It should not come as news, but today’s college students are
being seriously misled. Beyond the obvious fact that too many universities have
become indoctrination mills—in the humanities and the social sciences—and that
the fight for social justice seems more important than learning anything, it
appears that students are being told that the purpose of a liberal arts
education is to find themselves.
Having been nurtured with a steady diet of unearned praise,
they all seem to know what that means. In truth, it suggests that the college
experience should be therapeutic, not educational, that it should promote a
specious notion of mental health and not the skills needed to succeed in the
real world. No wonder, as Camille Paglia says, their minds are like Jello.
Michael Puett and Christine Gross-Loh tell us that we can
find the antidote if we go East and look to Chinese thinking for an
alternative. They have written a synopsis in the Wall Street Journal.
Of course, Tiger Mom Amy Chua has already suggested as much
in her book Battle Hymn of the Tiger
Mother and yours truly has said as much in his book: Saving Face: America and the Politics of Shame.
But, what does it mean to find yourself? The authors
explain:
When
students arrive at college these days, they hear a familiar mantra about the
purpose of higher education: Find yourself. Use these four years to discover
who you are. Learn flamenco dancing or ceramics, start a composting project,
write for the student newspaper or delve into 19th-century English poetry.
Self-discovery, they are told, is the road to adulthood.
So why
is it that so many students feel such anxiety? On campus, we hear the same
complaint again and again: “I’ve done lots of extracurriculars. I’ve taken a
variety of courses. Why can’t I figure out who I am and what I want to do?”
One would love to see these students read more Chinese
philosophy, but, truth be told, these children have been turned into
professional dilettantes. They have done so many different things that they cannot
have put enough focus and concentration into one activity.
Having also been burdened with the notion that they must
actualize all of their potential, they seem not to have learned that in order
to excel you must concentrate. If you spend your time studying a multitude of
subjects and spreading yourself thin in a multitude of activities, you will
never excel at any of them. These children should be learning that you cannot
have it all, and that if you work hard at one thing you will have to give up
other things. You cannot be in the library and at the party at the same time.
Life is about trade-offs. Perhaps you can learn it in
Confucius. But the idea is not alien to Western civilization.
What do the authors find in Confucius? Glad you asked:
According
to Confucius and other Chinese philosophers, we shouldn’t be looking for our
essential self, let alone seeking to embrace it, because there is no true,
unified self to begin with. As Confucius understood, human beings are messy,
multidimensional creatures, a jumble of conflicting emotions and capabilities
living in a messy, ever-changing world. We are who we are by constantly
reacting to one another. Looking within is dangerous.
So, they have discovered that introspection is bad for you.
Since a goodly amount of therapy is based on the notion of introspection, of
finding yourself, of getting in touch with your feelings, of learning what you
really, really want… the authors have correctly identified a basic flaw in the
therapy culture.
And yet, one would be remiss if one did not note that
British philosophy has long known all about this. Ever since the time when
David Hume, in the mid eighteenth century decided to search for his Self
introspectively, only to find nothing but bundles of sensations, thinkers in
the Anglo world have known better than to try to find something that does not
exist. Many continental philosophers and certainly many in the psycho world
have continued the fruitless search, but the ideas are readily available in Anglo philosophy.
For those of you who have a fairly sophisticated knowledge
of philosophy, Saul Kripke tells this story in his book: Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language.
The authors also argue against authenticity, which means,
generally speaking, that you ought to be expressing what you have deep inside,
with passion, with gusto, with vigor… even if it is offensive and obnoxious.
Express your feelings, your instincts, your impulses, your heart, the stirrings
of your loins… it is a good thing because the value of what you say resides in
the feeling that gave rise to it.
Obviously, other people have a slightly different conception
of authenticity, but time and space do not allow me to elaborate here. In place
of authenticity the authors offer a plastic view of Self:
Instead
of struggling to be authentic, Confucius proposed another approach: “as if”
rituals, that is, rituals meant to break us out of our own reality for a
moment. These rituals are the very opposite of authenticity—and that’s what
makes them work. We break from who we are when we note the unproductive
patterns we’ve fallen into and actively work to shift them—“as if” we were
different people in that moment.
When
you hear your girlfriend at the door and make yourself go to greet her instead
of sitting there absorbed in your iPhone, you are creating a break. When you
make a point of ignoring your mother’s harping and solicit her guidance, you
are recognizing that both of you are constantly shifting and changing and
capable of bringing out other parts of each other. Instead of being stuck in
the roles of nagging mother and put-upon child, you have behaved “as if” you were
someone else. It turns out that being insincere, being untrue to ourselves,
helps us to grow.
There is good and bad in this notion. If you do the right
thing even though you do not feel like doing the right thing, you will acting
ethically. Your ethical being might feel slightly alien, but it is the real
You. Somehow or other the authors do not seem to bring in the ethical
dimension. Unless I miss my guess it was central for Confucius.
Chinese thinking is not about introspection because it is about
FACE. It is about how you look to other people, not how you feel about
yourself. Perhaps the authors mention this in their book, but the important
point is how one learns how to become an ethical individual. And one does so,
Confucius said, by performing the correct rituals regardless of whether we
understand them or not. And he introduced the notion of sincerity, whereby he
meant that if you act correctly over and over again, even if it felt false when
you started it will feel true in time.
It is misleading to suggest that you are becoming a whole series
of different people, as though you were putting on one mask or another, to see
which one fits and to see which one pleases other people.
The notion that we are constantly changing, that we are
Protean was explored by Robert Jay Lifton, someone who has done work with
Chinese philosophy.
And yet, having face, saving face cannot really be
encompassed by the notion of ever shifting personae. One sees how this works
when the authors address a college student’s question: what career path should
he follow?
“But if
there’s no true self and I’m always changing,” more than one student has asked,
“how can I decide on the career that’s right for me?” Today’s students want a
plan for their future, which makes sense. Their high-school activities—AP
classes, varsity soccer, the service trip to Haiti—were aimed at the goal of
college admission, and they believe that a clear road map will help them to
take the next step toward a fulfilling and profitable career.
From here they take us on an extended excursion through the
experience of a student who finds his love for medicine after getting sick and
being treated in a hospital. He had at first thought he wanted to be a
diplomat, but fortune or fate or God tapped him on the shoulder, got him very
sick and told him to become a physician.
OK, the authors do not say it was divine intervention, but
it does sound as though this student found his calling by getting sick. Yet,
getting sick and being hospitalized is a random event. What would have happened
if he had gone to Spain and had gotten fascinated by bull fights? Might he have then chosen to become a butcher? Besides, isn’t this
argument roughly equivalent to the dilettantism promoted by those who want you
to go out and to find yourself?
In both cases you undertake a series of different
experiences in order to find which one fits you best.
Truth be told, if the young man who discovers medicine in
his sick bed has no real talent for science, what good has his discovery really
done him? How does anyone know what psychological factors led him to discard
his plans to be a diplomat, field in which he might excel, and become a
physician, field which seems to be his passion but in which he might be no more
than a mediocre practitioner.
Here the authors indulge in some less than coherent
thinking. It is one thing to critique the pathlessness and purposelessness of
today’s college students. It is quite another to say that they are too focused
on a path and purpose in which they are known to have superior natural talent.
The authors write:
Consider
how many of today’s students were raised: Their talents were identified early.
They were “athletic,” “good at math,” “a natural at the violin.” Soon enough,
they were winnowed into a stream that would allow those talents to flourish.
They learned to stick with what they were good at. Over the years, it became
instinctive to sideline the interests for which they didn’t show a natural
aptitude.
Obviously, to me at least, working hard to become a great
violinist will not allow you to participate in the variety of activities that
would lead you to find yourself. Once your talent is identified the question is:
how well you develop it, how hard you work at it, how focused you are in
learning it?What matters in choosing a career path is discovering where your talent lies. As Peter Drucker once said, it is better to work to excel at something you are good at than to work to become good at something you have little talent for.
In order to excel at a task or at an occupation or in a
career is perseverance, industry, hard work, integrity and other aspects of
good character.
And it does require some coherent thought. The authors of
this new work might think that they are fighting the good fight against
self-esteem and authenticity and dilettantism, but they are effectively arguing
for it. Without having read their book I suspect that their grasp of Chinese
thinking, to say nothing of the Anglo thinkers who have covered the same
ground, is somewhat skewed.
4 comments:
Stuart: Truth be told, if the young man who discovers medicine in his sick bed has no real talent for science, what good has his discovery really done him? ... Here the authors indulge in some less than coherent thinking. It is one thing to critique the pathlessness and purposelessness of today’s college students. It is quite another to say that they are too focused on a path and purpose in which they are known to have superior natural talent.
I thought about that too when I first read through the article. At least the main point I saw, was about avoiding prejudgement, about the world, and about one's self, which can help in the moment at least, but limited strategical value.
An open question, to try to imagine the sequence of events that leads a person to the life they eventually lead. So this reflection seems closer to Soren Kierkegaard's quote "Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
The best introspection is when you like where you ended up, if you got your well earned place of success and status, and then you can see you'd never have arrived there by rational choice at every step. And it might be introspection is most useful midlife, where you can take in some vision of how you got to where you are, and then ask if that was really where you planned to do.
And that also reminds me of the idea that sin as "missing the mark", like target practice, you can compare the difference between intention and result. And as Stuart likes to point out, bad habits that accumulate are hard to break, and two complimentary bad habits to believe are (1) Only the inner self is real or (2) Only our public self and relationships is real.
If we believe the first, then we will happily "play act" whatever gets us ahead in in life, while having no ethics, because the world has "forced" us to comply with its rules. So that's trouble because eventually we become exposed as frauds, as hypocrites for not living in private what we proclaim in public.
And if we believe the second, and we disbelieve in our own perspective, then we may too easily conform to the pressures of others at first, and then later expect others below us to conform, because we see their choices as a reflection of ourselves. And if we see anyone acting outside the rules, then unconscious resentment arises, and we can become blindly tyrannically to those under our care, disallowing them their own mistakes.
Or maybe other ways to go wrong, but this division just suggests where I figure we need a little of both. You need an inner self that won't fully conform everything others expect of you, and you need a world that won't fully confirm to what you think you need it to be.
Its easy to imagine some ideal social world where good behavior is always rewarded, and bad behavior is always punished, but that world isn't ours, so we need intrinsic motives to do the right thing, or to at least know when we're not, so we can see what happens, like how it feels to cheat, because you can, and have no one know but yourself and nothing bad happens, except you don't like yourself anymore.
There's probably lots of interesting paths to FACE, even if sometimes you're the only judge in the room.
I've liked the idea that the greater evil can occur by millions of people slightly leaning in towards evil, even if we only publicly see the great evils when great men fall. But if you could introspect back, you'd find all the little wounded consciouses of the cut corners, of people just trying to get a little something for themselves, those events are what enable the larger evils to grow under our noses.
I remember from the 1970s and perhaps the early self-esteem movement, the idea of the Greater Self, and the Less self. I still think that's a useful concept. You don't have to judge the lesser self as bad, but something we have to deal with, just like we have to deal with all the other people in the world, who are not always acting their best either.
My Self is right here, inside, not beside. I and my Self are cool with that. Lots of other things, too.
Another well done post.
My younger patients are suffering in part because they lack everything but solipsism.
Their search for self ends however in disabling somatic symptoms.
Post a Comment