this is the right way to educate anybody, to ask them to just sit down, as you say, at your desk with a book alone and have a dialogue with, say, Plato, in the sense that there are not that many people -- and I am not afraid of including myself in this -- who at first glance are not just going to be able to take Plato alone. I would like to have -- and would you deny I should have this? I would like to have Bernard Knox talk to me a bit about what Greece and the setting and the philosophy and the history and so on is? Or Aristotle, is Aristotle for everybody? Or don't they need some help? ADLER: You read the book to the effect that Aristotle is for everybody, as the Great Books are for everybody. But I agree with you. Though I think one should do a certain amount of work alone, I also think it is a great help to have someone else read the same book you are reading and have someone to talk to about it, whether it be your elders, your colleagues, or a teacher in discussion. One of the reasons why we set up the Great Books Discussion Program, one of the reasons for the Aspen Program, as I have been teaching the Great Books since 1923, is that to read them entirely by yourself is not nearly as fruitful or enjoyable. It is always better to read them with somebody else and have a discussion. the Great Books Program is a program in which, whether it is at St. John's College, or whether I do it at Aspen, or I've got a Great Books Seminar for adults in Chicago that has been going since 1943. We read a book every month, and we meet on a Wednesday evening for two hours and talk about the book. CAVETT: Uh huh. ADLER: As a moderator, I ask questions about the book. But when the discussion gets generated in this cross-table conversation, that is what makes it enjoyable. And you learn more. And I don't think you can learn entirely by yourself. I agree with you. CAVETT: We sometimes get labeled as the man who says, "Get rid of schools, get rid of teachers, get rid of written exams, get rid of classes," and this misunderstands you to a degree. You have said things along those lines. ADLER: I can be very precise about that, Dick. CAVETT: Yeah. ADLER:I think schools and teachers are dispensable. CAVETT: By that you mean -- ADLER:They are not absolutely necessary. People have become educated without schools and without teachers. CAVETT: Sure. ADLER: But they are very helpful. CAVETT: Yeah. ADLER: And if they were better, it would be even better. They would be even more helpful. CAVETT:Uh huh, now Groucho Marx, to pick an odd example, was one of the best-read men I had ever met. He hardly ever went to school. He had a tiny amount of schooling. Are you willing to say that had he gone to school, he would have been less educated in your sense of the word than if he had - ADLER:If he had gone to a good school where they had taught him how to read and write and speak and given him, shall I say, a superficial introduction in his youth to the world of learning, he might have profited by that and gotten further in his own education. See, I think the school is a help, an aid, toward the process of becoming educated. CAVETT: Uh huh. ADLER: It functions best when it functions most effectively in that direction. When it tries to educate the person in school, it fails, because that can't be done. That is because immaturity is not just a difficulty; it is an impossible obstacle to becoming educated. CAVETT: You can't over leak material. It has to come upon -- ADLER:You cannot become educated while young. CAVETT:You would, I think, favor having so-called formal education end earlier in a person's life. ADLER:Yes, that is very important. That is my most serious criticism in the American school system. CAVETT: And you mean more by it than just every one of us who has ever looked out on a beautiful spring day and thought, "Why am I sitting in this stuffy classroom?" ADLER: In all the great European systems of schooling, not education, but schooling, the basic undergraduate schooling is twelve years. There are two, six forms, elementary and the secondary, primary and the secondary. And after that there is university. CAVETT: Ending at about eighteen. Eighteen, yes. ADLER: I would like to move -- we have, unfortunately, sixteen years, starting at six and ending at twenty-two, so that young people are in school and the undergraduate college between eighteen and twenty-two, which is much too late. And one of the reasons for the decline, serious decline of our colleges is increase of specialization, increase of vocational training, the dwindling and decline of liberal schooling and general schooling is that is too late. It is not realistic to ask young people, boys and girls between eighteen and twenty-two not to think about their future careers, not to think of specialization, not to ask for some vocational preparation. You could up to sixteen. So I would like to suggest that schooling start at age four. The sooner we get the young out of the home, the better I think. Starting at four, by the way, we know everything about early learning that children at age three can begin all the Montessori experience supports that. CAVETT: Kids are hungry to read, some of them at three. ADLER: That's right. You really are wasting two years by starting at six. Start at four, run two periods of six years each, primary and secondary. CAVETT: Yeah. ADLER:Give the Bachelor of Arts degree at age sixteen. That completes undergraduate education. Have that twelve years of schooling completely general, completely required, no electives, no specialization, no vocational preparation. And then at sixteen, have four years of compulsory non-schooling. CAVETT: Meaning what? ADLER:Everyone out of school. School is closed. CAVETT: The one thing you can't do is go to school. The one thing you can't do. ADLER: That's right. CAVETT: Oh, I wish this had been true years ago. ADLER:Between sixteen and twenty, and during that time either work in the public or private sector, the Army or the Navy, travel, anything to grow up so that when those who come back to the university, they come back and are mature as they are not now. CAVETT: In ways I envied the guys who came to college from the war because they said, "I never realized what it was like until I got away from it and realized how much I wanted it at an earlier age." ADLER: I was teaching at the University of Chicago right after the Korean War. So I had in my classes two kinds of students -- those who came through the ordinary way, and G. I. Bill students, students of the G. I. Bill of Rights.
And though they are far closer to the same age, they are utterly different. CAVETT: You could tell who the ardent student was. ADLER: That is right. CAVETT: I have to cut you for the moment, but tomorrow at the same time, we will return. Adler, thank you. And you will be with us tomorrow. ADLER: Thank you. CAVETT: We will see you tomorrow, and good night.
U.S. News & World Report Interviews Dr. Mortimer J. Adler "We Have Failed Completely" to Teach Children to Think
Q. Dr. Adler, is there any difference in the way people are behaving morally today, and the way they behaved in the past? A. In outward manners and customs, yes. But if you are asking whether in any generation there are more men who violate the simplest moral principles, whether there are more scoundrels, my answer is no. Q. Why is it that you hear growing complaints about laxity in public and private morals? A. Any generation of human beings will contain the same human potentialities. The differences in human behavior result from what you surround that population with -- the amount of power that is put into the hands of some people, the controls that are exercised on human conduct, the institutions you give them, the opportunities you give them. They will appear to behave differently because of the surrounding circumstances, though in fact the human material will be about the same. Q. Are things like television creating wrong attitudes? What about crime programs, other kinds of entertainment people are getting? A. Advertisers are paying for the time to sell their products. They want a mass audience, which is not supplied by educational or public-service shows. You ask, "Whose fault is it that you can't get a mass audience for such shows?" Well, it is not the advertisers' fault. If anything, it's the fault of American education. Q. The problem rests with people themselves -- what they will accept? A. Yes. Q.Is education supposed to build moral fiber? A.Yes. There's a lot of talk, you know, that schools are responsible for training the moral character of their students as well as giving them intellectual training. But it's always seemed to me that the question is put the wrong way. You cannot create a good student except by creating a morally virtuous student. Q. In what way? A. Let's ask what it means to be a good student. Here is a child who is given the opportunity to do the hard job of studying, or the easy job of playing. All the enticements of youth -- cars, football games, parties, drinking -- surround him. Now, if he yields to these, he will not have as much time as he needs to study well. Hence, when you find a good student, you have found a morally virtuous child. Q. It's not just a matter of basic intelligence, then? A. Oh, no. I have met many children whose intellectual capacity would permit them to be good students, but whose moral laxity prevents them from being good students because of the way they use their time. Q. Does that affect their attitudes outside school? A. That's the worst of it. I've often thought that one of the most potent causes of juvenile delinquency is that the present high school does not work any of its children hard enough. The bright children get away with doing almost nothing -- they don't have to study to get good grades. And the duller ones know that they will be passed, anyway, because they have to be promoted. Few people are flunked out of high school. As a result, all the children have a very easy time of it. Q. Do they then have time for getting into trouble? A. Yes. A child at that age is energetic and ingenious. His mind, his ingenuity, his energy are not being taxed by study. Well, he has to have an outlet somewhere. Much of our delinquency doesn't come from the slum areas -- it comes from children who are trying to find something to do. They're inventing a way of life for themselves. Q. At one time youngsters went to work at an early age. A. If there's any reason why there is more juvenile delinquency today, it's that there are more children in high school who are not occupied full time with their studies. A hundred years ago, when boys went to work at 14 or earlier, and worked 12 to 14 hours a day, they didn't have any time for delinquency. Q. Don't youngsters learn to work in college? A. I doubt if 10 per cent of the college population in the United States works 40 hours a week. Add up the number of hours a student spends in class -- assuming that he's attentive and not asleep -- and the number of hours he spends in the library and at a desk, and I would guess that less than 10 per cent work much more than 30 hours a week. That's not enough for an energetic boy or girl to put in. Q. Do youngsters carry those standards of work with them into later life -- as plumbers or clerks or salesmen? A. That's right. In our generation, there are many educators who say that school should "prepare for life." I agree with them. Now what is life? Is it mainly significant work, or is it play? Anyone's understanding of human life is that the main job a man has to do is to grow, improve himself, make a contribution to society, as well as earn a living. All of this is work -- leisure work or subsistence work. If this is so, then the only way the schools can prepare a child for life is to start him working at the age of 6. From 6 on, the child should be given a full burden of work and kept at it. That is the way to prepare a child for life. Of course, if life is to be a round of frolic and fun, then what the schools are doing now is "preparing for life." I think it is a dreadful picture. Q. A youngster gets out of school without working very hard, so his idea is to get through life the same way -- A. That is precisely it.
HOW PARENTS CAN HELP Q. What about the parents? This idea of education has been going on for many years. Is their outlook affected? A. It's a vicious circle. You have no idea how much protest comes from parents when teachers try to increase homework. Why is this so? The answer is that, if the children have considerable homework, the evening hours of parents in the home are interfered with. The child should be able to go to his parents for some help with respect to difficult problems. But this interferes with the relaxed state of affairs in the home, and the parents would rather not be troubled by it. Q. Is that true of all parents? A. I'm not saying this is true of all parents, but it's true of a great many. And a great many American parents are incredibly sentimental about childhood. "Why should Johnny have to work so hard?" they ask. This silly sentimentality about children is bad for the children, bad for our society, bad for the school system, bad all along the line. Q. Are people being equipped intellectually to handle their problems today? A. If you consider schooling up through high school, the main change is that our children are simply less well trained than they were in the schools of earlier centuries. They cannot read as well. They cannot write as well. They cannot think as well. They are not as well disciplined in the actual processes of study and learning. Q. Aren't there exceptions? A. Oh, in every generation there are some good students. There always will be -- the worst school system in the world can't prevent that. But, by and large, in relative numbers -- I'm speaking on the basis of what I know from teaching in college and seeing the product of the American high school -- I think it has grown much worse. Q. Did that come with mass education? A. What educators should have faced is this hard question: How do you do for those whose educational aptitude is low exactly what you do for the most gifted in proportion to their capacity? Let me illustrate this very simply: In gymnastics, if you had children of different strengths and heights, and you thought that chinning the bar was a good exercise for the development of muscles and co-ordination, would you set the bar at the same height for all the children? No. You would set it for children of different groups at different heights. Would you be doing the same thing for all children with this bar set at different heights? Yes. You'd be doing exactly the same.
Now what I'm saying is this: If Greek and Latin, algebra and calculus, history and physics, and the great books are the subjects which stretch the intellectual muscles of the brightest child and give him the skill and training he needs, then we either have to find or invent materials which do exactly the same things in proportion to the capacity of the weaker child. Not something different -- the same things. Q. Does every child need that training -- even if he becomes a manual laborer? A. If stretching the child's mind and making him use it for learning and thinking is the function of education, then you must do it for every child who is not in an asylum, who is going to become a citizen, who is going to rear children, who is going to have to hold a job of some kind, who is going to have more free time than he knows what to do with. And that is where we have failed completely. Q. Is that a growing problem? A. Let me put the matter this way: It would take the most extraordinary reforms, a complete recasting of our whole school system from the kindergarten through college, to prepare most of tomorrow's children to use their opportunities well. Their opportunities are too rich. The thing that is frightening to me is that we progressively improve the institutions and the conditions of our lives -- Q. Is that a bad thing? A. I don't think there is any question that all these improvements and advances are good. Technological advances substitute machines for human labor. The freeing of human time from drudgery and toil is of unquestionable goodness. The reduction of menial labor to almost zero is wonderful. The opportunity that everybody has for travel, for recreation, for study -- everything we have done institutionally and externally is good for men. But human beings -- are they prepared for these good things? Can a society have institutions and conditions too good for the human beings in it? The answer is "Yes, it can." Not too good for their natures, but too good for those natures as trained. Q. Is there any answer to that problem? A. We are a million miles away from the kind of training that would be required to make our total population worthy of the institutions we have created. I don't believe we can create it in less than 150 or 200 years. Certainly the kind of thing I'm talking about cannot be done in a five-year reform. Q. Are you saying that more education is needed? A. Oh, much more. Actually, what is required is universal liberal schooling. And I mean liberal through and through -- not an ounce of vocational training from the kindergarten through college, but liberal schooling for all children up through the bachelor of arts degree. That, plus some kind of publicly sustained liberal education for all adults throughout their lives. This is my notion of the educational burden that our society must discharge. Q. Why is that? A. Let's suppose for a moment that there will never be a thermonuclear war. Let your imagination run as follows:
Let the Atlantic and the Pacific walls of this country be sky high. Imagine ourselves as isolated, economically self-sufficient, able to make progress at the rate we have been making it in all technological fields.
Now, in 150 or 200 years, the work load should be -- for those who work at all -- about 20 hours a week, and I would say we ought to have something like 25 million unemployed. All the wealth we would then need could be produced by a society in which those who worked at it did so 20 hours a week and for not more than 30 years of their lives.
Under such conditions, if education, both in and out of schools, were to remain as it is now, that society would destroy itself, out of the misuse of its time, because of the degradations and corruptions that would have to ensue just from sheer boredom. You know, free time is like a vacuum -- it has to be filled, in good ways or bad ways, but it has to be filled. People can't sleep it all away. Q. Does this problem of free time affect everyone? A. The people who have the least free time are the leaders, the men at the top of the corporations, the professions, and in political life. Most of them work much more than 40 hours a week. By "work" I'm talking about all forms of it -- both work to produce wealth and work to produce the goods of civilization. I would say that our leading citizens work 60 hours a week or more.
This is all right, because their work is good work. Sixty hours a week of drudgery is dreadful. But where you learn something and you contribute something by working, there is nothing wrong with 60 hours of it. It is when you come down to those of less ability that it becomes more and more important to provide the means of using their free time well. We don't have to worry about the fellows at the top. They haven't got much free time. They never will. Q. Are most people getting more free time than they know how to handle? A. Yes. They've been educated in schools where work was talked down rather than talked up, where study was something you got out of rather than got into. They live in a society where all the proliferated amusement industries bid for the use of their free time, and they have no resistance to the enticements. Q. Isn't there such a thing, then, as too much prosperity? A. No, no. There's nothing wrong with affluence. The affluent society we have is a fine thing. Q. It's what man does in an affluent society that counts? A. That's right. Q. Yet, back in the 1930s, didn't the depression seem to stiffen the backbone of people? A. In general, as we look back on it, we think it had a good effect. But there's a reason for that, you see. Adversity is often easier on the moral character than good fortune is. That is, if you have any guts at all, you can stand up to adversity more easily than you can resist good fortune. Q. People, then, respond to challenges. A. Yes. In general, men fight better when they're kicked than when they're pampered. Q. Some people say another depression might be a good thing for Americans. A. Perhaps, but that isn't a good solution. Q. Why not? A. It wouldn't be a solution, because a depression causes too much misery of a kind that you don't want to have. It isn't a good state of affairs in itself, even though it has some good by-products accidentally. The real problem is to learn how to live with prosperity. There's a wonderful statement by the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius on this point, in the Meditations. Aurelius, with no comment, just says: "It is possible to live well, even in a palace." The implication is clear. It is not too hard to "live well" if you're a slave or an underling, because you've got to. But, given all the enticements and comforts of a palace, said Aurelius, it is difficult but possible to live well even there. Q. You once stated that "philosophy is everybody's business." Are people really interested in philosophy? A. I think so. From time to time, I have engaged people, in all walks of life, in philosophical conversations -- taxi drivers, porters, businessmen. We talk about the great questions -- the purpose of life, the existence of Cod, the immortality of the soul, free will, good and bad societies, moral right and wrong. The basic questions interest everybody. Q. Can they understand such questions? A. If you talk the kind of repulsive jargon that is talked in philosophy classes, no one is interested. But, if you talk the common sense with which philosophy begins, no one turns away. Q. Do people ask questions? A. They always have. I'm a firm believer in the opening sentence of Aristotle's Metaphysics. He says, "All men by nature desire to know." This is a universal impulse. In most children, it gets crushed out. Or society turns our attention away from it. But I would say that the desire to know is stronger than the desire to eat, except when a man is starving. Q. But don't some philosophers say you can't settle questions of "right" and "wrong" by discussion. A. Well, there are the logical positivists whose point of origin is in the philosophy of David Hume. He dismissed all speculative philosophy as so much loose talk and unverifiable opinion.
The positivists are mathematical logicians who think that the job of the philosopher is the patient analysis of what human beings mean when they say something. When you ask, "Now, what is the truth about the way things are? What is man? What should he do?" they reply: "That's something to be solved by empirical science. All we can do is examine what men say."
Positivism is the dominant theory that is now being taught in our philosophy classes. In addition, our college students are taught in anthropology or sociology -- most professors of social science are moral skeptics -- that there are no objective principles in morality, that there is no way to establish what is right or wrong. If a tribe practices cannibalism, it is wrong by our standards, but not by that tribe's standards. So they leave college with the view that all morals are a matter of opinion. Q. Has this affected the moral outlook of people? A. I want to be careful about that. If you say that it affects the general state of our mentality, the answer is yes. If you then ask if it affects the general level of our conduct, my answer is I don't know. This mentality is not, in my opinion, an admirable mentality, but I don't think it means that more men than before act badly. Q. Can an adult start educating himself? A. Yes -- that is not only possible, but necessary. In my view, it is adult learning that is the most important part of education. Let me say it in another way: If the schools were as good as they could be, if every child got the very best liberal schooling from kindergarten through college in proportion to his capacity, it would still be necessary for everyone to do most of his learning in adult life. Q. Why? A. Children can be trained to learn and prepared for learning, but they cannot achieve much understanding or insight, and certainly they can attain no wisdom. As long as you're a child, you're inexperienced, you're not serious, you're not stable, you have no depth, and, in the absence of all the qualities that go with maturity, not very much that is important can be learned.
You can't expect a child really to understand War and Peace or The Divine Comedy or Faust or The Iliad. You can't expect the great works of moral and metaphysical philosophy to be grasped by children. They can pass examinations, they can hand you back the words, but they're childish in their understanding -- because they are children.
To get much depth of understanding and even a modicum of wisdom requires continued learning, mainly after 40, and certainly after 35. Q. Are many people doing this? A. Some. At the top level of American life we do have such things as the executive seminars which are held at Aspen, Colorado -- nine in the summertime and three in the wintertime -- and we get top business and professional men from all over the country to go there for two weeks.
Now that is not very long, and in one sense it's a very narrow course of reading. It consists of 12 sessions and 12 assignments, with the reading mainly in the basic political and economic papers that relate to the two basic institutions of our society -- democracy and capitalism. Q. How do these executives feel about it? A. What fascinates me is to hear these presidents, vice presidents and other executives of corporations admitting that this is the first time in years that they have read material like this. They regard it as tough to read. It is, but not too tough to read -- it's just tight and well reasoned, instead of the slop they've been reading, or the technical stuff they don't really read but glance at.
In the course of those two weeks, they realize how rusty their minds are. They suppose that they've been "thinking" in their jobs; but, in fact, most executives don't have to do much "thinking" to solve the routine problems that come before them. They've got habits and rules of thumb for doing that. Q. Are these problems found just in the United States? A. Here alone, but only to the extent that we are technologically more advanced and also politically more democratic. Every other country will face the same problem in proportion as it becomes industrially developed and politically democratic.
REASONS FOR OPTIMISM Q. Do you see any hope for a solution? A. I'm really an optimist. I think the problem will have to be solved, because the alternative is so desperate. Q. How will it be solved? A. I don't know the circumstances -- I guess my faith is something like that of De Tocqueville's, that the movement of the world toward democracy is almost a providential one. The movement of the world toward industrialism is equally providential. Taking the proposition that all men are by nature equal, which I do take to be true, these advances, political democracy and the freeing of human time so that men can have equal opportunity to live well, are so intrinsically right that it seems to me incredible that men should not be able to make good use of them.
In other words, that we should have produced these right things and then fail to make a right use of them seems to me -- well, my faith is that we can't fail on this. So I really am an optimist, though perhaps I'm a bleak optimist. I don't see how it's going to happen, but I believe that it's going to happen.
first interview website
I have gone through and highlighted some good information in red ans some I put in bold this is mostly Adler's ideas about education.
Dick Cavett Interviews Dr. Adler
(A transcription of Dick Cavett's delightful television interview with Dr. Adler in 1978.)
DICK CAVETT: I can always see one face that looks disappointed when I walk out. I don't know what it is. Good evening, and philosophy today -- don't touch the dial -- is generally a pretty technical and academic matter. And philosophy is a pretty remote figure, as I would say, to most of us, including me.
My guest tonight and tomorrow night, Mortimer Adler, believes that is all wrong. He thinks philosophy should be for everybody, that it should be a part of ordinary, daily life, that a philosopher belongs in the marketplace. And in a long career of writing and teaching, he has not been above a little salesmanship of a bestseller here and there. He is Chairman of the Board of Editors for the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Director of the Institute for Philosophical Research in Chicago, and he has turned out a long line of almost, let's say, evangelical works that actually try to bring great books, great ideas to the people. You have seen him over the years in the advertisement -- pipe. He is a familiar face. And he was an editor, for example, of the famous 102-volume set called Great Books of the Western World. His latest work is something called Great Treasury of Western Thought.
He'll be here for two nights. I'll bring that out tomorrow night. I forgot to bring it with me tonight. There are some people who do feel that in his zeal, Mr. Adler goes to far in boiling down, packaging, and selling the classics. But as you are about to see, he has no trouble dealing with that criticism or with anything else that is tossed his way. Will you welcome, please, then a fascinating man, Mortimer Adler?
You upset some people somewhere once by saying that you had only been educated in the last twenty-five years. I think that is a quote from an address you gave somewhere.
MORTIMER ADLER: But indeed.
CAVETT: This, of course, because of your age being -- is it seventy-five?
ADLER: Seventy-six.
CAVETT: Seventy-six, left out your -- there is always an appreciative moan from the audience when someone like you or Bob Hope, who is that age, appears to be fifty. That left out, of course, the years of your formal education and --
ADLER: I call that schooling, not education.
CAVETT: Oh, please tell us the difference.
ADLER: Well, schooling is what goes on in institutions. It is only a preparation for education. No one ever gets educated in school. One of the troubles with the educational system is the wrong supposition that school is a place where you get an education, so that when you get a degree, that certifies you are an educated man or woman. That is far from the truth.
CAVETT: So now, yes, there is the phrase, "My son just completed his education."
ADLER: Utterly crazy. Utterly crazy.
CAVETT: Whereas, in fact, you wouldn't even assume that he had begun it?
ADLER: No, he hadn't begun it. But schools are not at their best, I assure you. And they aren't doing what they should be doing. But if they were doing what they should be doing, if they were at their best, the best they could do would be to prepare the young to become educated in their adult life by their own means -- by reading, by discussion, by travel, by thought. And when I say that I have ever been educated or become educated in the last twenty-five years, I mean that quite seriously. Only a really mature person has enough depth of soul to have ideas to take root and understand things. And the joke of that is that though I now think I am educated, I have forgotten most of the things I have learned in school.
CAVETT: Is that bad?
ADLER: No, good.
CAVETT: Uh, huh? Okay.
ADLER: Because most of the things you learn in school, you only learn to pass examinations with. And they aren't worth -- they aren't very important.
CAVETT: That depends on the school, doesn't it? I mean, there are schools where you simply learn the dates of the Dred Scott Decision and the Hanseatic League, and memorize them for the test, and then throw them out happily forever. But if you are asked to write on the following quotation everything you know about the phrase, "the poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling," or something, isn't that a little different?
ADLER: The most important things that you learn in school that you don't forget are the skills you acquire -- the skills of writing and reading, of good speech, even of good behavior in some sense --
CAVETT: Yes. . . and typing I would add.
ADLER: Well, typing is a very fun skill. I learned that before I went to school.
CAVETT: Typing is the best thing I ever had. It saved my life a few times. Ten dollars a day.
ADLER: It's very important.
CAVETT: You were quite a kid. I think I would like to have known you as a kid, but I am not entirely sure.
ADLER: You would have liked to have known me if you hadn't been one of my teachers.
CAVETT: If what?
ADLER: If you had not been one of my teachers. My teachers didn't like to know me because I was a nuisance to them.
CAVETT: Apparently you drove them up the blackboarded wall occasionally.
ADLER: I did indeed. I had a very kindly professor at Columbia. He was a professor of psychology. I was very fond of Professor Poffenberger. But I would walk into his office about fifty minutes before class. There was a list of twenty-five questions for him to answer.
CAVETT: For him to answer?
ADLER: Yes.
CAVETT: And if he hadn't prepared, did you grade him?
ADLER: And John Dewey, who I had studied at Columbia in the early 1920s --
CAVETT: The John Dewey?
ADLER: The John Dewey. He was, again, a kindly gentleman, who lectured very slowly so that I could take his lectures down in longhand. I would go home to my study and type the lecture out. I collected these lectures that I wrote about. And I noticed that what he said on Tuesday was inconsistent with what he said the previous Thursday. So I would write him a letter, and say, "Dear Professor Dewey, last Thursday you said . . . " and I would quote. "But this Tuesday you said . . . and that does not seem quite consistent to me. Would you please explain?"
Well, he came to class and said, "A student in class wrote me a letter." He read the letter and then tried to explain. I wrote the answer down. And the answer didn't solve the problem. So I wrote him another letter. And this went on for three weeks. And he finally had his assistant come to me, and say, "Dr. Dewey wishes you would stop writing him letters."
CAVETT: Does that show the proper attitude on the part of an educator?
ADLER: No, I was a nuisance. I admit I was a nuisance. I was a very persistent student.
CAVETT: Uh huh, you admit that.
ADLER: In fact, one teacher I had a Columbia that you probably know the name of -- Irwin Edman, he wrote a book called Philosopher's Holiday, I would argue with him so vigorously in class that one day I came to class at two-thirty. He was standing outside the door, and said, "Mortimer, I think you had better take the afternoon off. You get too excited in class."
CAVETT: Yes, I read about that. And he actually thought you were in some danger of getting hyper or whatever. Well, when I say is that the proper educational attitude, I wonder what should be the limit of a teacher's involvement with a student who is rigorously questioning him?
ADLER: I think the teacher should be complete. But that depends upon the students -- the teacher's having enough time for an individual student.
CAVETT: Yes, uh huh.
ADLER: And my, I think, my failure was to recognize the limits of the teacher's time.
CAVETT: Yeah.
ADLER: I was more of a burden than I should have been.
CAVETT: So somewhere between you and the student who falls asleep in class is the ideal.
ADLER: I think that many of my teachers did not resent my pertinacity in pursuing the question.
CAVETT: Uh huh, you never had the poor taste to correct the teacher's spelling in fourth grade as I did once?
ADLER: No.
CAVETT: Good. I barely survived that, even with my alleged friends. There was a man once named John Stuart Mill who couldn't remember a time when he couldn't read Greek.
ADLER: Well, he couldn't read Greek before the age of three.
CAVETT: Oh, is that it?
ADLER: You know, his father, who is James Mill, was a great English philosopher. And his father's friend was Jeremy Bentham, an even greater English philosopher. And Mill had other children. He must have had maybe half a dozen children that he sent to ordinary schools. But when John Stuart was born, he decided that he and Jeremy Bentham would bring this child up according to their own ideas of schooling. So they taught John Stuart Greek in the cradle. And as John Stuart reports in his autobiography, he could speak and read Greek at the age of three. He had read The Dialogues of Plato in Greek at the age of five, "And could distinguish," he said, "between the Socratic method and the substances of Platonic philosophy." Between five and eleven, he had read most of the books that I really came to know as the Great Books. At eleven he edited his father's History of India. At twelve, he edited Bentham's Rationale of Judicial Proof. And at eighteen, he had a nervous breakdown.
CAVETT: Well, I am certainly glad to hear it. Now, could you imagine what W. C. Fields would have done with that?
ADLER: I read John Stuart Mill's autobiography when I was fifteen. And, my God, I said, "I'm fifteen. I don't know Greek. I never read any Plato." In fact, I didn't even know who Socrates was at fifteen.
CAVETT: So you were five years behind on Aristotle probably, and then how many on Virgil?
ADLER: Well, at that time I was working on the editorial page of The New York Sun. And I took an advance on my week's salary, which was four dollars -- I got four dollars a week --
CAVETT: Wow!
ADLER: I got four dollars a week, which was a large salary in those days, and I went down to a secondhand bookstore on John Street and bought a secondhand set of Plato and started to read the Dialogues of Plato. And that is what ruined me.
CAVETT: Ruined you?
ADLER: I stopped -- I decided that up to that point I had planned to become a journalist. But I decided I wanted to become a philosopher. And I went back to college as a result of reading John Stuart Mill and Plato.
CAVETT: Did your parents think this was a little peculiar, that this was a phase, and pretty soon he'll start playing baseball and noticing girls and forget all this junk?
ADLER: I had a German father who took study rather seriously. My mother had been a schoolteacher. So they were a little less inclined to say that kind of thing.
CAVETT: Yeah.
ADLER: But, you see, I had left high school -- no, I shouldn't say that. I had been expelled from high school.
CAVETT: Leaving a grade.
ADLER: No, I had a disagreement with the principal. And he won the argument. But he did suspend me from all -- I was editor of the school paper, and he suspended me from all activities. And I decided to leave school, I guess. So I went to work on The New York Sun, and I had only finished two years of high school. So going to college wasn't easy. I had two years of high school preparation to make up. So while I was working as an office boy to the president of the Worthington Pump and Machinery Corporation down at 115th and Broadway, I did all the studying I had to do, take the regent's examinations, and entered Columbia. So I went to Columbia.
CAVETT: Yes, aren't you one of those rare birds who has a Ph.D. but not a B.A.?
ADLER: I have a Ph.D. but no M.A., no B.A., and no high school diploma.
CAVETT: Has the statute of limitations run out on this? Is it all right to admit this?
ADLER: I have been given by the University of Seattle an honorary B.A. I have been given by St. Mary's College an honorary M.A. But no one has given me a high school diploma.
CAVETT: I hate to ask such a square question, but isn't it a requirement in getting a Ph.D. in every school to have had an --
ADLER: No, no.
CAVETT: I didn't realize that.
ADLER: I had more than enough credits to graduate from Columbia. In fact, I think you needed 130 points of credit, and I had a 145. They were all As.
CAVETT: Yeah, so you were --
ADLER: I had no problem with that at all. The reason why I didn't get the diploma was that not only did I not swim, I refused to go to --
CAVETT: You did say swim?
ADLER: Swim, I didn't take the swimming test.
CAVETT: Had you failed to study for it or what?
ADLER: Well, worse than that. At Columbia in my day, maybe it is still true, physical education was required for all four years. And I cut all four years. I cut physical education. I never went to gym. And my reason for not going to gym was that I hated to dress and undress in the middle of the day. You see --
CAVETT: Once a day is enough, yes.
ADLER: And it was just before graduation, just after I had gotten my Phi Beta Kappa key, the dean called me, and said, "Mortimer, I have looked at your record, and you haven't been to gym for four years. Is that true?" I said, "Yes." He said, "Well, you can't get your diploma." So I marched in the procession at Columbia but didn't get my diploma.
CAVETT: Dressed, I assume.
ADLER: Yes, of course, I paid twenty dollars, which I never got back by the way.
CAVETT: Now, what do you think about that? In retrospect do you still hold that you were within your rights? What about the Greek idea of the trained body and the trained mind?
ADLER: No, I was not within my rights. He was within his rights to withhold my diploma because physical education was a requirement, and I didn't do it.
CAVETT: Yeah, eventually did you miss something valuable? Are you still against physical education?
ADLER: Well, you know that I share Mr. Hutchins's view about physical education or exercise in general.
CAVETT: Uh huh.
ADLER: Hutchins used to say, "Whenever I feel the impulse to exercise, I lie down until it passes away."
CAVETT: Yes, Dr. Jonathan Miller, on this show, put running and jogging where some people think it should be put, although I am a practitioner of it, and I think he is wrong. But not to dwell on this too much, but, you know, there is, along with an intellectual tradition in some societies, a parallel physical tradition of -- seriously, I think there is perhaps some link between a well-tuned body and an alert mind.
ADLER: Well, yes, I don't look with contempt upon a well-tuned body. But I don't enjoy tuning it.
CAVETT: You can get people to do that. You've had the temerity, I think -- oh, let's go back a bit to your -- I am still fascinated with you as a kid. You were not only, from what I read about you, content simply to study avidly but began to educate your own sister, I think, at a very tender age.
ADLER: Yes, I had become an avid student of Darwin's Origin of Species and the theory of evolution. So I gave her lectures on evolution and the origin of the human species when she was about ten.
CAVETT: And you were older?
ADLER: Yes, I was fourteen.
CAVETT: Were you ever chosen for the baseball team as a kid?
ADLER: No, no. I did start writing very early. One of the reasons why I was able to get that job on The New York Sun, though I was only fifteen years old, was that because when I was ten years old or eleven in public school, I won an essay contest and a silver medal from The New York Sun for writing an essay on Napoleon. So I marched down -- I wanted a job and marched down and showed them my silver medal. And I got the job.
CAVETT: You had the right credentials. You wrote -- some of the things I want to get to with you -- you wrote a book called How to Read a Book.
ADLER: In 1940.
CAVETT: Of course, presumably, people who need to know how to read a book couldn't read it, could they?
ADLER: No.
CAVETT: So is there a previous book that should be written?
ADLER: No. You are right. People have said, "How do I learn how to read a book?" But the book teaches you how to read as you read it. And say, that if you begin with real little skill, as most people will begin with little skill, since most people have acquired the skill of reading up to the fourth grade and not beyond -- I mean most Americans have fourth grade reading abilities. Even when they graduate from college, they are not much better than fourth grade reading abilities. The book is an attempt to show what the art of reading, the skill of reading should become as one develops beyond that elementary level.
CAVETT: Yes, uh huh.
ADLER: They obviously -- most Americans are functionally literate. They can read the newspaper, Time Magazine, the advertisements, directions on signs.
CAVETT: Yeah.
ADLER: But give them a difficult book -- a lot of reading consists in taking a book that is over your head -- if it isn't over your head, if there is nothing in the book that you can't understand as soon as you see the words, you don't need any skill in reading, obviously, except the ordinary elementary school, fourth-grade level. But if a book that is over your head, and no books -- none of your heads can possibly lift your head up, can they? If a book that is over your head puzzles you, the art of reading -- and if you don't fully understand it as you read the words, the art of reading consists in the skill of being able to -- without any help from outside -- find out what that book is saying and to state it better. I almost say that it is the skill of being able to lift your own mind up from understanding less to understanding more.
CAVETT: And in your book you tell how to do that?
ADLER: Yes, another important thing to say about it is that I once had to write a slogan for an ad, I think, about the book, but it was a bestseller. And I what I suggested with it was that the art of reading consists -- the art of staying awake while reading. Most people don't stay awake.
CAVETT: As many people say, "Oh, that is a wonderful book for going to sleep."
ADLER: And those books, I don't call that reading. I mean, the books you read to go to sleep with, the books you read on airplanes, the books you read while waiting to pass the time are like movies. They are the time killers, the enjoyment. I am talking about serious reading, which is profitable to the mind because it improves your understanding. And here I would guess, Dick, that I don't read more than five books a year. I read a great many to go to sleep with. I must scan hundreds that come into my office that I put on shelves and classify or make notes about if I want to go back to them.
CAVETT: Someone saw you on a plane reading a thriller, The Vicar of Christ, was it?
ADLER: Yes, it is. That is right. I went to Australia with The Vicar of Christ.
CAVETT: That is escapist reading for you?
ADLER: It occupied two long flights to Auckland and back from Sydney.
CAVETT: Yes.
ADLER: But that is not reading.
CAVETT: But when you consider books, do you only read five a year?
ADLER: I seldom read a book except at my desk or at a table with a pencil and pad, marking the book, writing notes. That is what I mean by reading.
CAVETT: Librarians just fainted all over the country when you said that.
ADLER: Yes, but I only mark my own books, not library books.
CAVETT: Okay, yeah.
ADLER: And unless reading is a very intense activity, unless it is sufficiently fatiguing so that you get tired after you do an hour or two of it, you aren't doing it. And most people, I think, do not have the experience of reading this way.
CAVETT: My wife reads at least a book a day, which gives me a terrible inferiority complex.
ADLER: Do you know what Thomas Hobbes said about that? You might tell your wife.
CAVETT: I will.
ADLER: He said, "If I read as many books as most men do, I would be as dull-witted as they are."
CAVETT: I think maybe you had better tell her that. And here she is now. She is quite sharp-witted. And it is amazing that she has managed -- she can go into Foyles's Bookstore in London and not find anything she hasn't read in whole sections of the store. And it just gives me the --
ADLER: Are we talking about reading for pleasure or reading for profit now?
CAVETT: Both, but see, she has also made the mistake of trying to read to go to sleep and once finished the entire Memoirs of Cardinal Wolsey without falling asleep.
ADLER: Oh, no.
CAVETT: That was the price of making that mistake. Some people might see your book, How to Read a Book, and say, "Oh, good, a book on speed-reading."
ADLER: Oh, no.
CAVETT: Perish the thought.
ADLER: Perish the thought. In the revised edition, which came out in 1974, we made the point that the theory of speed-reading is entirely wrong. One should not be able to read quickly. We should be able to read at variable speeds. Some things we want to look at and be able to scan very quickly. And some things they are opposite. We want you to be able to read as slowly as possible. In fact, as the book becomes more difficult and more important, I would say ten pages an hour is the maximum. It depends on what you are working at. If the book becomes something that is inconsiderable, insubstantial, you can scan it in fifty minutes or thirty minutes.
CAVETT: Yes, there was a friend of mine who stomped out of the famous lady's speed-reading course, when they said, "When you are just reading for fun like a novel," but he said, "But I take novels quite seriously. I consider those important reading."
ADLER: I think the claim, the famous Evelyn Wood's claim is quite wrong. I think you can increase a person's speed in scanning a book. I don't think you can increase the speed of comprehension.
CAVETT: Yes, I taught a speed-reading course on cassette one time. I mean, that some companies use. And it is based on a sound principle that our muscles can be trained to move infinitely faster. It is not literal, of course. Never is it faster than we think it can. And so for people who just have to quickly digest a lot of stuff, you can do it at lightning speed with a little practice. One of the things that you get a kind of grudging respect from your colleagues on is what I guess you might call your utter faith in learning and self-improvement. And some people question whether this is the right way to educate anybody, to ask them to just sit down, as you say, at your desk with a book alone and have a dialogue with, say, Plato, in the sense that there are not that many people -- and I am not afraid of including myself in this -- who at first glance are not just going to be able to take Plato alone. I would like to have -- and would you deny I should have this? I would like to have Bernard Knox talk to me a bit about what Greece and the setting and the philosophy and the history and so on is? Or Aristotle, is Aristotle for everybody? Or don't they need some help?
ADLER: You read the book to the effect that Aristotle is for everybody, as the Great Books are for everybody. But I agree with you. Though I think one should do a certain amount of work alone, I also think it is a great help to have someone else read the same book you are reading and have someone to talk to about it, whether it be your elders, your colleagues, or a teacher in discussion. One of the reasons why we set up the Great Books Discussion Program, one of the reasons for the Aspen Program, as I have been teaching the Great Books since 1923, is that to read them entirely by yourself is not nearly as fruitful or enjoyable. It is always better to read them with somebody else and have a discussion. the Great Books Program is a program in which, whether it is at St. John's College, or whether I do it at Aspen, or I've got a Great Books Seminar for adults in Chicago that has been going since 1943. We read a book every month, and we meet on a Wednesday evening for two hours and talk about the book.
CAVETT: Uh huh.
ADLER: As a moderator, I ask questions about the book. But when the discussion gets generated in this cross-table conversation, that is what makes it enjoyable. And you learn more. And I don't think you can learn entirely by yourself. I agree with you.
CAVETT: We sometimes get labeled as the man who says, "Get rid of schools, get rid of teachers, get rid of written exams, get rid of classes," and this misunderstands you to a degree. You have said things along those lines.
ADLER: I can be very precise about that, Dick.
CAVETT: Yeah.
ADLER: I think schools and teachers are dispensable.
CAVETT: By that you mean --
ADLER: They are not absolutely necessary. People have become educated without schools and without teachers.
CAVETT: Sure.
ADLER: But they are very helpful.
CAVETT: Yeah.
ADLER: And if they were better, it would be even better. They would be even more helpful.
CAVETT: Uh huh, now Groucho Marx, to pick an odd example, was one of the best-read men I had ever met. He hardly ever went to school. He had a tiny amount of schooling. Are you willing to say that had he gone to school, he would have been less educated in your sense of the word than if he had -
ADLER: If he had gone to a good school where they had taught him how to read and write and speak and given him, shall I say, a superficial introduction in his youth to the world of learning, he might have profited by that and gotten further in his own education. See, I think the school is a help, an aid, toward the process of becoming educated.
CAVETT: Uh huh.
ADLER: It functions best when it functions most effectively in that direction. When it tries to educate the person in school, it fails, because that can't be done. That is because immaturity is not just a difficulty; it is an impossible obstacle to becoming educated.
CAVETT: You can't over leak material. It has to come upon --
ADLER: You cannot become educated while young.
CAVETT: You would, I think, favor having so-called formal education end earlier in a person's life.
ADLER: Yes, that is very important. That is my most serious criticism in the American school system.
CAVETT: And you mean more by it than just every one of us who has ever looked out on a beautiful spring day and thought, "Why am I sitting in this stuffy classroom?"
ADLER: In all the great European systems of schooling, not education, but schooling, the basic undergraduate schooling is twelve years. There are two, six forms, elementary and the secondary, primary and the secondary. And after that there is university.
CAVETT: Ending at about eighteen. Eighteen, yes.
ADLER: I would like to move -- we have, unfortunately, sixteen years, starting at six and ending at twenty-two, so that young people are in school and the undergraduate college between eighteen and twenty-two, which is much too late. And one of the reasons for the decline, serious decline of our colleges is increase of specialization, increase of vocational training, the dwindling and decline of liberal schooling and general schooling is that is too late. It is not realistic to ask young people, boys and girls between eighteen and twenty-two not to think about their future careers, not to think of specialization, not to ask for some vocational preparation. You could up to sixteen. So I would like to suggest that schooling start at age four. The sooner we get the young out of the home, the better I think. Starting at four, by the way, we know everything about early learning that children at age three can begin all the Montessori experience supports that.
CAVETT: Kids are hungry to read, some of them at three.
ADLER: That's right. You really are wasting two years by starting at six. Start at four, run two periods of six years each, primary and secondary.
CAVETT: Yeah.
ADLER: Give the Bachelor of Arts degree at age sixteen. That completes undergraduate education. Have that twelve years of schooling completely general, completely required, no electives, no specialization, no vocational preparation. And then at sixteen, have four years of compulsory non-schooling.
CAVETT: Meaning what?
ADLER: Everyone out of school. School is closed.
CAVETT: The one thing you can't do is go to school. The one thing you can't do.
ADLER: That's right.
CAVETT: Oh, I wish this had been true years ago.
ADLER: Between sixteen and twenty, and during that time either work in the public or private sector, the Army or the Navy, travel, anything to grow up so that when those who come back to the university, they come back and are mature as they are not now.
CAVETT: In ways I envied the guys who came to college from the war because they said, "I never realized what it was like until I got away from it and realized how much I wanted it at an earlier age."
ADLER: I was teaching at the University of Chicago right after the Korean War. So I had in my classes two kinds of students -- those who came through the ordinary way, and G. I. Bill students, students of the G. I. Bill of Rights.
And though they are far closer to the same age, they are utterly different.
CAVETT: You could tell who the ardent student was.
ADLER: That is right.
CAVETT: I have to cut you for the moment, but tomorrow at the same time, we will return. Adler, thank you. And you will be with us tomorrow.
ADLER: Thank you.
CAVETT: We will see you tomorrow, and good night.
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The second interview is from this website http://radicalacademy.com/adlerinterview3.htm
U.S. News & World Report Interviews Dr. Mortimer J. Adler
"We Have Failed Completely" to Teach Children to Think
Q. Dr. Adler, is there any difference in the way people are behaving morally today, and the way they behaved in the past?
A. In outward manners and customs, yes. But if you are asking whether in any generation there are more men who violate the simplest moral principles, whether there are more scoundrels, my answer is no.
Q. Why is it that you hear growing complaints about laxity in public and private morals?
A. Any generation of human beings will contain the same human potentialities. The differences in human behavior result from what you surround that population with -- the amount of power that is put into the hands of some people, the controls that are exercised on human conduct, the institutions you give them, the opportunities you give them. They will appear to behave differently because of the surrounding circumstances, though in fact the human material will be about the same.
Q. Are things like television creating wrong attitudes? What about crime programs, other kinds of entertainment people are getting?
A. Advertisers are paying for the time to sell their products. They want a mass audience, which is not supplied by educational or public-service shows. You ask, "Whose fault is it that you can't get a mass audience for such shows?" Well, it is not the advertisers' fault. If anything, it's the fault of American education.
Q. The problem rests with people themselves -- what they will accept?
A. Yes.
Q. Is education supposed to build moral fiber?
A. Yes. There's a lot of talk, you know, that schools are responsible for training the moral character of their students as well as giving them intellectual training. But it's always seemed to me that the question is put the wrong way. You cannot create a good student except by creating a morally virtuous student.
Q. In what way?
A. Let's ask what it means to be a good student. Here is a child who is given the opportunity to do the hard job of studying, or the easy job of playing. All the enticements of youth -- cars, football games, parties, drinking -- surround him. Now, if he yields to these, he will not have as much time as he needs to study well. Hence, when you find a good student, you have found a morally virtuous child.
Q. It's not just a matter of basic intelligence, then?
A. Oh, no. I have met many children whose intellectual capacity would permit them to be good students, but whose moral laxity prevents them from being good students because of the way they use their time.
Q. Does that affect their attitudes outside school?
A. That's the worst of it. I've often thought that one of the most potent causes of juvenile delinquency is that the present high school does not work any of its children hard enough. The bright children get away with doing almost nothing -- they don't have to study to get good grades. And the duller ones know that they will be passed, anyway, because they have to be promoted. Few people are flunked out of high school. As a result, all the children have a very easy time of it.
Q. Do they then have time for getting into trouble?
A. Yes. A child at that age is energetic and ingenious. His mind, his ingenuity, his energy are not being taxed by study. Well, he has to have an outlet somewhere. Much of our delinquency doesn't come from the slum areas -- it comes from children who are trying to find something to do. They're inventing a way of life for themselves.
Q. At one time youngsters went to work at an early age.
A. If there's any reason why there is more juvenile delinquency today, it's that there are more children in high school who are not occupied full time with their studies. A hundred years ago, when boys went to work at 14 or earlier, and worked 12 to 14 hours a day, they didn't have any time for delinquency.
Q. Don't youngsters learn to work in college?
A. I doubt if 10 per cent of the college population in the United States works 40 hours a week. Add up the number of hours a student spends in class -- assuming that he's attentive and not asleep -- and the number of hours he spends in the library and at a desk, and I would guess that less than 10 per cent work much more than 30 hours a week. That's not enough for an energetic boy or girl to put in.
Q. Do youngsters carry those standards of work with them into later life -- as plumbers or clerks or salesmen?
A. That's right. In our generation, there are many educators who say that school should "prepare for life." I agree with them. Now what is life? Is it mainly significant work, or is it play? Anyone's understanding of human life is that the main job a man has to do is to grow, improve himself, make a contribution to society, as well as earn a living. All of this is work -- leisure work or subsistence work. If this is so, then the only way the schools can prepare a child for life is to start him working at the age of 6. From 6 on, the child should be given a full burden of work and kept at it. That is the way to prepare a child for life. Of course, if life is to be a round of frolic and fun, then what the schools are doing now is "preparing for life." I think it is a dreadful picture.
Q. A youngster gets out of school without working very hard, so his idea is to get through life the same way --
A. That is precisely it.
HOW PARENTS CAN HELP
Q. What about the parents? This idea of education has been going on for many years. Is their outlook affected?
A. It's a vicious circle. You have no idea how much protest comes from parents when teachers try to increase homework. Why is this so? The answer is that, if the children have considerable homework, the evening hours of parents in the home are interfered with. The child should be able to go to his parents for some help with respect to difficult problems. But this interferes with the relaxed state of affairs in the home, and the parents would rather not be troubled by it.
Q. Is that true of all parents?
A. I'm not saying this is true of all parents, but it's true of a great many. And a great many American parents are incredibly sentimental about childhood. "Why should Johnny have to work so hard?" they ask. This silly sentimentality about children is bad for the children, bad for our society, bad for the school system, bad all along the line.
Q. Are people being equipped intellectually to handle their problems today?
A. If you consider schooling up through high school, the main change is that our children are simply less well trained than they were in the schools of earlier centuries. They cannot read as well. They cannot write as well. They cannot think as well. They are not as well disciplined in the actual processes of study and learning.
Q. Aren't there exceptions?
A. Oh, in every generation there are some good students. There always will be -- the worst school system in the world can't prevent that. But, by and large, in relative numbers -- I'm speaking on the basis of what I know from teaching in college and seeing the product of the American high school -- I think it has grown much worse.
Q. Did that come with mass education?
A. What educators should have faced is this hard question: How do you do for those whose educational aptitude is low exactly what you do for the most gifted in proportion to their capacity? Let me illustrate this very simply: In gymnastics, if you had children of different strengths and heights, and you thought that chinning the bar was a good exercise for the development of muscles and co-ordination, would you set the bar at the same height for all the children? No. You would set it for children of different groups at different heights. Would you be doing the same thing for all children with this bar set at different heights? Yes. You'd be doing exactly the same.
Now what I'm saying is this: If Greek and Latin, algebra and calculus, history and physics, and the great books are the subjects which stretch the intellectual muscles of the brightest child and give him the skill and training he needs, then we either have to find or invent materials which do exactly the same things in proportion to the capacity of the weaker child. Not something different -- the same things.
Q. Does every child need that training -- even if he becomes a manual laborer?
A. If stretching the child's mind and making him use it for learning and thinking is the function of education, then you must do it for every child who is not in an asylum, who is going to become a citizen, who is going to rear children, who is going to have to hold a job of some kind, who is going to have more free time than he knows what to do with. And that is where we have failed completely.
Q. Is that a growing problem?
A. Let me put the matter this way: It would take the most extraordinary reforms, a complete recasting of our whole school system from the kindergarten through college, to prepare most of tomorrow's children to use their opportunities well. Their opportunities are too rich. The thing that is frightening to me is that we progressively improve the institutions and the conditions of our lives --
Q. Is that a bad thing?
A. I don't think there is any question that all these improvements and advances are good. Technological advances substitute machines for human labor. The freeing of human time from drudgery and toil is of unquestionable goodness. The reduction of menial labor to almost zero is wonderful. The opportunity that everybody has for travel, for recreation, for study -- everything we have done institutionally and externally is good for men. But human beings -- are they prepared for these good things? Can a society have institutions and conditions too good for the human beings in it? The answer is "Yes, it can." Not too good for their natures, but too good for those natures as trained.
Q. Is there any answer to that problem?
A. We are a million miles away from the kind of training that would be required to make our total population worthy of the institutions we have created. I don't believe we can create it in less than 150 or 200 years. Certainly the kind of thing I'm talking about cannot be done in a five-year reform.
Q. Are you saying that more education is needed?
A. Oh, much more. Actually, what is required is universal liberal schooling. And I mean liberal through and through -- not an ounce of vocational training from the kindergarten through college, but liberal schooling for all children up through the bachelor of arts degree. That, plus some kind of publicly sustained liberal education for all adults throughout their lives. This is my notion of the educational burden that our society must discharge.
Q. Why is that?
A. Let's suppose for a moment that there will never be a thermonuclear war. Let your imagination run as follows:
Let the Atlantic and the Pacific walls of this country be sky high. Imagine ourselves as isolated, economically self-sufficient, able to make progress at the rate we have been making it in all technological fields.
Now, in 150 or 200 years, the work load should be -- for those who work at all -- about 20 hours a week, and I would say we ought to have something like 25 million unemployed. All the wealth we would then need could be produced by a society in which those who worked at it did so 20 hours a week and for not more than 30 years of their lives.
Under such conditions, if education, both in and out of schools, were to remain as it is now, that society would destroy itself, out of the misuse of its time, because of the degradations and corruptions that would have to ensue just from sheer boredom. You know, free time is like a vacuum -- it has to be filled, in good ways or bad ways, but it has to be filled. People can't sleep it all away.
Q. Does this problem of free time affect everyone?
A. The people who have the least free time are the leaders, the men at the top of the corporations, the professions, and in political life. Most of them work much more than 40 hours a week. By "work" I'm talking about all forms of it -- both work to produce wealth and work to produce the goods of civilization. I would say that our leading citizens work 60 hours a week or more.
This is all right, because their work is good work. Sixty hours a week of drudgery is dreadful. But where you learn something and you contribute something by working, there is nothing wrong with 60 hours of it. It is when you come down to those of less ability that it becomes more and more important to provide the means of using their free time well. We don't have to worry about the fellows at the top. They haven't got much free time. They never will.
Q. Are most people getting more free time than they know how to handle?
A. Yes. They've been educated in schools where work was talked down rather than talked up, where study was something you got out of rather than got into. They live in a society where all the proliferated amusement industries bid for the use of their free time, and they have no resistance to the enticements.
Q. Isn't there such a thing, then, as too much prosperity?
A. No, no. There's nothing wrong with affluence. The affluent society we have is a fine thing.
Q. It's what man does in an affluent society that counts?
A. That's right.
Q. Yet, back in the 1930s, didn't the depression seem to stiffen the backbone of people?
A. In general, as we look back on it, we think it had a good effect. But there's a reason for that, you see. Adversity is often easier on the moral character than good fortune is. That is, if you have any guts at all, you can stand up to adversity more easily than you can resist good fortune.
Q. People, then, respond to challenges.
A. Yes. In general, men fight better when they're kicked than when they're pampered.
Q. Some people say another depression might be a good thing for Americans.
A. Perhaps, but that isn't a good solution.
Q. Why not?
A. It wouldn't be a solution, because a depression causes too much misery of a kind that you don't want to have. It isn't a good state of affairs in itself, even though it has some good by-products accidentally. The real problem is to learn how to live with prosperity. There's a wonderful statement by the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius on this point, in the Meditations. Aurelius, with no comment, just says: "It is possible to live well, even in a palace." The implication is clear. It is not too hard to "live well" if you're a slave or an underling, because you've got to. But, given all the enticements and comforts of a palace, said Aurelius, it is difficult but possible to live well even there.
Q. You once stated that "philosophy is everybody's business." Are people really interested in philosophy?
A. I think so. From time to time, I have engaged people, in all walks of life, in philosophical conversations -- taxi drivers, porters, businessmen. We talk about the great questions -- the purpose of life, the existence of Cod, the immortality of the soul, free will, good and bad societies, moral right and wrong. The basic questions interest everybody.
Q. Can they understand such questions?
A. If you talk the kind of repulsive jargon that is talked in philosophy classes, no one is interested. But, if you talk the common sense with which philosophy begins, no one turns away.
Q. Do people ask questions?
A. They always have. I'm a firm believer in the opening sentence of Aristotle's Metaphysics. He says, "All men by nature desire to know." This is a universal impulse. In most children, it gets crushed out. Or society turns our attention away from it. But I would say that the desire to know is stronger than the desire to eat, except when a man is starving.
Q. But don't some philosophers say you can't settle questions of "right" and "wrong" by discussion.
A. Well, there are the logical positivists whose point of origin is in the philosophy of David Hume. He dismissed all speculative philosophy as so much loose talk and unverifiable opinion.
The positivists are mathematical logicians who think that the job of the philosopher is the patient analysis of what human beings mean when they say something. When you ask, "Now, what is the truth about the way things are? What is man? What should he do?" they reply: "That's something to be solved by empirical science. All we can do is examine what men say."
Positivism is the dominant theory that is now being taught in our philosophy classes. In addition, our college students are taught in anthropology or sociology -- most professors of social science are moral skeptics -- that there are no objective principles in morality, that there is no way to establish what is right or wrong. If a tribe practices cannibalism, it is wrong by our standards, but not by that tribe's standards. So they leave college with the view that all morals are a matter of opinion.
Q. Has this affected the moral outlook of people?
A. I want to be careful about that. If you say that it affects the general state of our mentality, the answer is yes. If you then ask if it affects the general level of our conduct, my answer is I don't know. This mentality is not, in my opinion, an admirable mentality, but I don't think it means that more men than before act badly.
Q. Can an adult start educating himself?
A. Yes -- that is not only possible, but necessary. In my view, it is adult learning that is the most important part of education. Let me say it in another way: If the schools were as good as they could be, if every child got the very best liberal schooling from kindergarten through college in proportion to his capacity, it would still be necessary for everyone to do most of his learning in adult life.
Q. Why?
A. Children can be trained to learn and prepared for learning, but they cannot achieve much understanding or insight, and certainly they can attain no wisdom. As long as you're a child, you're inexperienced, you're not serious, you're not stable, you have no depth, and, in the absence of all the qualities that go with maturity, not very much that is important can be learned.
You can't expect a child really to understand War and Peace or The Divine Comedy or Faust or The Iliad. You can't expect the great works of moral and metaphysical philosophy to be grasped by children. They can pass examinations, they can hand you back the words, but they're childish in their understanding -- because they are children.
To get much depth of understanding and even a modicum of wisdom requires continued learning, mainly after 40, and certainly after 35.
Q. Are many people doing this?
A. Some. At the top level of American life we do have such things as the executive seminars which are held at Aspen, Colorado -- nine in the summertime and three in the wintertime -- and we get top business and professional men from all over the country to go there for two weeks.
Now that is not very long, and in one sense it's a very narrow course of reading. It consists of 12 sessions and 12 assignments, with the reading mainly in the basic political and economic papers that relate to the two basic institutions of our society -- democracy and capitalism.
Q. How do these executives feel about it?
A. What fascinates me is to hear these presidents, vice presidents and other executives of corporations admitting that this is the first time in years that they have read material like this. They regard it as tough to read. It is, but not too tough to read -- it's just tight and well reasoned, instead of the slop they've been reading, or the technical stuff they don't really read but glance at.
In the course of those two weeks, they realize how rusty their minds are. They suppose that they've been "thinking" in their jobs; but, in fact, most executives don't have to do much "thinking" to solve the routine problems that come before them. They've got habits and rules of thumb for doing that.
Q. Are these problems found just in the United States?
A. Here alone, but only to the extent that we are technologically more advanced and also politically more democratic. Every other country will face the same problem in proportion as it becomes industrially developed and politically democratic.
REASONS FOR OPTIMISM
Q. Do you see any hope for a solution?
A. I'm really an optimist. I think the problem will have to be solved, because the alternative is so desperate.
Q. How will it be solved?
A. I don't know the circumstances -- I guess my faith is something like that of De Tocqueville's, that the movement of the world toward democracy is almost a providential one. The movement of the world toward industrialism is equally providential. Taking the proposition that all men are by nature equal, which I do take to be true, these advances, political democracy and the freeing of human time so that men can have equal opportunity to live well, are so intrinsically right that it seems to me incredible that men should not be able to make good use of them.
In other words, that we should have produced these right things and then fail to make a right use of them seems to me -- well, my faith is that we can't fail on this. So I really am an optimist, though perhaps I'm a bleak optimist. I don't see how it's going to happen, but I believe that it's going to happen.