Abstract

Legislators ought to pay attention, above all else, to education.1 To the degree that scholars and educators are in any loose sense legislators, this injunction to treat seriously and above all else the question of education is just as imperative. The Committee on the Political Economy of the Good Society has accordingly decided to focus the current issue of the journal to the subject of education, guided by this belief in the absolute necessity of education generally, and of university education particularly, to the flourishing or well-being of a good society. Nothing is as important. Last year important scholarship was done on the question of education, and two events particularly drew our attention. First, many scholars and academics marked the twentieth anniversary of Allan Bloom's controversial yet influential The Closing of the American Mind with conference panels and articles reassess ing the insights, merits, or flaws of that work. The same year, John L. Puckett, Ira Harkavy, and Lee Benson published their own thoughtful and engaging collaborative manifesto Dewey s Dream: Universities and Democracies in an Age of Education Reform, which sought to bring Dewey 's thought to bear on the current problems facing the academy and the good society. Greatly interested in pursuing scholarship on the question of education and the good society, we were inspired to take the educational thought of Allan Bloom and John Dewey (and, by extension, Dewey's contemporary supporters Puckett, Harkavy, and Benson) as our guides in putting together a symposium. Part of the reason for this is the obvious tension or disagreement on the role of education in the thought of these two men. Our symposium on education, then, consists chiefly of two parts. One focus, inspired by Puckett, Benson, and Harkavy's recent book, would consist of articles and reflections on John Dewey's thoughts and writing on education, especially as they relate to universities. The other focus would be on Allan Bloom's work. In the best cases, our contributors would address both foci; that is, there would be genuine dialogue. Bringing together a discussion of Dewey's democratic education together with Bloom's account lib ral education is truly an amazing feat. We believe that we have brought together an impressive group of diverse scholars to comment on two thinkers who wrote on education and are impressive, although quite distinct, in their own right: Allan Bloom and John Dewey. In this symposium, we first asked the contributors to reflect very generally on university education in the good society. To the extent that we offered any further guidance, we urged the contributors to consider the educational writings of Allan Bloom and John Dewey. However, we gave no explicit limitations as to what direction individual articles should take from this sug gestion. Indeed, the symposium before you consists of many articles that treat either Bloom or Dewey as well as those that treat them both. There are also a number of excellent articles

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call