Thursday, 8 September 2011
The Closing of the American Mind by Allan Bloom
Allan Bloom died in 1992, but after reading The Closing of the American Mind you'll wonder what he might have thought about universities today. The subtitle, How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy and Impoverished the Souls of Today's Students
says it all. In his 1987 book, Bloom, then a professor of political
science and philosophy at the University of Chicago, issues a scathing
critique of how America educates its young people and the decline of
intellectuality in national life in general. He critiques the
contemporary university, saying it is failing students. A chief point
of Bloom's argument is that the "great books" of Western thought —
those by philosophers such as Rousseau, Locke and Nietzsche whose names
are better known than their theories — have been devalued as a source
of wisdom in favor of professors who "simply would not and could not
talk about anything important." For anyone who cares about the state of
higher education in the U.S., Bloom's insight puts his treatise high on
the list of great books.
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