Beyond Critical Thinking!
The ant vocational dimension of
the humanities has been a source of pride and embarrassment for generations.
The persistence of this reputed uselessness is puzzling given the fact that an
education in the humanities allows one to develop skills in reading, writing,
reflection, and interpretation that are highly prized in our economy and
culture. Sure, specific training in a discrete set of skills might prepare you
for Day 1 of the worst job you'll ever have (your first), but the humanities
teach elements of mind and heart that you will draw upon for decades of
innovative and focused work. But we do teach a set of skills, or an attitude,
in the humanities that may have more to do with our antipractical reputation
than the ant vocational notion of freedom embedded in the liberal arts. This is
the set of skills that usually goes under the rubric of critical thinking.
Although critical thinking first
gained its current significance as a mode of interpretation and evaluation to
guide beliefs and actions in the 1940s, the term took off in education circles
after Robert H. Ennis published "A Concept of Critical Thinking" in
the Harvard Educational Review in 1962. Ennis was interested in how we teach
the "correct assessment of statements," and he offered an analysis of
12 aspects of this process. Ennis and countless educational theorists who have
come after him have sung the praises of critical thinking. There is now a
Foundation for Critical Thinking and an industry of consultants to help you
enhance this capacity in your teachers, students, or yourself.
A common way to show that one has
sharpened one's critical thinking is to display an ability to see through or
undermine statements made by (or beliefs held by) others. Thus, our best
students are really good at one aspect of critical thinking—being critical.
For many students today, being smart means being critical. To be able to show
that Hegel's concept of narrative foreclosed the non-European, or that Butler's
stance on vulnerability contradicts her conception of performativity, or that a
tenured professor has failed to account for his own "privilege"—these
are marks of sophistication, signs of one's ability to participate fully in the
academic tribe. But this participation, being entirely negative, is not only
seriously unsatisfying; it is ultimately counterproductive.
The skill at unmasking error, or
simple intellectual one-upmanship, is not completely without value, but we
should be wary of creating a class of self-satisfied debunkers or, to use a
currently fashionable word on campuses, people who like to "trouble"
ideas. In overdeveloping the capacity to show how texts, institutions, or
people fail to accomplish what they set out to do, we may be depriving students
of the capacity to learn as much as possible from what they study. In a
humanities culture in which being smart often means being a critical unmasked,
our students may become too good at showing how things don't make sense. That
very skill may diminish their capacity to find or create meaning and direction
in the books they read and the world in which they live. Once outside the
university, our students continue to score points by displaying the critical
prowess for which they were rewarded in school. They wind up contributing to a
cultural climate that has little tolerance for finding or making meaning, whose
intellectuals and cultural commentators delight in being able to show that
somebody else is not to be believed.
I doubt that this is a
particularly contemporary development. In the 18th century there were
complaints about an Enlightenment culture that prized only skepticism and that
was satisfied only with disbelief. Our contemporary version of this trend,
though, has become skeptical even about skepticism. We no longer have the
courage of our lack of conviction. Perhaps that's why we teach our students
that it's cool to say that they are engaged in "troubling" an
assumption or a belief. To declare that one wanted to disprove a view would
show too much faith in the ability to tell truth from falsehood. And to declare
that one was receptive to learning from someone else's view would show too much
openness to being persuaded by an idea that might soon be deconstructed (or
simply mocked).
In training our students in the
techniques of critical thinking, we may be giving them reasons to remain
guarded—which can translate into reasons not to learn. The confident refusal to
be affected by those with whom we disagree seems to have infected much of our
cultural life: from politics to the press, from siloed academic programs (no
matter how multidisciplinary) to warring public intellectuals. As humanities
teachers, however, we must find ways for our students to open themselves to the
emotional and cognitive power of history and literature that might initially
rub them the wrong way, or just seem foreign. Critical thinking is sterile
without the capacity for empathy and comprehension that stretches the self.
One of the crucial tasks of the
humanities should be to help students cultivate the willingness and ability to
learn from material they might otherwise reject or ignore. This material will
often surprise students and sometimes upset them. Students seem to have learned
that teaching-evaluation committees take seriously the criticism that "the
professor, or the material, made me uncomfortable." This complaint is so
toxic because being made uncomfortable may be a necessary component of an
education in the humanities. Creating a humanistic culture that values the
desire to learn from unexpected and uncomfortable sources as much as it values
the critical faculties would be an important contribution to our academic and
civic life.
But the contemporary humanities
should do more than supplement critical thinking with empathy and a desire to
understand others from their own point of view. We should also supplement our
strong critical engagement with cultural and social norms by developing modes
of teaching that allow our students to enter in the value-laden practices of a
particular culture to understand better how these values are legitimated: how
the values are lived as legitimate. Current thinking in the humanities is often
strong at showing that values that are said to be shared are really imposed on
more-vulnerable members of a particular group. Current thinking in the
humanities is also good at showing the contextualization of norms, whether the
context is generated by an anthropological, historical, or other disciplinary
matrix. But in both of these cases we ask our students to develop a critical
distance from the context or culture they are studying.
Many humanities professors have
become disinclined to investigate with our students how we generate the values
we believe in, or the norms according to which we go about our lives. In other
words, we have been less interested in showing how we make a norm legitimate
than in sharpening our tools for delegitimization. The philosopher Robert
Pippin has recently made a similar point, and has described how evolutionary
biology and psychology have moved into this terrain, explaining moral values as
the product of the same dynamic that gives rise to the taste for sweets. Pippin
argues, on the contrary, that "the practical autonomy of the normative is
the proper terrain of the humanities," and he has an easy task of showing
how the pseudoscientific evolutionary "explanation" of our moral
choices is a pretty flimsy "just-so" story.
If we humanities professors saw
ourselves more often as explorers of the normative than as critics of normatively,
we would have a better chance to reconnect our intellectual work to broader
currents in public culture. This does not have to mean an acceptance of the
status quo, but it does mean an effort to understand the practices of cultures
(including our own) from the point of view of those participating in them. This
would include an understanding of how cultures change. For many of us, this
would mean complementing our literary or textual work with participation in
community, with what are often called service-learning courses. For others, it
would mean approaching our object of study not with the anticipated goal of
exposing weakness or mystification but with the goal of turning ourselves in
such a way as to see how what we study might inform our thinking and our lives.
I realize that I am arguing for a
mode of humanistic education that many practice already. It is a mode that can
take language very seriously, but rather than seeing it as the master mediator
between us and the world, a matrix of representations always doomed to fail, it
sees language as itself a cultural practice to be understood from the point of
view of those using it.
The fact that language fails
according to some impossible criterion, or that we fail in our use of it, is no
news, really. It is part of our finitude, but it should not be taken as the key
marker of our humanity. The news that is brought by the humanities is a way of
turning the heart and the spirit so as to hear possibilities of various forms
of life in which we might participate. When we learn to read or look or listen
intensively, we are not just becoming adept at exposing falsehood or at
uncovering yet more examples of the duplicities of culture and society. We are
partially overcoming our own blindness by trying to understand something from
another's artistic, philosophical, or historical point of view. William James
put it perfectly in a talk to teachers and students entitled "On a Certain
Blindness in Human Beings": "The meanings are there for others, but
they are not there for us." James saw the recognition of this blindness as
key to education as well as to the development of democracy and civil society.
Of course hard-nosed critical thinking may help in this endeavor, but it also
may be a way we learn to protect ourselves from the acknowledgment and insight
that humanistic study has to offer. As students and as teachers we sometimes
crave that protection because without it we risk being open to changing who we
are. In order to overcome this blindness, we risk being very uncomfortable
indeed.
It is my hope that humanists will
continue offering criticism, making connections, and finding ways to
acknowledge practices that seem at first opaque or even invisible. In
supporting a transition from critical thinking to practical exploration, I am
echoing a comment made by my undergraduate philosophy teacher Louis Mink, and
echoed by my graduate mentor, Richard Rorty. Years before Dick Rorty
deconstructed the idea of the "philosopher as referee," Louis Mink
suggested that critics "exchange the judge's wig for the guide's
cap." I think we may say the same for humanists, who can, in his words,
"show us details and patterns and relations which we would not have seen
or heard for ourselves."
My humanities teachers enriched
my life by showing me details and pattern and relations. In so doing they also
helped me to acquire tools that have energetically shaped my scholarship and my
interactions with colleagues and students. It is my hope that as guides, not
judges, we can show our students how to engage in the practice of exploring
objects, norms, and values that inform diverse cultures. In doing so, students
will develop the ability to converse with others about shaping the objects,
norms, and values that will inform their own lives. They will develop the
ability to add value to (and not merely criticize values in) whatever
organizations in which they participate. They will often reject roads that
others have taken, and they will sometimes chart new paths. But guided by the
humanities, they will increase their ability to find together ways of living
that have meaning and direction, illuminating paths immensely practical and sustainability.
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