179. The
Problem Of God: The Underground History of Amerccan Education by John Taylor
Gatto from archive.org
Chapter
Fourteen
Absolute Absolution
The leading principle of Utopian
religion is the repudiation of the doctrine of Original Sin. — H.G. Wells, A Modern Utopia (1905)
Everything
functions as if death did not exist. Nobody takes it into account; it
is suppressed everywhere. ...We now seem
possessed by he Promethean desire to cure death. — Octavio Paz, The Labyrinth of Solitude (1950)
Education
is the modern world's temporal religion... — Bob Chase, president, National Education
Association, NEA TODAY, April 1997
179. The Problem Of God
The problem of God
has always been a central question of Western intellectual life. The flight from this heritage is our best
evidence that school is a project having little to do with education as the West defined it for thousands of years.
It's difficult to imagine anyone
who lacks an understanding of Western spirituality regarding himself as
educated. And yet, American
schools have been forbidden to enter this arena even in a token way since 1947.
In spite of the irony
that initial Protestant church support is the only reason we have American compulsion schools at all, the
rug was pulled out from beneath the churches quite suddenly at the end of the nineteenth century, under
the pretext that it was the only
way to keep Catholicism out of the schools. When the second shoe dropped
with the Everson decision by the
U.S. Supreme Court in 1947, God was pitched out of school on His ear entirely.
Before we go forward we need to go back.
The transformation businessmen wrought in
the idea of education at the end of the nineteenth century and the early
decades of the twentieth is the
familiar system we have today. Max Otto argued in his intriguing book- length essay Science and the Moral Life
(1949) that a philosophical revolution had been pulled off by businessmen under everybody's nose. Otto
described what most college
graduates still don't know — that the traditional economy, where wants
regulate what is produced, is
dead. The new economy depends upon creating demand for whatever stuff machinery, fossil fuel, and
industrialized imagination can produce. When this reversal was concluded, consumption, once only
one detail among many in people's lives, became the most important end. Great consumers are heroes to a
machine society; the frugal,
villains.
In such a universe,
schools have no choice but to participate. Supporting the economic system became the second important
mission of mass schooling's existence, but in doing so, materiality found itself at war with an older family of
spiritual interests. In the general
society going about its business, it wasn't easy to see this contest
clearly — to recognize that great
corporations which provided employment, endowed universities, museums, schools, and churches, and which
exercised a powerful voice on important issues of the day — actually had a life-and-death stake in the formation
of correct psychological attitudes
among children.
It was nature, not
conspiracy, Otto wrote, that drove businessmen "to devote themselves to something besides business." It
was only natural "they should try to control education and to supplant religion as a definer
of ideals." The class of businessmen who operated on a national and international basis,
having estranged themselves from considerations of nation, culture, and tradition, having virtually freed
themselves from competitive risk
because they owned the legislative and judicial processes, now turned
their attention to cosmic themes
of social management.
In this fashion,
minister gave way to schoolteacher, schoolteacher became pedagogus under direction of the controllers of
work.
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