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THE
GREAT BOOKS MOVEMENT
A Return to the Classics
by Patrick S. J. Carmack
The
Great Books Movement, being a movement or change, begins
one place and ends another. The movement is not
physical, but intellectual, and, hopefully, volitional
(involving the will) as well. Further, the experience
of those in the Great Books movement is that the change
involved is most often much for the better, in fact
remarkably so. Following are four of the basic opening
questions, and answers, upon which the Great Books Movement
was based.
OPENING
QUESTIONS
Why
a "books" movement? Because reading is good for the
mind: it requires individuals to acquire basic intellectual
skills; the art of reading; the art of speaking
about what is read; the art of thinking about what
is read and discussed. Beyond that, reading
books increases the opportunity for the mind to gain
a little insight, understanding, and wisdom. Reading,
and discussion of what is read, provides conditions
favorable for the acquisition of these favorable mental
qualities.
"If
there is some purpose of the things we do.will not
knowledge of it have a great influence on life?
Shall we not, like archers who have a mark to aim
at, be more likely to hit upon what we should? If
so, we must try, in outline at least, to determine
what it is." - Aristotle
Why
great books? Because greatness means excellence -
the highest and best materials on which the human
mind can work in order to gain insight, understanding,
and wisdom. Obviously, inferior materials lessen
the opportunity for such gains, to the point - with
poor to bad materials - that nothing is gained and
much may be lost. No one can any longer read all books,
or even most books, but only a very tiny percentage
of the total number of books. Therefore, to maximize
the gains to be made from reading, the best should
be read - the great books.
"He
[Adler] had discovered that merely reading was not
enough. He had found out that the usefulness
of reading was some way related to the excellence
of what was read and the plan for reading it. I
knew that reading was a good thing, but had hitherto
been under the impression that it didn't make any
difference what you read or how it was related to
anything else you read." - Robert M. Hutchins
"Contact
with writers of genius procures us the immediate
advantage of lifting us to a higher plane; by their
superiority alone they confer a benefit on us even
before teaching us anything....they accustom us
to the air of the mountaintops....In that world
of lofty thought the face of truth seems to be unveiled;
beauty shines forth..."
-The Intellectual Life, A.G. Sertillanges,
O.P.
Will
reading make one good, or at least better? No, at
least not directly, but it can be a great help to
that end. Goodness in that sense is a quality
of the will, not of the mind. However, as Aristotle
noted, above, if having some understanding and wisdom
is of some advantage to a man, then reading the
great books can improve the mind and so help a man
in the pursuit of happiness and in the performance
of his duties. But merely reading, even the
great books, does not make better men. However,
it does provide the best opportunity for the improvement
of the mind, and if that opportunity is taken, and
other factors cooperate (including a good will), the
result may be a better man and a better society.
"If
then the power of speech is a gift as great as any
that can be named,-if the origin of language is
by many philosophers even considered to be nothing
short of divine,-if by means of words the secrets
of the heart are brought to light, pain of soul
is relieved, hidden grief is carried off, sympathy
conveyed, counsel imparted, experience recorded
and wisdom perpetuated,-if by great authors the
many are drawn into unity, national character is
fixed, a people speaks, the past and the future,
the East and the West are brought into communication
with each other,-if such men are, in a word, the
spokesmen and prophets of the human family,-it will
not answer to make light of Literature or to neglect
its study; rather we may be sure that, in proportion
as we master it in whatever language, and imbibe
its spirit, we shall ourselves become in our own
measure the ministers of like benefits to others,
be they many or few, be they in the obscurer or
the more distinguished walks of life,- who are united
to us by social ties, and are within the sphere
of our personal influence." - John Henry Cardinal
Newman
Having
established some of the great importance and value
of reading great books (and the limitations thereof),
we now are faced with the fourth question mentioned
above:
What
criteria ought to be used to select the greatest books
to read? The answer to this question sets us on our
course to look at the Great Books Movement, which
began when one man - John Erskine - having arrived
at some semblance of the conclusions cited above,
in answer to the first three questions, had to grapple
with that fourth question.
The
first answer is that there are many answers - men
have disagreed in compiling lists of the greatest
books. In the 19th century Oxford and Cambridge Universities
each put together classics courses and so short lists
of classics, but no comprehensive list as such.
At the end of that century , also in England, Sir
John Lubbock published his list of "the 100
best books." In 1901 Charles M. Gayley compiled
a list of great books for his course of that name
at Berkeley. In 1910 Charles W. Eliot, President of
Harvard, edited an extensive list of great books entitled
The Harvard Classics which became known as
"Dr. Eliot's five-foot shelf of books." This was a
marvelous collection and is still in print. However,
as the description implies, it was merely Dr. Eliot's
personal list (as Sir John's was his), and so lacked
any kind of broader consensus regarding his selections.
Other lists compiled by individuals or various publishing
houses (e.g. the Modern Library series, the
Everyman's Library series, Oxford Press series of
World Classics, Penguin Classics, Book-of-the-Month
Club) suffer from the same defect (as well as commercial
considerations). Indeed, the great books movement
originally suffered from that very same defect, resulting
in more personal bias influencing the list than was
reasonably avoidable or desirable. This was later
minimized with the expansion of the movement.
THE BEGINNING OF THE MOVEMENT
The
relevant course at Columbia University in New York
first taught by John Erskine, a musician, author and
literature prof, who specialized in Elizabethan literature,
was originally titled General Honors and the books
he assembled were called the "Classics of Western
Civilization." Erskine's first list was simply his
own list of 52 books. Had it gone no farther,
the movement would never have taken off - at least
from there. But Erskine combined his list of classics
with a discussion group approach - now commonly called
a Socratic discussion group (or Socratic seminar or
tutorial). He had his students read one classic
a week and then meet once a week for a two-hour discussion
sitting round a large oval table.
When
it began in 1921, there was only one discussion group,
which Erskine conducted by himself (he was a soloist
on piano as well, at the NY Philharmonic). To catch
the flavor of his course, here are two bits of advice
about reading the classics which Erskine penned and
must have spoken, in substance, in that class as well:
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Apothoesis
of Homer, author of The Iliad
and The Odyssey
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"The
fact that a book is famous is enough to scare off
some people who, if they had the courage to open the
pages, would find there delight and profit.
We make the mistake of fearing that the immortal things
of art must be approached through special studies
and disciplines, and we comfort ourselves on the principle
of sour grapes, by deciding that even if we were prepared
to read the classics, we should find them dull.
But one explanation of any long fame is that it is
deserved, and the men who wrote these books would
have been horrified if they had known that you and
I might think of them only as matter for school and
college courses. They wrote to be read by the general
public, and they assumed in their readers an experience
of life and an interest in human nature, nothing more.
. .
It
is advisable to sample as many of the great books
as we can, for the first ones we come to may not
be those which reflect us most completely.
But once we have found our author, we have only
to read him over and over, and after a while to
read out from him, into the authors who seem kindred
spirits. When the reader has found himself in two
great authors, he is fairly launched. But
the books should be read over and over. Until we
have discovered that certain books grow with our
maturing experience and other books do not, we have
not learned how to distinguish a great book from
a book." - John Erskine [from The Delight
of Great Books, 1928]
In
1921 Mortimer J. Adler took the course as a student.
The course was popular and in 1923 the number of
General Honors groups were increased and were staffed
by two instructors each, to insure a broad knowledge
between the two moderators since the groups discussed
a wide array of books in various disciplines.
It was then that Adler was selected to co-moderate
one group with the poet, Mark Van Doren. Van Doren
later won the Pulitzer prize (1943) for his Collected
Poems, and succeeded Erskine to teach
the Shakespeare course at Columbia. Van Doren's
sons, Charles and John, later worked with Adler
in various endeavors to promote the Great Books
Movement. Adler continued to participate in such
groups right up to the present - 79 years.
Why this devotion to a course?
"Most
professionals teach by telling; amatuers, among whom
Socrates was a paragon, teach by questioning." Adler
wrote that line tongue-in-cheek to explain the difference
in Socrates' - and Erskine's - teaching method. It
was not just the excellence of the materials which
Erskine had selected - there had been classics courses
before Erskine's - but the excellence of the Socratic
teaching method as well. It was the fortuitous combination
of the two that clicked: reading great material and
then discussion of it. Adler wrote of this:
"Our
minds, unlike our bodies, are able to grow until
death overtakes us. The only condition of
its continual growth is that it be continually nourished
and exercised. How nourished? By reading the
great books year after year. How exercised? By discussing
them."
Erskine
had hit on something that worked and his students
were stimulated, delighted and enlightened by it.
A movement had been born, though no one realized it
at the time. Erskine taught at Columbia from 1909
to 1937, but after he wrote a bestseller (Helen
of Troy) in 1925 he used the proceeds to pursue
his other interests. He wrote 45 books and became
president of Julliard School of Music and director
of the Metropolitan Opera Association. Erskine (b.
1879) died in 1951.
By
1925 the General Honors course had grown to a dozen
faculty. Rexford Tugwell was Chair and in 1927
he appointed Adler to reconsider Erskine's list of
classics. The result of suggestions Adler solicited
from others on the faculty and his own, was a revised
list of 176 authors to be voted on by the General
Honors faculty. 19 authors were approved unanimously,
and 76 authors total - the overall approval rate was
about 90%. Various authors - such as Shakespeare
- were selected for more than one work.
Adler's
revision of the list grew to 130 authors. Finally,
in 1947 Sen. William Benton asked Hutchins,
Adler, and the rest to draw up a definitive list for
publication by Encyclopaedia Britannica as the Great
Books of the Western World set. Erskine, Hutchins,
Adler, Van Doren, Scott Buchanan, Stringfellow Barr
and Alexander Meikljohn constituted the Advisory Board
- all of them now with many years and broad
experience in the Great Books Movement. After
much consultation, reexamination of existing lists,
many votes, reconsiderations, and so on, a final list
including 74 authors (433 works) was published in
a 54 volume set, including 1 introductory volume written
by Hutchins and a 2 volume great ideas index (the
Syntopicon) edited by Adler.
Of
course, any book list will change with time.
But it can be said that for books prior to the cut-off
date selected by the Board (c. 1900), the Britannica
list was certainly the product of a broad consensus
of experts consulting in many fields, practiced in
the field of reading, comparing, and discussing the
classics. In 1990 Britannica asked Adler to update
the list and the result was a list of 130 authors
(517 works) published in 60 volumes (including 6 volumes
of 20th century works [to c. 1950] and the 2 volumes
updated Syntopicon). Is this the definitive
list? No, but it cannot be denied that it is about
as good a place to start - when you make you own list
to read - as can be had anywhere, and probably very
much better.
The
selection criteria developed by the Board are interesting:
1.) Contemporary significance - not confined
exclusively to one historical era, a timeless and
universal appeal; 2.) Rereadability - books
intended for rereading, many times and worth the effort
due to their insights, beauty, and wisdom; 3.) Extensive
relevance to the great ideas - each author selected
has something significant to say about a large number
of the great ideas; their contirbution to the great
on-going conversation in Western civilization. Scott
Buchanan had also introduced the criterion of 4.)
indispensibility to anyone's education, which
was accepted. It was possible to reach near
unanimity in selecting the pre-1700 classics, but
as the modern period was approached it became more
difficult to find the 90% consensus, which was, however,
finally achieved with the 1990 set.
The GREAT CONVERSATION, the GREAT IDEAS and
the SYNTOPICON
Hutchins
and Adler, as well as the others, had gradually discovered
in their discussion groups that they were also participating
in a much larger group discussion, one spanning the
centuries. The authors of the classics often
wrote about what their predecessors had to say about
this idea or that, this topic or that, and responded
to it by commenting on it or refuting it. The
topics they wrote about tended to be the same, and
they were generally well aware of what their predecessors
had written, so they carried the discussion one or
more steps further. So noteworthy was this fact, that
Adler later compiled evidence of it in Author-to-Author
and Author-to-Idea indices which connect the authors,
demonstrating the intense interconnectedness of the
classics and intellectual activity of the Western
authors, over the nearly 3,000 years in which they
wrote. Through their books, the thought of the authors
of the classics continually influences the living,
in each generation right up to our day, to the extent
they are read and discussed. To date, no generation
in the West has entirely neglected or forgotten them,
though at times this has nearly happened (e.g.
in the Dark Ages after the barbarian invasions of
Europe, and in our day). On the other hand, renewed
study of the classics has initiated several cultural
flowerings (e.g. the Renaissance).
Hutchins
was taken with the idea and wrote an essay entitled
"The Great Conversation" lauding this remarkable and
unique (in both longevity and scope) accomplishment
of Western civilization which he referred to as the
"Civilization of the Dialogue." The notion was
not entirely new, but Hutchins and Adler developed
it and made it into the tie that bound the set together.
"The
reading of all good books is indeed like a conversation
with the noblest men of past centuries who were
the authors of them, nay a carefully studied conversation,
in which they reveal to us none but the best of
their thoughts." - Rene Descartes,
Discourse on Method, I
The
great ideas were developed as Adler's response to
Hutchin's reluctance to work on a set he thought
would just gather dust in most libraries. It occurred
to Adler, while doing research on what all of the
authors had to say about one idea (which required
re-reading all of the books under the impetus of
that one issue or question -- much like a key-word
search on the internet), that if the ideas
discussed in this three- thousand-year-long Great
Conversation could be identified and referenced
for readers, they would be motivated to join the
conversation. So Adler and a team, of what eventually
became 90 co-workers, began a ten-year effort to
index and cross-reference the great books to a set
of pivotal ideas.
After
two years, 105 key ideas had been selected, later
reduced to 102 and called the Great Ideas (listed
on page 17). Adler developed the notion of ideas
being rather like constellations, with lesser ideas
circling around the greater ones and crossing paths
now and then with other constellations, in one orderly
universe of truth (again, the notion was not entirely
new, St. Bonaventure had the angels similarly named
and guiding stars representing a virtue or idea of
corresponding lesser or greater worth). 163,000 references
to the Great Books, assembled under 3,000
topics, representing about 400,000 man-hours of reading,
were indexed. Adler coined the word Syntopicon
for the result: a topical index to the Great Ideas
indexed to the Great Books. References to other
works were also included. This completed the
core corpus of the Great Books Movement. Thus
the Great Ideas (and the Great Conversation about
them), contained within the Great Books, came
be to emphasized - it being recognized by all that
without them the Great Books were merely furniture.
GROWTH
Scott
Buchanan and Alexander Meiklejohn both hailed from
Amherst College. Buchanan had been a Rhodes scholar
at Oxford where he met Stringfellow Barr and Jerry
McGill. All but McGill (who authored The Idea of
Happiness for the Institute for Philosophical
Research) were on the Britannica Advisory Board, and
all were later heavy players in the movement.
Buchanan and Stringfellow Barr went on to begin the
New Program (i.e. great books) at St. John's
College in Annapolis, Maryland, which completely turned
around a failing enrollment and financial picture
there. St. John's spun-off a second campus in Santa
Fe, New Mexico.
Hutchins
was President of the University of Chicago when he
invited Adler to begin a great books program there,
which he co-moderated. It settled in the University
College. A great books program for adults and the
Great Books Foundation were begun in Chicago, both
still actively promoting the great books approach
to education. From there the movement spread into
numerous colleges. Adler spent much time promoting
great books discussion groups for adults, outside
institutionalized education, all around the country.
The Britannica Great Books set sales began
to gather steam and by the mid 1950's was selling
nearly 50,000 sets per year, 1 million total sets
sold. America was searching for, and finding,
its roots. Into the 1960's the movement continued
to gather steam, but it never reached more than a
small minority of colleges and homes before the progressivists'
reaction began.
DECLINE
The
damage wrought by Dewey's pragmatism, widespread skepticism,
anthropological relativism, and logical positivism,
combined with America's growing post-war prosperity
and accompanying materialism turned the heads of our
youth, and they became fair game for all of the above.
The 1960's marked the demise of the Great Books Movement.
Thenceforth, to be a dead, European, male author (as
the writers of the Western classics almost all were)
was to be irrelevant. Only the living were worthy
of a hearing. The Socratic method, like Socrates before,
was condemned to death. Education was increasingly
turned over to the radical "progressives", who still
entirely dominate education, and the tragic
results now haunt us.
But
here and there the Great Books Movement survived
and Adler himself never gave up the struggle.
In the early 1980's a group of educators called the
Paideia (pronounced pie-day-ah; Greek for the upbringing
of children) Group published the Paideia
Proposal, setting forth needed reforms at the
elementary and secondary level (see the related article
in this issue), particularly the introduction of the
Socratic method, coaching in learning skills, and
reading of the classics. The Great Books Foundation
continues publishing Junior classics sets and promoting
Socratic discussion groups among adults and in schools.
Great books discussion groups for adults continue
in many cities, and Nina Houghton at the Aspen Institute
puts on "Adler Reunion seminars" every year, assisted
by Charlene Costello, while Max Weismann at the Center
for the Study of the Great Ideas conducts on-line
discussion groups on the Great Ideas. In all, about
37 colleges and universities still have some form
of great books program and signs of new interest in
the classics continue to spring up in colleges here
and there (e.g. Wilbur Wright College, Chicago).
But only two colleges have the entire four-year Great
Books Program advocated by Adler, Buchanan et al.:
St. John's Colleges and Thomas Aquinas College, Santa
Paula, CA .
RENAISSANCE
2000
A.D., 79 years after participating in his first great
books discussion group, Adler participated in yet
another and lives to see the movement enter into a
new arena, homeschooling. Having witnessed,
and experienced, the results of the hold progressive
education and the deconstructists of Western culture
have on America's educational institutions, parents
are bailing -out in ever-increasing numbers - between
1.6 and 2 million children are now being homeschooled.
Somewhat
in parellel with how St. John's (no religious affiliation
[though originally Anglican, in the 17th century])
and Thomas Aquinas College (Catholic) relate, the
latter indirectly spinning-off from the former to
include specifically Catholic magisterial material
- two new great books homeschool programs are likewise
based entirely on the great books approach in their
high school programs, and on the Paideia proposals
in their elementary programs: The
Great Books Academy
(no religious affiliation) and The
Angelicum Academy
(Catholic). In light of the absence of educational
progressivism and institutionalized resistance to
reform in the homeschool movement, 2000 A.D. bodes
well to be the year of the beginning of a revival
of the Great Books Movement in education, or, as one
author in this issue has called it: the Great Books
Homeschool Renaissance.
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The
Authors of the Great Books
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Adam
Smith
Aeschylus
Aquinas
Archimedes
Aristophanes
Aristotle
Augustine
Austen
Bacon
Balzac
Barth
Beckett
Bergson
Berkeley
Bohr
Boswell
Brecht
Calvin
Cather
Cervantes
Chaucer
Chekhov
Conrad
Copernicus
Dante
Darwin
Descartes
Dewey
Dickens
Diderot
Dobzhansky
Dostoevsky
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Eddington
Einstein
Engels
Epictetus
Erasmus
Euclid
Euripides
Faraday
Faulkner
Fitzgerald
Frazer
Freud
Galen
Galileo
George Eliot
Gibbon
Gilbert
Goethe
Hardy
Harvey
Hegel
Heidegger
Heisenberg
Hemingway
Henry James
Herodotus
Hippocrates
Hobbes
Homer
Huizinga
Hume
Huygens
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Ibsen
J.S. Mill
Joyce
Kafka
Kant
Kepler
Keynes
Kierkegaard
Lavoisier
Lawrence
Levi-Strauss
Locke
Lucretius
Machiavelli
Mann
Marcus Aurelius
Marx
Melville
Milton
Moliére
Montaigne
Montesquieu
Newton
Nicomachus
Nietzsche
O'Neill
Orwell
Pascal
Pirandello
Planck
Plato
Plotinus
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Plutarch
Poincare
Proust
Ptolemy
Rabelais
Racine
Rousseau
Russell
Schrodinger
Shakespeare
Shaw
Sophocles
Spinoza
Swift
T.S. Eliot
Tacitus
Tawney
Thucydides
Tocqueville
Tolstoy
Twain
Veblen
Virgil
Voltaire
Waddington
Weber
Whitehead
Whitehead
William James
Wittgenstein
Woolf
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CATHOLIC
GREAT BOOKS - GREAT CATHOLIC
BOOKS
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