
This post was kelmed from Rogue Lutheran.
May 08, 2010                         
Defining Dumbness Down
By Daniel H. FernaldHaving no substance of its own, the left is inherently  parasitic; like a cancer cell or virus, it survives by posing as a  healthy member of the same host it attacks and ultimately destroys. This  pattern of "mimic-attack-conquer" has given us liberty-hating  "liberals," leftist mainline churches that publicly embrace what their  own teachings explicitly prohibit, and educators whose goal is to ensure  that all children get left behind.
This last item is exemplified by  the distressing transformation of the backbone of the Western Canon, the  liberal arts, into something decidedly "illiberal." Under the direction  of leftist educators, the very institutions charged with the liberation  of young minds from the chains of ignorance and groupthink have become  increasingly effective indoctrination centers and breeding grounds for  rigid, unreflective political orthodoxy.
This transformation has been long  in coming. A look at where the liberal arts began puts in clearer relief  the full extent to which our educational system has been hijacked in  the service of the left's political agenda.
The seven liberal arts have deep  roots in the ancient world and are divided into two groups. The artes  triviales, or Trivium, consist of grammar, rhetoric, and  dialectic. They correspond roughly to what today are called "the  humanities." These early studies focused on the proper use and mastery  of language and verbal reasoning. Today's grammar schools are the direct  pedagogical descendants -- through numerous intermediaries -- of the  private academies in fourth-century-B.C. Athens.  
Having mastered the elementary  lessons of the Trivium, the pupil was prepared for the study of the more  advanced Quadrivium, or artes quadriviales, of arithmetic,  geometry, astronomy, and music.  
Taken together, the Trivium and Quadrivium  constitute what came to be called artes liberales, the liberal  arts. These were considered the proper pursuit for free minds pursuing  knowledge and wisdom and were contrasted with the illiberal arts, artes  illiberales, which aimed at mastery of only a particular subject  or skill set. 
The spirit of the artes liberales is manifest in  Pythagoras' (c. 570-c. 490 B.C.) classification of the attendees at the Olympic games: the  vendors, athletes, and spectators.  
The vendors attended the Games for  material gain and were consequently the lowest group. Just above the  vendors were the athletes, who exemplified excellence and virtue (arĂȘte)  in sport but did so for the merely instrumental purpose of achieving  victory. Their real goal was honor, not excellence.
The third and highest group was  the spectators. The spectators observed and studied the excellence and  virtue on display before them, but they had no stake in the results.  Their study of virtue for its own sake made them superior to the  athletes.
This same elevation of wisdom over honor and utility is at  the heart of the liberal arts. The knowledge and skills gained in the  course of a genuine liberal education are among the least of its  blessings. The liberally educated person's most cherished possession is  the love of learning itself, for its own sake. No person who regards  learning as merely instrumental is liberally educated, no matter how  encyclopedic his knowledge. Wisdom is not a means; it is the ultimate  end.
Tragically,  for most of even the best, brightest, and most privileged of today's  youth, the liberal arts are no longer an option, as they have been  redefined virtually out of existence. The professionalized, leftist  professoriate places politics above all.  
I will never forget the open sneer  from a former colleague -- an intelligent and multi-talented feminist  history professor -- that greeted my advocacy of "free and unfettered  discourse." The very idea struck her as absurd, and she acted as though I  was running some kind of intellectual con. She averred that "free and  unfettered discourse" was code for permitting the expression of bigoted,  racist, and otherwise "illegitimate" points of view. For such  closed-minded, anti-intellectual academics, the liberal arts' commitment  to free inquiry is itself a serious threat, and it is treated  accordingly.
Like a virus, the academic left has "reprogrammed" the host  to do its bidding by replacing the content, and even the method, of the  liberal arts without changing the name.  
In other words, the liberal arts  and the Western Canon itself have been zombified.  
The corruption of the Quadrivium  is clearly to be seen in the Climategate scandal and other examples of  pseudo-scientific quackery, but the real damage has been to the Trivium.  Like so many other cherished traditions and institutions, the "trivial"  arts of grammar, rhetoric, and dialectic (which include logic and  critical thinking) have been co-opted and subordinated to an explicitly  political agenda.  
Grammar, even broadly conceived, has yielded to multiculti  gibberish in the freshman English classroom. Rhetoric, if taught at all,  consists principally of learning to denounce politically incorrect  opinions, not to evaluate, refute, or engage constructively with them.  The only "dialectic" a college student is likely to encounter is the  dialectical materialism of Marx and his Merrily Murderous Marauders in  the guise of the latest academic fad.
How and why has this happened?
The "how" is easy. As with its  successful conquest of mainline Protestantism, the left has taken over  the educational establishment via the long march through the  institutions. Admitted Pentagon-bomber and alleged Obama ghostwriter  Bill Ayers is well-regarded by many in academe, as is radical leftist  Professor Angela Davis, among many others.  
These are not marginalized fringe  characters. They represent the academic mainstream. They run the joint.  The barbarians are not merely inside the gates; they control them, and  like Plato's philosopher-dogs, they are quite good at  distinguishing friend from foe. Does one really expect such people to  give a hoot and a holler about some racist, sexist, bigoted system of  education founded by dead white guys over two thousand years ago?  
The "why" is only slightly harder  to grasp. As rooted in the classical Greek conception of excellence and  virtue (arĂȘte), the Trivium and Quadrivium continually incline  the diligent student's gaze both inward and upward. Self-reflection and  correction lead to the development of a character that loves the True,  the Good, and the Beautiful. Such a character is strong enough to repel  attacks and sufficiently principled to give assent only to such  propositions as can withstand logical and critical scrutiny.
In addition, study of the seven  liberal arts tends to persuade the open-minded and inquisitive that  there is something beyond the here and the now. A belief in a  transcendent order that predates us and has some manner of authority  over us is anathema to today's radical, arrogant, solipsistic,  illiberal, and anti-intellectual left. They do not inquire because they  see no need to do so. After all, why study what you already "know"?
Leftist pseudo-educators care  greatly about ensuring that the peasants have the correct opinions, but  not a whit about the integrity of the process by which such opinions may  be intelligently formulated -- and challenged.  
In contrast, the liberal arts  create independent-minded, freethinking citizens who follow no light  except that of Truth itself. By defining dumbness down, leftist  intellectual patricians churn out generation after generation of  malleable plebeians who are under-informed, intellectually incurious,  and easily led. A critical, intelligent, well-informed citizenry is  political kryptonite to the left's ongoing transformational agenda.
Daniel H. Fernald has  written numerous academic articles and books, including Atheism Answered.  He holds a Ph.D.  in philosophy and rhetoric from Emory University. professordhf@hotmail.com
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GJ - Synods are as closed-minded as the tenured faculty of the Left. Once Holy Mother Synod has spoken on any issue, especially when it is contrary to the Word and Confessions--roma locuta est, causa finita est. "Rome has spoken, case closed."
I could hear the brains snapping shut in Ohio when Valleskey gave his horrid, anti-Biblical, anti-Lutheran, anti-Confessional "Figs from Thistles" paper on the Church Growth Movement. I could have ice-skated on the carpeting at the gathering afterwards, so frosty was the mood toward one who dared compare Valleskey's "spoiling the Egyptians" to stealing their garbage. The WELS pastors (except for one, later kicked out for orthodoxy) did not mind that they were following the Gadarene swine in tumbling off the cliff, following the wrong spirit.
Tim Glende grew up in that conference. His concept of the Lutheran Church came from maturing in the very bowels of Church Growth in the Michigan District, WELS.
Glende and Ski are the last belch of the Pepsi Generation, Ohio Conference.