Independent Education: the crisis and the crossroad
By Jon Rappoport
A hundred fifty years ago, at least some Americans recognized
that all serious discourse depended on the use of the faculty called
Reason.
Formal debate, science, and law all flowed from that source.
A common bond existed in some schools of the day. The
student was expected to learn how Reason operates, and for that he was
taught the only subject which could lay out, as on a long table, the
visible principles: Logic.
This was accepted.
But now, this bond is gone.
The independence engendered by the disciplined study of logic is no longer a desired quality in students.
The classroom, at best, has taken on the appearance of a
fact-memorization factory; and we should express grave doubts about the
relevance and truth of many of those facts.
A society filled with people who float in the drift of non-logic is a society that declines.
Ideologies that deny individual freedom and independence are
welcomed with open arms, because they mirror a muddled people's desire
to confirm that failure is the inevitable fate of all of us.
When education becomes so degraded that young students are no
longer taught to reason clearly, private citizens have the obligation
rebuild that system so the great contribution to Western
civilization---logic---is reinstated in its rightful place.
Logic, the key by which true political discourse, science, and law were, in fact, originally developed, must be unearthed.
Logic and reasoning, the capacity to think, the ability to
analyze ideas---an ability which has been forgotten, which has been a
surpassing virtue in every shadow of a free civilization---must be
restored.
Once a vital thing has been misplaced, buried, and covered
over by mindless substitutions, people cannot immediately recognize the
original thing has any importance, meaning, or existence.
To declare its importance makes no sense to "the crowd." They
look bewildered and shake their heads. They search their memories and
find nothing.
They prefer to adhere to rumor, gossip, accusation, wild
speculation, and fear mongering as the primary means of public discourse
and assessment of truth.
These habits light their paths. These reflexes give them some degree of pleasure. These idols become their little gods.
To win out over such attachments and superstitions is a job for the long term.
But if our labors yield rewards, we can once again bring
import to education, and to the idea of authentic freedom that once cut a
wide swathe through darkness.
A string of direct and distracting abuses has saddled our schools. Among them:
Teachers believe they need to entertain children, in order to capture their attention;
School systems have substituted the need for public funds in the place of actually supplying a sound education;
Under the banner of political correctness, school texts have
been sanitized to the point of sterility, in order to avoid the
possibility of offending, to the slightest degree, any group;
Students rarely confront information in the form in which it
is delivered to people all over the world---they confront substitutes;
Students have, in this respect, been coddled;
Subjects such as sex education, which belong in the family, have been delivered into the hands of schools and teachers;
Indeed, in certain respects, schools are asked to substitute and stand in for parents;
Masked as "learning opportunities," various political agendas have been inserted in school curricula;
The basis on which every historic document establishing some
degree of freedom was debated and drafted---logical thought---has been
eliminated from the curriculum as a serious discipline;
Students are permitted and even encouraged to drift and grasp at superficially attractive ideas and fads of the moment;
In this respect, freedom has been reinterpreted to mean "mental incapacity and wandering thought";
The vast contributions of the ancient Greek civilization,
where logic as a crucial subject was born, have been obliterated,
minimized or summarized in sterile fashion;
Logic, the connective tissue which binds together the
progression of ideas in rational argument, has been kept away from
students;
The result is the production of shallow minds that cannot see the architecture of reasoning;
Students, at sea, begin to invent wholly insufficient
standards for accepting or rejecting various points of view and supposed
authorities;
Students lose their true independence without ever having gained it;
The low level of overall literacy in our schools is matched only by the non-comprehension of rational thought;
In the presence of these and other deficiencies and abuses,
students are pushed through, from grade to grade, graduation to
graduation, as a bureaucratic function, regardless of their ability.
Therefore, citizens of good intent must offload this system.
They must assume responsibility for teaching children the missing key to
education.
Logic; the capacity to reason, to think lucidly; to separate
sense from chatter; to discover deception and avoid being influenced by
it; to remain free and independent from the shifting opinions of "the
herd"; to maintain personal liberty in the face of every spurious
enticement to abandon it; to come to grips with competitive sets of
First Principles which will lead to freedom or slavery; these are the
stakes in our time.
This is the crossroad.
Choose the path that can bring us the fulfillment of a worthy goal.
Choose reason over vacuous mindlessness.
We, who still know the power of the mind, and who understand
how that power can be harnessed to shape independence and liberty, can
bring, out of the dust of recent history, an education that truly trains
the intellect.
Logic is the foundation of such an education.
If schools, which have become madhouses and factories and toxic medical dispensaries, will not teach it, we can teach it.
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