My son and I were having a discourse by e-mail when the
subject of this blog came up. If he
doesn’t mind, I am going to quote from his latest message, “Had a conversation the other night . . . about how what seems to be in shortest supply
in our contemporary discourse is complexity and nuance. We've been told that we
live in a world of choice, and that extends to how we consume information: we
build a bubble, an echo chamber, and we don't tend to permit into that bubble
anything which challenges our views. A seeming result of this is an
increasingly black/white worldview: "That's wrong, so it should be
stopped." Yes, it is wrong. But no number of goddamn internet petitions
will have one bit of impact on it. There are some things we can't prevent, even
in the face of all our great intentions.”
Some people have tended to blame Donald Trump for this
black/white worldview, but the trend has been there long before his
campaign. But I will admit that he
didn’t help the situation by depicting the world as a we/they proposition. But we saw lots of examples before. It has been seen rising in discourse about
the genders (however many there are these days). We have seen it in politics. Is it my imagination that this black/white
view seems to be more prevalent among those on the conservative/right than
those of us of a more liberal bent? Like the Conservative government minister a
few years ago who, in trying to justify unfettered access by police to all
e-mails, said that if you did not agree with the bill, you were in the same
category as child molesters. Black and
white.
But where I have seen this worldview most vividly recently,
and in my mind the most troublesome, is in universities. Universities were, I thought, places where
young people could explore different ideas in an unbiased atmosphere. It was a place to welcome diversity of
thought leading to your own thought-out worldview. It was a place where you
learned, you thought, read, thought and debated ideas. But that no longer seems
to be the case. Although I am no fan of
her ideas, I thought that one of the most shameful episodes in recent years was
the treatment of Ann Coulter by the students and faculty of the University of
Ottawa. In 2009, she was scheduled to speak there, but the event was cancelled
when people objected. At the time I
wrote, “One student tried to explain the
situation be stating, “On campus, we promise our students a safe and positive
space, and that’s not what (Coulter) brings.”
I agree that physical safety is important for students, but here we are
talking about intellectual “safety”, the prevention of exposure to different
ideas. Is this what we want our students
to be subjected to, a litany of wishy-washy or unimagined ideas?” More recently, we have the issue at a west
coast school where an instructor used an example in his lecture that
“triggered” (whatever that means) a female student who complained to the school
authorities. He was then subjected to
the most demeaning of meetings and forced to make a declaration of
contrition. In it he admitted that he
liked and admired the young complainant and for that the student turned her
thumb down and he was fired.
“If mankind minus one were of one
opinion, then mankind is no more justified in silencing the one than the one -
if (s)he had the power - would be justified in silencing mankind.”
- John Stuart Mill
- John Stuart Mill
I asked my
son, who graduated from Carleton University with an honours degree in history
some years ago, if he had experienced any of this on campus. He replied,”I wasn't subject to anything like this
during my post-secondary education, though it was in the air -- after all,
Allan Bloom wrote "The Closing of the American Mind," about this very
subject, in 1987.” He added, “Part of me worries that this is all
representative of the last throes of the Enlightenment's basest and best
ideals.” When a thinking man of
forty with a wife and family can say this, it really does give pause.
Many people explain this shut-down of debate by saying it is the politically correct way of thinking.
But to me that is a cop-out.
There are many ways to be “correct” and “incorrect” and for some to set
themselves up as the arbiter of what is correct and incorrect is the height of
intellectual arrogance. They think they
can talk for all of us. That they, and
they alone, have a total world view of every situation. They challenge every tradition and cultural
practice without any idea when and why these practices came about (see my
earlier blog http://jgforbes.blogspot.ca/2016/05/sins-of-fathers.html)
“Historically, the
claim of consensus has been the first refuge of scoundrels; it is a way to
avoid debate by claiming that the matter is already settled.”
- Michael Crichton
- Michael Crichton
There is a famous saying to the effect, “I may not agree
with your ideas, but I will fight to the death to defend your right to say
them.” That is what open discussion and
debate is all about, not fixed ideas that cater to the political correctness of
the day. What are students, the future
leaders of industry and government, learning from this experience? Do they learn that they can impose their view
on society merely by shutting down discussion and not allowing other ideas to
be considered? I hope not, but I fear
that this is what, after all, will happen.
“There's a whiff of the lynch mob or
the lemming migration about any overlarge concentration of like-thinking
individuals, no matter how virtuous their cause.”
“Read, every day, something no one else is
reading. Think, every day, something no one else is thinking. Do, every day,
something no one else would be silly enough to do. It is bad for the mind to be
always part of unanimity.”
- Christopher Morley
- Christopher Morley
“Ideology has
triumphed over reason.”
- William
L. Shirer (The
Collapse of the Third Republic)
It would appear that some people in the past understood this. Some may condemn this blog as being politically
incorrect and if so, it just proves my point.