164. Emptiness: The Master Theory: The Underground History of American
Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Emptiness:
The Master Theory
Conceptions of
emptiness to be filled as the foundation metaphor of schooling are not confined to hollowness and plasticity,
but also include theories of mechanism. De La Mettrie's 2 Man a Machine vision from the
Enlightenment, for
instance, is evidence of an idea regularly
recurring for millennia. If we are mechanisms, we must be predetermined, as Calvin said. Then the whole notion
of "Education" is nonsensical. There is no independent inner essence to be drawn forth and developed.
Only adjustments are possible, and
if the contraption doesn't work right, it should be junked. Everything important about machinery is
superficial.
This notion of machine emptiness has
been the master theory of human nature since the beginning of the nineteenth century. It still takes turns in
curriculum formation with theories
of vegetable emptiness, plastic emptiness, systems emptiness and, from time
to time, some good old-fashioned
Lockean blank sheet emptiness. Nobody writes curriculum for self-determined spiritual individuals and
expects to sell it in the public
school market.
This hardline empiricism descends to us
most directly from Locke and Hume, who both said Mind lacks capacities and powers of its own. It has no
innate contents. Everything etched
there comes from simple sense impressions mixed and compounded. This
chilly notion was greatly refined
by the French ideologues^ who thought the world so orderly and mechanical, the future course of
history could be predicted on the basis of the position and velocity of molecules. For these men, the
importance of human agency
vanished entirely. With Napoleon, these ideas were given global reach a
few years later. So seductive is
this mechanical worldview it has proven itself immune to damage by facts which contradict it. 4
2 Julien Offray de La Mettrie
(1709-1751) was theearliest of the materialistic writers of the
Enlightenment.His conclusion that religious thought was a physical disorder akin to fever forced him to flee
France. In the middle of the eighteenth century his two master works, Man a
Machine and Man a Plant, stated principles
which are self-evident from the titles. The ethics of these principles are
worked out in later essays. The
purpose of life is to pleasure the senses, virtue is measured by
self-love, the hope of the world lies in the spread of atheism. De La Mettrie
was compelled to flee the
Netherlands and accept the protection of Frederick of Prussia in 1748. The
chief authority for his life is an eulogy entitled "The Elegy," written by Frederick II himself.
3
Ideologue is a term coined by Antoine Destuit de Tracy around 1 790 to describe
those empiricists and rationalists concerned to establish a new order in the intellectual realm,
eradicating the influence of religion, replacing it with universal education as
the premier solution to the problem
of reforming human shortcomings. They believed that Hume's rationalized
morality (after the methods of chemistry, physics, mathematics, and astronomy) was the best way to
accomplish this.
4.
For instance, the serious problems encountered by mechanists in the nineteenth
century when develop- ments in
electricity revealed a cornucopia of nonmechanical, nongravitational forces and
entities which eroded the classical conception of matter. In optics, the work of Young and Fresnel on
diffraction and refraction made Newton's particle theory of light untenable,
yet it was still being taught in
senior physics at Uniontown High School when I got there in the 1950s. The
earth might move, but human nature only accepts the move when it suits human purposes.
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