The Higher Learning as an Expression of the
Pecuniary Culture
To the end that suitable habits of
thought on certain heads may be conserved in the incoming
generation, a scholastic discipline is sanctioned
by the common sense of the community and incorporated
into the accredited scheme of life. The habits
of thought which are so formed under the guidance
of teachers and scholastic traditions have an economic
value a value as affecting the serviceability
of the individual no less real than the
similar economic value of the habits of thought formed
without such guidance under the discipline of everyday
life. Whatever characteristics of the accredited
scholastic scheme and discipline are traceable to
the predilections of the leisure class or to the guidance
of the canons of pecuniary merit are to be set down
to the account of that institution, and whatever economic
value these features of the educational scheme possess
are the expression in detail of the value of that
institution. It will be in place, therefore, to
point out any peculiar features of the educational
system which are traceable to the leisure-class scheme
of life, whether as regards the aim and method of
the discipline, or as regards the compass and character
of the body of knowledge inculcated. It is in
learning proper, and more particularly in the higher
learning, that the influence of leisure-class ideals
is most patent; and since the purpose here is not
to make an exhaustive collation of data showing the
effect of the pecuniary culture upon education, but
rather to illustrate the method and trend of the leisure-class
influence in education, a survey of certain salient
features of the higher learning, such as may serve
this purpose, is all that will be attempted.
In point of derivation and early development,
learning is somewhat closely related to the devotional
function of the community, particularly to the body
of observances in which the service rendered the supernatural
leisure class expresses itself. The service by
which it is sought to conciliate supernatural agencies
in the primitive cults is not an industrially profitable
employment of the community’s time and effort.
It is, therefore, in great part, to be classed as a
vicarious leisure performed for the supernatural powers
with whom negotiations are carried on and whose good-will
the service and the professions of subservience are
conceived to procure. In great part, the early
learning consisted in an acquisition of knowledge
and facility in the service of a supernatural agent.
It was therefore closely analogous in character to
the training required for the domestic service of a
temporal master. To a great extent, the knowledge
acquired under the priestly teachers of the primitive
community was knowledge of ritual and ceremonial; that
is to say, a knowledge of the most proper, most effective,
or most acceptable manner of approaching and of serving
the preternatural agents. What was learned was
how to make oneself indispensable to these powers,
and so to put oneself in a position to ask, or even
to require, their intercession in the course of events
or their abstention from interference in any given
enterprise. Propitiation was the end, and this
end was sought, in great part, by acquiring facility
in subservience. It appears to have been only
gradually that other elements than those of efficient
service of the master found their way into the stock
of priestly or shamanistic instruction.
The priestly servitor of the inscrutable
powers that move in the external world came to stand
in the position of a mediator between these powers
and the common run of unrestricted humanity; for he
was possessed of a knowledge of the supernatural etiquette
which would admit him into the presence. And
as commonly happens with mediators between the vulgar
and their masters, whether the masters be natural or
preternatural, he found it expedient to have the means
at hand tangibly to impress upon the vulgar the fact
that these inscrutable powers would do what he might
ask of them. Hence, presently, a knowledge of
certain natural processes which could be turned to
account for spectacular effect, together with some
sleight of hand, came to be an integral part of priestly
lore. Knowledge of this kind passes for knowledge
of the “unknowable”, and it owes its serviceability
for the sacerdotal purpose to its recondite character.
It appears to have been from this source that learning,
as an institution, arose, and its differentiation
from this its parent stock of magic ritual and shamanistic
fraud has been slow and tedious, and is scarcely yet
complete even in the most advanced of the higher seminaries
of learning.
The recondite element in learning
is still, as it has been in all ages, a very attractive
and effective element for the purpose of impressing,
or even imposing upon, the unlearned; and the standing
of the savant in the mind of the altogether unlettered
is in great measure rated in terms of intimacy with
the occult forces. So, for instance, as a typical
case, even so late as the middle of this century,
the Norwegian peasants have instinctively formulated
their sense of the superior erudition of such doctors
of divinity as Luther, Malanchthon, Peder Dass, and
even so late a scholar in divinity as Grundtvig, in
terms of the Black Art. These, together with
a very comprehensive list of minor celebrities, both
living and dead, have been reputed masters in all magical
arts; and a high position in the ecclesiastical personnel
has carried with it, in the apprehension of these
good people, an implication of profound familiarity
with magical practice and the occult sciences.
There is a parallel fact nearer home, similarly going
to show the close relationship, in popular apprehension,
between erudition and the unknowable; and it will
at the same time serve to illustrate, in somewhat
coarse outline, the bent which leisure-class life gives
to the cognitive interest. While the belief is
by no means confined to the leisure class, that class
today comprises a disproportionately large number
of believers in occult sciences of all kinds and shades.
By those whose habits of thought are not shaped by
contact with modern industry, the knowledge of the
unknowable is still felt to the ultimate if not the
only true knowledge.
Learning, then, set out by being in
some sense a by-product of the priestly vicarious
leisure class; and, at least until a recent date,
the higher learning has since remained in some sense
a by-product or by-occupation of the priestly classes.
As the body of systematized knowledge increased, there
presently arose a distinction, traceable very far
back in the history of education, between esoteric
and exoteric knowledge, the former so far
as there is a substantial difference between the two comprising
such knowledge as is primarily of no economic or industrial
effect, and the latter comprising chiefly knowledge
of industrial processes and of natural phenomena which
were habitually turned to account for the material
purposes of life. This line of demarcation has
in time become, at least in popular apprehension,
the normal line between the higher learning and the
lower.
It is significant, not only as an
evidence of their close affiliation with the priestly
craft, but also as indicating that their activity to
a good extent falls under that category of conspicuous
leisure known as manners and breeding, that the learned
class in all primitive communities are great sticklers
for form, precedent, gradations of rank, ritual, ceremonial
vestments, and learned paraphernalia generally.
This is of course to be expected, and it goes to say
that the higher learning, in its incipient phase,
is a leisure-class occupation more specifically
an occupation of the vicarious leisure class employed
in the service of the supernatural leisure class.
But this predilection for the paraphernalia of learning
goes also to indicate a further point of contact or
of continuity between the priestly office and the office
of the savant. In point of derivation, learning,
as well as the priestly office, is largely an outgrowth
of sympathetic magic; and this magical apparatus of
form and ritual therefore finds its place with the
learned class of the primitive community as a matter
of course. The ritual and paraphernalia have
an occult efficacy for the magical purpose; so that
their presence as an integral factor in the earlier
phases of the development of magic and science is
a matter of expediency, quite as much as of affectionate
regard for symbolism simply.
This sense of the efficacy of symbolic
ritual, and of sympathetic effect to be wrought through
dexterous rehearsal of the traditional accessories
of the act or end to be compassed, is of course present
more obviously and in larger measure in magical practice
than in the discipline of the sciences, even of the
occult sciences. But there are, I apprehend,
few persons with a cultivated sense of scholastic merit
to whom the ritualistic accessories of science are
altogether an idle matter. The very great tenacity
with which these ritualistic paraphernalia persist
through the later course of the development is evident
to any one who will reflect on what has been the history
of learning in our civilization. Even today there
are such things in the usage of the learned community
as the cap and gown, matriculation, initiation, and
graduation ceremonies, and the conferring of scholastic
degrees, dignities, and prerogatives in a way which
suggests some sort of a scholarly apostolic succession.
The usage of the priestly orders is no doubt the proximate
source of all these features of learned ritual, vestments,
sacramental initiation, the transmission of peculiar
dignities and virtues by the imposition of hands, and
the like; but their derivation is traceable back of
this point, to the source from which the specialized
priestly class proper came to be distinguished from
the sorcerer on the one hand and from the menial servant
of a temporal master on the other hand. So far
as regards both their derivation and their psychological
content, these usages and the conceptions on which
they rest belong to a stage in cultural development
no later than that of the angekok and the rain-maker.
Their place in the later phases of devout observance,
as well as in the higher educational system, is that
of a survival from a very early animistic phase of
the development of human nature.
These ritualistic features of the
educational system of the present and of the recent
past, it is quite safe to say, have their place primarily
in the higher, liberal, and classic institutions and
grades of learning, rather than in the lower, technological,
or practical grades, and branches of the system.
So far as they possess them, the lower and less reputable
branches of the educational scheme have evidently borrowed
these things from the higher grades; and their continued
persistence among the practical schools, without the
sanction of the continued example of the higher and
classic grades, would be highly improbable, to say
the least. With the lower and practical schools
and scholars, the adoption and cultivation of these
usages is a case of mimicry due to a desire
to conform as far as may be to the standards of scholastic
reputability maintained by the upper grades and classes,
who have come by these accessory features legitimately,
by the right of lineal devolution.
The analysis may even be safely carried
a step farther. Ritualistic survivals and reversions
come out in fullest vigor and with the freest air
of spontaneity among those seminaries of learning which
have to do primarily with the education of the priestly
and leisure classes. Accordingly it should appear,
and it does pretty plainly appear, on a survey of
recent developments in college and university life,
that wherever schools founded for the instruction
of the lower classes in the immediately useful branches
of knowledge grow into institutions of the higher
learning, the growth of ritualistic ceremonial and
paraphernalia and of elaborate scholastic “functions”
goes hand in hand with the transition of the schools
in question from the field of homely practicality
into the higher, classical sphere. The initial
purpose of these schools, and the work with which
they have chiefly had to do at the earlier of these
two stages of their evolution, has been that of fitting
the young of the industrious classes for work.
On the higher, classical plane of learning to which
they commonly tend, their dominant aim becomes the
preparation of the youth of the priestly and the leisure
classes or of an incipient leisure class for
the consumption of goods, material and immaterial,
according to a conventionally accepted, reputable
scope and method. This happy issue has commonly
been the fate of schools founded by “friends
of the people” for the aid of struggling young
men, and where this transition is made in good form
there is commonly, if not invariably, a coincident
change to a more ritualistic life in the schools.
In the school life of today, learned
ritual is in a general way best at home in schools
whose chief end is the cultivation of the “humanities”.
This correlation is shown, perhaps more neatly than
anywhere else, in the life-history of the American
colleges and universities of recent growth. There
may be many exceptions from the rule, especially among
those schools which have been founded by the typically
reputable and ritualistic churches, and which, therefore,
started on the conservative and classical plane or
reached the classical position by a short-cut; but
the general rule as regards the colleges founded in
the newer American communities during the present
century has been that so long as the constituency
from which the colleges have drawn their pupils has
been dominated by habits of industry and thrift, so
long the reminiscences of the medicine-man have found
but a scant and precarious acceptance in the scheme
of college life. But so soon as wealth begins
appreciably to accumulate in the community, and so
soon as a given school begins to lean on a leisure-class
constituency, there comes also a perceptibly increased
insistence on scholastic ritual and on conformity
to the ancient forms as regards vestments and social
and scholastic solemnities. So, for instance,
there has been an approximate coincidence between
the growth of wealth among the constituency which
supports any given college of the Middle West and the
date of acceptance first into tolerance
and then into imperative vogue of evening
dress for men and of the decollete for women, as the
scholarly vestments proper to occasions of learned
solemnity or to the seasons of social amenity within
the college circle. Apart from the mechanical
difficulty of so large a task, it would scarcely be
a difficult matter to trace this correlation.
The like is true of the vogue of the cap and gown.
Cap and gown have been adopted as
learned insignia by many colleges of this section
within the last few years; and it is safe to say that
this could scarcely have occurred at a much earlier
date, or until there had grown up a leisure-class
sentiment of sufficient volume in the community to
support a strong movement of reversion towards an archaic
view as to the legitimate end of education. This
particular item of learned ritual, it may be noted,
would not only commend itself to the leisure-class
sense of the fitness of things, as appealing to the
archaic propensity for spectacular effect and the
predilection for antique symbolism; but it at the
same time fits into the leisure-class scheme of life
as involving a notable element of conspicuous waste.
The precise date at which the reversion to cap and
gown took place, as well as the fact that it affected
so large a number of schools at about the same time,
seems to have been due in some measure to a wave of
atavistic sense of conformity and reputability that
passed over the community at that period.
It may not be entirely beside the
point to note that in point of time this curious reversion
seems to coincide with the culmination of a certain
vogue of atavistic sentiment and tradition in other
directions also. The wave of reversion seems
to have received its initial impulse in the psychologically
disintegrating effects of the Civil War. Habituation
to war entails a body of predatory habits of thought,
whereby clannishness in some measure replaces the sense
of solidarity, and a sense of invidious distinction
supplants the impulse to equitable, everyday serviceability.
As an outcome of the cumulative action of these factors,
the generation which follows a season of war is apt
to witness a rehabilitation of the element of status,
both in its social life and in its scheme of devout
observances and other symbolic or ceremonial forms.
Throughout the eighties, and less plainly traceable
through the seventies also, there was perceptible
a gradually advancing wave of sentiment favoring quasi-predatory
business habits, insistence on status, anthropomorphism,
and conservatism generally. The more direct and
unmediated of these expressions of the barbarian temperament,
such as the recrudescence of outlawry and the spectacular
quasi-predatory careers of fraud run by certain “captains
of industry”, came to a head earlier and were
appreciably on the decline by the close of the seventies.
The recrudescence of anthropomorphic sentiment also
seems to have passed its most acute stage before the
close of the eighties. But the learned ritual
and paraphernalia here spoken of are a still remoter
and more recondite expression of the barbarian animistic
sense; and these, therefore, gained vogue and elaboration
more slowly and reached their most effective development
at a still later date. There is reason to believe
that the culmination is now already past. Except
for the new impetus given by a new war experience,
and except for the support which the growth of a wealthy
class affords to all ritual, and especially to whatever
ceremonial is wasteful and pointedly suggests gradations
of status, it is probable that the late improvements
and augmentation of scholastic insignia and ceremonial
would gradually decline. But while it may be
true that the cap and gown, and the more strenuous
observance of scholastic proprieties which came with
them, were floated in on this post-bellum tidal wave
of reversion to barbarism, it is also no doubt true
that such a ritualistic reversion could not have been
effected in the college scheme of life until the accumulation
of wealth in the hands of a propertied class had gone
far enough to afford the requisite pecuniary ground
for a movement which should bring the colleges of the
country up to the leisure-class requirements in the
higher learning. The adoption of the cap and
gown is one of the striking atavistic features of
modern college life, and at the same time it marks
the fact that these colleges have definitely become
leisure-class establishments, either in actual achievement
or in aspiration.
As further evidence of the close relation
between the educational system and the cultural standards
of the community, it may be remarked that there is
some tendency latterly to substitute the captain of
industry in place of the priest, as the head of seminaries
of the higher learning. The substitution is by
no means complete or unequivocal. Those heads
of institutions are best accepted who combine the
sacerdotal office with a high degree of pecuniary
efficiency. There is a similar but less pronounced
tendency to intrust the work of instruction in the
higher learning to men of some pecuniary qualification.
Administrative ability and skill in advertising the
enterprise count for rather more than they once did,
as qualifications for the work of teaching. This
applies especially in those sciences that have most
to do with the everyday facts of life, and it is particularly
true of schools in the economically single-minded
communities. This partial substitution of pecuniary
for sacerdotal efficiency is a concomitant of the modern
transition from conspicuous leisure to conspicuous
consumption, as the chief means of reputability.
The correlation of the two facts is probably clear
without further elaboration.
The attitude of the schools and of
the learned class towards the education of women serves
to show in what manner and to what extent learning
has departed from its ancient station of priestly and
leisure-class prerogatives, and it indicates also what
approach has been made by the truly learned to the
modern, economic or industrial, matter-of-fact standpoint.
The higher schools and the learned professions were
until recently tabu to the women. These establishments
were from the outset, and have in great measure continued
to be, devoted to the education of the priestly and
leisure classes.
The women, as has been shown elsewhere,
were the original subservient class, and to some extent,
especially so far as regards their nominal or ceremonial
position, they have remained in that relation down
to the present. There has prevailed a strong
sense that the admission of women to the privileges
of the higher learning (as to the Eleusianin mysteries)
would be derogatory to the dignity of the learned craft.
It is therefore only very recently, and almost solely
in the industrially most advanced communities, that
the higher grades of schools have been freely opened
to women. And even under the urgent circumstances
prevailing in the modern industrial communities, the
highest and most reputable universities show an extreme
reluctance in making the move. The sense of class
worthiness, that is to say of status, of a honorific
differentiation of the sexes according to a distinction
between superior and inferior intellectual dignity,
survives in a vigorous form in these corporations
of the aristocracy of learning. It is felt that
the woman should, in all propriety, acquire only such
knowledge as may be classed under one or the other
of two heads: (1) such knowledge as conduces
immediately to a better performance of domestic service the
domestic sphere; (2) such accomplishments and dexterity,
quasi-scholarly and quasi-artistic, as plainly come
in under the head of a performance of vicarious leisure.
Knowledge is felt to be unfeminine if it is knowledge
which expresses the unfolding of the learner’s
own life, the acquisition of which proceeds on the
learner’s own cognitive interest, without prompting
from the canons of propriety, and without reference
back to a master whose comfort or good repute is to
be enhanced by the employment or the exhibition of
it. So, also, all knowledge which is useful as
evidence of leisure, other than vicarious leisure,
is scarcely feminine.
For an appreciation of the relation
which these higher seminaries of learning bear to
the economic life of the community, the phenomena which
have been reviewed are of importance rather as indications
of a general attitude than as being in themselves
facts of first-rate economic consequence. They
go to show what is the instinctive attitude and animus
of the learned class towards the life process of an
industrial community. They serve as an exponent
of the stage of development, for the industrial purpose,
attained by the higher learning and by the learned
class, and so they afford an indication as to what
may fairly be looked for from this class at points
where the learning and the life of the class bear
more immediately upon the economic life and efficiency
of the community, and upon the adjustment of its scheme
of life to the requirements of the time. What
these ritualistic survivals go to indicate is a prevalence
of conservatism, if not of reactionary sentiment,
especially among the higher schools where the conventional
learning is cultivated.
To these indications of a conservative
attitude is to be added another characteristic which
goes in the same direction, but which is a symptom
of graver consequence that this playful inclination
to trivialities of form and ritual. By far the
greater number of American colleges and universities,
for instance, are affiliated to some religious denomination
and are somewhat given to devout observances.
Their putative familiarity with scientific methods
and the scientific point of view should presumably
exempt the faculties of these schools from animistic
habits of thought; but there is still a considerable
proportion of them who profess an attachment to the
anthropomorphic beliefs and observances of an earlier
culture. These professions of devotional zeal
are, no doubt, to a good extent expedient and perfunctory,
both on the part of the schools in their corporate
capacity, and on the part of the individual members
of the corps of instructors; but it can not be doubted
that there is after all a very appreciable element
of anthropomorphic sentiment present in the higher
schools. So far as this is the case it must be
set down as the expression of an archaic, animistic
habit of mind. This habit of mind must necessarily
assert itself to some extent in the instruction offered,
and to this extent its influence in shaping the habits
of thought of the student makes for conservatism and
reversion; it acts to hinder his development in the
direction of matter-of-fact knowledge, such as best
serves the ends of industry.
The college sports, which have so
great a vogue in the reputable seminaries of learning
today, tend in a similar direction; and, indeed, sports
have much in common with the devout attitude of the
colleges, both as regards their psychological basis
and as regards their disciplinary effect. But
this expression of the barbarian temperament is to
be credited primarily to the body of students, rather
than to the temper of the schools as such; except
in so far as the colleges or the college officials as
sometimes happens actively countenance and
foster the growth of sports. The like is true
of college fraternities as of college sports, but
with a difference. The latter are chiefly an
expression of the predatory impulse simply; the former
are more specifically an expression of that heritage
of clannishness which is so large a feature in the
temperament of the predatory barbarian. It is
also noticeable that a close relation subsists between
the fraternities and the sporting activity of the
schools. After what has already been said in
an earlier chapter on the sporting and gambling habit,
it is scarcely necessary further to discuss the economic
value of this training in sports and in factional
organization and activity.
But all these features of the scheme
of life of the learned class, and of the establishments
dedicated to the conservation of the higher learning,
are in a great measure incidental only. They are
scarcely to be accounted organic elements of the professed
work of research and instruction for the ostensible
pursuit of which the schools exists. But these
symptomatic indications go to establish a presumption
as to the character of the work performed as
seen from the economic point of view and
as to the bent which the serious work carried on under
their auspices gives to the youth who resort to the
schools. The presumption raised by the considerations
already offered is that in their work also, as well
as in their ceremonial, the higher schools may be expected
to take a conservative position; but this presumption
must be checked by a comparison of the economic character
of the work actually performed, and by something of
a survey of the learning whose conservation is intrusted
to the higher schools. On this head, it is well
known that the accredited seminaries of learning have,
until a recent date, held a conservative position.
They have taken an attitude of depreciation towards
all innovations. As a general rule a new point
of view or a new formulation of knowledge have been
countenanced and taken up within the schools only
after these new things have made their way outside
of the schools. As exceptions from this rule
are chiefly to be mentioned innovations of an inconspicuous
kind and departures which do not bear in any tangible
way upon the conventional point of view or upon the
conventional scheme of life; as, for instance, details
of fact in the mathematico-physical sciences, and
new readings and interpretations of the classics,
especially such as have a philological or literary
bearing only. Except within the domain of the
“humanities”, in the narrow sense, and
except so far as the traditional point of view of the
humanities has been left intact by the innovators,
it has generally held true that the accredited learned
class and the seminaries of the higher learning have
looked askance at all innovation. New views, new
departures in scientific theory, especially in new
departures which touch the theory of human relations
at any point, have found a place in the scheme of
the university tardily and by a reluctant tolerance,
rather than by a cordial welcome; and the men who
have occupied themselves with such efforts to widen
the scope of human knowledge have not commonly been
well received by their learned contemporaries.
The higher schools have not commonly given their countenance
to a serious advance in the methods or the content
of knowledge until the innovations have outlived their
youth and much of their usefulness after
they have become commonplaces of the intellectual
furniture of a new generation which has grown up under,
and has had its habits of thought shaped by, the new,
extra-scholastic body of knowledge and the new standpoint.
This is true of the recent past. How far it may
be true of the immediate present it would be hazardous
to say, for it is impossible to see present-day facts
in such perspective as to get a fair conception of
their relative proportions.
So far, nothing has been said of the
Maecenas function of the well-to-do, which is habitually
dwelt on at some length by writers and speakers who
treat of the development of culture and of social
structure. This leisure-class function is not
without an important bearing on the higher and on
the spread of knowledge and culture. The manner
and the degree in which the class furthers learning
through patronage of this kind is sufficiently familiar.
It has been frequently presented in affectionate and
effective terms by spokesmen whose familiarity with
the topic fits them to bring home to their hearers
the profound significance of this cultural factor.
These spokesmen, however, have presented the matter
from the point of view of the cultural interest, or
of the interest of reputability, rather than from that
of the economic interest. As apprehended from
the economic point of view, and valued for the purpose
of industrial serviceability, this function of the
well-to-do, as well as the intellectual attitude of
members of the well-to-do class, merits some attention
and will bear illustration.
By way of characterization of the
Maecenas relation, it is to be noted that, considered
externally, as an economic or industrial relation
simply, it is a relation of status. The scholar
under the patronage performs the duties of a learned
life vicariously for his patron, to whom a certain
repute inures after the manner of the good repute imputed
to a master for whom any form of vicarious leisure
is performed. It is also to be noted that, in
point of historical fact, the furtherance of learning
or the maintenance of scholarly activity through the
Maecenas relation has most commonly been a furtherance
of proficiency in classical lore or in the humanities.
The knowledge tends to lower rather than to heighten
the industrial efficiency of the community.
Further, as regards the direct participation
of the members of the leisure class in the furtherance
of knowledge, the canons of reputable living act to
throw such intellectual interest as seeks expression
among the class on the side of classical and formal
erudition, rather than on the side of the sciences
that bear some relation to the community’s industrial
life. The most frequent excursions into other
than classical fields of knowledge on the part of
members of the leisure class are made into the discipline
of law and the political, and more especially the
administrative, sciences. These so-called sciences
are substantially bodies of maxims of expediency for
guidance in the leisure-class office of government,
as conducted on a proprietary basis. The interest
with which this discipline is approached is therefore
not commonly the intellectual or cognitive interest
simply. It is largely the practical interest
of the exigencies of that relation of mastery in which
the members of the class are placed. In point
of derivation, the office of government is a predatory
function, pertaining integrally to the archaic leisure-class
scheme of life. It is an exercise of control and
coercion over the population from which the class
draws its sustenance. This discipline, as well
as the incidents of practice which give it its content,
therefore has some attraction for the class apart from
all questions of cognition. All this holds true
wherever and so long as the governmental office continues,
in form or in substance, to be a proprietary office;
and it holds true beyond that limit, in so far as
the tradition of the more archaic phase of governmental
evolution has lasted on into the later life of those
modern communities for whom proprietary government
by a leisure class is now beginning to pass away.
For that field of learning within
which the cognitive or intellectual interest is dominant the
sciences properly so called the case is
somewhat different, not only as regards the attitude
of the leisure class, but as regards the whole drift
of the pecuniary culture. Knowledge for its own
sake, the exercise of the faculty of comprehensive
without ulterior purpose, should, it might be expected,
be sought by men whom no urgent material interest
diverts from such a quest. The sheltered industrial
position of the leisure class should give free play
to the cognitive interest in members of this class,
and we should consequently have, as many writers confidently
find that we do have, a very large proportion of scholars,
scientists, savants derived from this class and deriving
their incentive to scientific investigation and speculation
from the discipline of a life of leisure. Some
such result is to be looked for, but there are features
of the leisure-class scheme of life, already sufficiently
dwelt upon, which go to divert the intellectual interest
of this class to other subjects than that causal sequence
in phenomena which makes the content of the sciences.
The habits of thought which characterize the life
of the class run on the personal relation of dominance,
and on the derivative, invidious concepts of honor,
worth, merit, character, and the like. The casual
sequence which makes up the subject matter of science
is not visible from this point of view. Neither
does good repute attach to knowledge of facts that
are vulgarly useful. Hence it should appear probable
that the interest of the invidious comparison with
respect to pecuniary or other honorific merit should
occupy the attention of the leisure class, to the
neglect of the cognitive interest. Where this
latter interest asserts itself it should commonly
be diverted to fields of speculation or investigation
which are reputable and futile, rather than to the
quest of scientific knowledge. Such indeed has
been the history of priestly and leisure-class learning
so long as no considerable body of systematized knowledge
had been intruded into the scholastic discipline from
an extra-scholastic source. But since the relation
of mastery and subservience is ceasing to be the dominant
and formative factor in the community’s life
process, other features of the life process and other
points of view are forcing themselves upon the scholars.
The true-bred gentleman of leisure should, and does,
see the world from the point of view of the personal
relation; and the cognitive interest, so far as it
asserts itself in him, should seek to systematize phenomena
on this basis. Such indeed is the case with the
gentleman of the old school, in whom the leisure-class
ideals have suffered no disintegration; and such is
the attitude of his latter-day descendant, in so far
as he has fallen heir to the full complement of upper-class
virtues. But the ways of heredity are devious,
and not every gentleman’s son is to the manor
born. Especially is the transmission of the habits
of thought which characterize the predatory master
somewhat precarious in the case of a line of descent
in which but one or two of the latest steps have lain
within the leisure-class discipline. The chances
of occurrence of a strong congenital or acquired bent
towards the exercise of the cognitive aptitudes are
apparently best in those members of the leisure class
who are of lower class or middle class antecedents that
is to say, those who have inherited the complement
of aptitudes proper to the industrious classes, and
who owe their place in the leisure class to the possession
of qualities which count for more today than they did
in the times when the leisure-class scheme of life
took shape. But even outside the range of these
later accessions to the leisure class there are an
appreciable number of individuals in whom the invidious
interest is not sufficiently dominant to shape their
theoretical views, and in whom the proclivity to theory
is sufficiently strong to lead them into the scientific
quest.
The higher learning owes the intrusion
of the sciences in part to these aberrant scions of
the leisure class, who have come under the dominant
influence of the latter-day tradition of impersonal
relation and who have inherited a complement of human
aptitudes differing in certain salient features from
the temperament which is characteristic of the regime
of status. But it owes the presence of this alien
body of scientific knowledge also in part, and in
a higher degree, to members of the industrious classes
who have been in sufficiently easy circumstances to
turn their attention to other interests than that of
finding daily sustenance, and whose inherited aptitudes
and anthropomorphic point of view does not dominate
their intellectual processes. As between these
two groups, which approximately comprise the effective
force of scientific progress, it is the latter that
has contributed the most. And with respect to
both it seems to be true that they are not so much
the source as the vehicle, or at the most they are
the instrument of commutation, by which the habits
of thought enforced upon the community, through contact
with its environment under the exigencies of modern
associated life and the mechanical industries, are
turned to account for theoretical knowledge.
Science, in the sense of an articulate
recognition of causal sequence in phenomena, whether
physical or social, has been a feature of the Western
culture only since the industrial process in the Western
communities has come to be substantially a process
of mechanical contrivances in which man’s office
is that of discrimination and valuation of material
forces. Science has flourished somewhat in the
same degree as the industrial life of the community
has conformed to this pattern, and somewhat in the
same degree as the industrial interest has dominated
the community’s life. And science, and
scientific theory especially, has made headway in
the several departments of human life and knowledge
in proportion as each of these several departments
has successively come into closer contact with the
industrial process and the economic interest; or perhaps
it is truer to say, in proportion as each of them has
successively escaped from the dominance of the conceptions
of personal relation or status, and of the derivative
canons of anthropomorphic fitness and honorific worth.
It is only as the exigencies of modern
industrial life have enforced the recognition of causal
sequence in the practical contact of mankind with
their environment, that men have come to systematize
the phenomena of this environment and the facts of
their own contact with it in terms of causal sequence.
So that while the higher learning in its best development,
as the perfect flower of scholasticism and classicism,
was a by-product of the priestly office and the life
of leisure, so modern science may be said to be a
by-product of the industrial process. Through
these groups of men, then investigators,
savants, scientists, inventors, speculators most
of whom have done their most telling work outside
the shelter of the schools, the habits of thought enforced
by the modern industrial life have found coherent expression
and elaboration as a body of theoretical science having
to do with the causal sequence of phenomena.
And from this extra-scholastic field of scientific
speculation, changes of method and purpose have from
time to time been intruded into the scholastic discipline.
In this connection it is to be remarked
that there is a very perceptible difference of substance
and purpose between the instruction offered in the
primary and secondary schools, on the one hand, and
in the higher seminaries of learning, on the other
hand. The difference in point of immediate practicality
of the information imparted and of the proficiency
acquired may be of some consequence and may merit the
attention which it has from time to time received;
but there is more substantial difference in the mental
and spiritual bent which is favored by the one and
the other discipline. This divergent trend in
discipline between the higher and the lower learning
is especially noticeable as regards the primary education
in its latest development in the advanced industrial
communities. Here the instruction is directed
chiefly to proficiency or dexterity, intellectual
and manual, in the apprehension and employment of
impersonal facts, in their casual rather than in their
honorific incidence. It is true, under the traditions
of the earlier days, when the primary education was
also predominantly a leisure-class commodity, a free
use is still made of emulation as a spur to diligence
in the common run of primary schools; but even this
use of emulation as an expedient is visibly declining
in the primary grades of instruction in communities
where the lower education is not under the guidance
of the ecclesiastical or military tradition. All
this holds true in a peculiar degree, and more especially
on the spiritual side, of such portions of the educational
system as have been immediately affected by kindergarten
methods and ideals.
The peculiarly non-invidious trend
of the kindergarten discipline, and the similar character
of the kindergarten influence in primary education
beyond the limits of the kindergarten proper, should
be taken in connection with what has already been
said of the peculiar spiritual attitude of leisure-class
womankind under the circumstances of the modern economic
situation. The kindergarten discipline is at its
best or at its farthest remove from ancient
patriarchal and pedagogical ideals in the
advanced industrial communities, where there is a
considerable body of intelligent and idle women, and
where the system of status has somewhat abated in
rigor under the disintegrating influence of industrial
life and in the absence of a consistent body of military
and ecclesiastical traditions. It is from these
women in easy circumstances that it gets its moral
support. The aims and methods of the kindergarten
commend themselves with especial effect to this class
of women who are ill at ease under the pecuniary code
of reputable life. The kindergarten, and whatever
the kindergarten spirit counts for in modern education,
therefore, is to be set down, along with the “new-woman
movement,” to the account of that revulsion against
futility and invidious comparison which the leisure-class
life under modern circumstances induces in the women
most immediately exposed to its discipline. In
this way it appears that, by indirection, the institution
of a leisure class here again favors the growth of
a non-invidious attitude, which may, in the long run,
prove a menace to the stability of the institution
itself, and even to the institution of individual
ownership on which it rests.
During the recent past some tangible
changes have taken place in the scope of college and
university teaching. These changes have in the
main consisted in a partial displacement of the humanities those
branches of learning which are conceived to make for
the traditional “culture”, character,
tastes, and ideals by those more matter-of-fact branches which make for civic
and industrial efficiency. To put the same thing in other words, those branches
of knowledge which make for efficiency (ultimately productive efficiency) have
gradually been gaining ground against those branches which make for a heightened
consumption or a lowered industrial efficiency and for a type of character
suited to the regime of status. In this adaptation of the scheme of instruction
the higher schools have commonly been found on the conservative side; each step
which they have taken in advance has been to some extent of the nature of a
concession. The sciences have been intruded into the scholars discipline from
without, not to say from below. It is noticeable that the humanities which have
so reluctantly yielded ground to the sciences are pretty uniformly adapted to
shape the character of the student in accordance with a traditional self-centred
scheme of consumption; a scheme of contemplation and enjoyment of the true, the
beautiful, and the good, according to a conventional standard of propriety and
excellence, the salient feature of which is leisure otium
cum dignitate. In language veiled by their own
habituation to the archaic, decorous point of view,
the spokesmen of the humanities have insisted upon
the ideal embodied in the maxim, fruges consumere
nati. This attitude should occasion no surprise
in the case of schools which are shaped by and rest
upon a leisure-class culture.
The professed grounds on which it
has been sought, as far as might be, to maintain the
received standards and methods of culture intact are
likewise characteristic of the archaic temperament
and of the leisure-class theory of life. The
enjoyment and the bent derived from habitual contemplation
of the life, ideals, speculations, and methods of
consuming time and goods, in vogue among the leisure
class of classical antiquity, for instance, is felt
to be “higher”, “nobler”, “worthier”,
than what results in these respects from a like familiarity
with the everyday life and the knowledge and aspirations
of commonplace humanity in a modern community, that
learning the content of which is an unmitigated knowledge
of latter-day men and things is by comparison “lower”,
“base”, “ignoble” one
even hears the epithet “sub-human” applied
to this matter-of-fact knowledge of mankind and of
everyday life.
This contention of the leisure-class
spokesmen of the humanities seems to be substantially
sound. In point of substantial fact, the gratification
and the culture, or the spiritual attitude or habit
of mind, resulting from an habitual contemplation
of the anthropomorphism, clannishness, and leisurely
self-complacency of the gentleman of an early day,
or from a familiarity with the animistic superstitions
and the exuberant truculence of the Homeric heroes,
for instance, is, aesthetically considered, more legitimate
than the corresponding results derived from a matter-of-fact
knowledge of things and a contemplation of latter-day
civic or workmanlike efficiency. There can be
but little question that the first-named habits have
the advantage in respect of aesthetic or honorific
value, and therefore in respect of the “worth”
which is made the basis of award in the comparison.
The content of the canons of taste, and more particularly
of the canons of honor, is in the nature of things
a resultant of the past life and circumstances of
the race, transmitted to the later generation by inheritance
or by tradition; and the fact that the protracted
dominance of a predatory, leisure-class scheme of
life has profoundly shaped the habit of mind and the
point of view of the race in the past, is a sufficient
basis for an aesthetically legitimate dominance of
such a scheme of life in very much of what concerns
matters of taste in the present. For the purpose
in hand, canons of taste are race habits, acquired
through a more or less protracted habituation to the
approval or disapproval of the kind of things upon
which a favorable or unfavorable judgment of taste
is passed. Other things being equal, the longer
and more unbroken the habituation, the more legitimate
is the canon of taste in question. All this seems
to be even truer of judgments regarding worth or honor
than of judgments of taste generally.
But whatever may be the aesthetic
legitimacy of the derogatory judgment passed on the
newer learning by the spokesmen of the humanities,
and however substantial may be the merits of the contention
that the classic lore is worthier and results in a
more truly human culture and character, it does not
concern the question in hand. The question in
hand is as to how far these branches of learning, and
the point of view for which they stand in the educational
system, help or hinder an efficient collective life
under modern industrial circumstances how
far they further a more facile adaptation to the economic
situation of today. The question is an economic,
not an aesthetic one; and the leisure-class standards
of learning which find expression in the deprecatory
attitude of the higher schools towards matter-of-fact
knowledge are, for the present purpose, to be valued
from this point of view only. For this purpose
the use of such epithets as “noble”, “base”,
“higher”, “lower”, etc.,
is significant only as showing the animus and the
point of view of the disputants; whether they contend
for the worthiness of the new or of the old.
All these epithets are honorific or humilific terms;
that is to say, they are terms of invidious comparison,
which in the last analysis fall under the category
of the reputable or the disreputable; that is, they
belong within the range of ideas that characterizes
the scheme of life of the regime of status; that is,
they are in substance an expression of sportsmanship of
the predatory and animistic habit of mind; that is,
they indicate an archaic point of view and theory
of life, which may fit the predatory stage of culture
and of economic organization from which they have
sprung, but which are, from the point of view of economic
efficiency in the broader sense, disserviceable anachronisms.
The classics, and their position of
prerogative in the scheme of education to which the
higher seminaries of learning cling with such a fond
predilection, serve to shape the intellectual attitude
and lower the economic efficiency of the new learned
generation. They do this not only by holding
up an archaic ideal of manhood, but also by the discrimination
which they inculcate with respect to the reputable
and the disreputable in knowledge. This result
is accomplished in two ways: (1) by inspiring
an habitual aversion to what is merely useful, as
contrasted with what is merely honorific in learning,
and so shaping the tastes of the novice that he comes
in good faith to find gratification of his tastes
solely, or almost solely, in such exercise of the
intellect as normally results in no industrial or social
gain; and (2) by consuming the learner’s time
and effort in acquiring knowledge which is of no use
except in so far as this learning has by convention
become incorporated into the sum of learning required
of the scholar, and has thereby affected the terminology
and diction employed in the useful branches of knowledge.
Except for this terminological difficulty which
is itself a consequence of the vogue of the classics
of the past a knowledge of the ancient
languages, for instance, would have no practical bearing
for any scientist or any scholar not engaged on work
primarily of a linguistic character. Of course,
all this has nothing to say as to the cultural value
of the classics, nor is there any intention to disparage
the discipline of the classics or the bent which their
study gives to the student. That bent seems to
be of an economically disserviceable kind, but this
fact somewhat notorious indeed need
disturb no one who has the good fortune to find comfort
and strength in the classical lore. The fact
that classical learning acts to derange the learner’s
workmanlike attitudes should fall lightly upon the
apprehension of those who hold workmanship of small
account in comparison with the cultivation of decorous
ideals: Iam fides et pax et
honos pudorque Priscus et neglecta
redire virtus Audet.
Owing to the circumstance that this
knowledge has become part of the elementary requirements
in our system of education, the ability to use and
to understand certain of the dead languages of southern
Europe is not only gratifying to the person who finds
occasion to parade his accomplishments in this respect,
but the evidence of such knowledge serves at the same
time to recommend any savant to his audience, both
lay and learned. It is currently expected that
a certain number of years shall have been spent in
acquiring this substantially useless information,
and its absence creates a presumption of hasty and
precarious learning, as well as of a vulgar practicality
that is equally obnoxious to the conventional standards
of sound scholarship and intellectual force.
The case is analogous to what happens
in the purchase of any article of consumption by a
purchaser who is not an expert judge of materials or
of workmanship. He makes his estimate of value
of the article chiefly on the ground of the apparent
expensiveness of the finish of those decorative parts
and features which have no immediate relation to the
intrinsic usefulness of the article; the presumption
being that some sort of ill-defined proportion subsists
between the substantial value of an article and the
expense of adornment added in order to sell it.
The presumption that there can ordinarily be no sound
scholarship where a knowledge of the classics and
humanities is wanting leads to a conspicuous waste
of time and labor on the part of the general body of
students in acquiring such knowledge. The conventional
insistence on a modicum of conspicuous waste as an
incident of all reputable scholarship has affected
our canons of taste and of serviceability in matters
of scholarship in much the same way as the same principle
has influenced our judgment of the serviceability
of manufactured goods.
It is true, since conspicuous consumption
has gained more and more on conspicuous leisure as
a means of repute, the acquisition of the dead languages
is no longer so imperative a requirement as it once
was, and its talismanic virtue as a voucher of scholarship
has suffered a concomitant impairment. But while
this is true, it is also true that the classics have
scarcely lost in absolute value as a voucher of scholastic
respectability, since for this purpose it is only necessary
that the scholar should be able to put in evidence
some learning which is conventionally recognized as
evidence of wasted time; and the classics lend themselves
with great facility to this use. Indeed, there
can be little doubt that it is their utility as evidence
of wasted time and effort, and hence of the pecuniary
strength necessary in order to afford this waste,
that has secured to the classics their position of
prerogative in the scheme of higher learning, and has
led to their being esteemed the most honorific of
all learning. They serve the decorative ends
of leisure-class learning better than any other body
of knowledge, and hence they are an effective means
of reputability.
In this respect the classics have
until lately had scarcely a rival. They still
have no dangerous rival on the continent of Europe,
but lately, since college athletics have won their
way into a recognized standing as an accredited field
of scholarly accomplishment, this latter branch of
learning if athletics may be freely classed
as learning has become a rival of the classics
for the primacy in leisure-class education in American
and English schools. Athletics have an obvious
advantage over the classics for the purpose of leisure-class
learning, since success as an athlete presumes, not
only waste of time, but also waste of money, as well
as the possession of certain highly unindustrial archaic
traits of character and temperament. In the German
universities the place of athletics and Greek-letter
fraternities, as a leisure-class scholarly occupation,
has in some measure been supplied by a skilled and
graded inebriety and a perfunctory duelling.
The leisure class and its standard
of virtue archaism and waste can
scarcely have been concerned in the introduction of
the classics into the scheme of the higher learning;
but the tenacious retention of the classics by the
higher schools, and the high degree of reputability
which still attaches to them, are no doubt due to their
conforming so closely to the requirements of archaism
and waste.
“Classic” always carries
this connotation of wasteful and archaic, whether
it is used to denote the dead languages or the obsolete
or obsolescent forms of thought and diction in the
living language, or to denote other items of scholarly
activity or apparatus to which it is applied with
less aptness. So the archaic idiom of the English
language is spoken of as “classic” English.
Its use is imperative in all speaking and writing
upon serious topics, and a facile use of it lends dignity
to even the most commonplace and trivial string of
talk. The newest form of English diction is of
course never written; the sense of that leisure-class
propriety which requires archaism in speech is present
even in the most illiterate or sensational writers
in sufficient force to prevent such a lapse.
On the other hand, the highest and most conventionalized
style of archaic diction is quite characteristically properly
employed only in communications between an anthropomorphic
divinity and his subjects. Midway between these
extremes lies the everyday speech of leisure-class
conversation and literature.
Elegant diction, whether in writing
or speaking, is an effective means of reputability.
It is of moment to know with some precision what is
the degree of archaism conventionally required in speaking
on any given topic. Usage differs appreciably
from the pulpit to the market-place; the latter, as
might be expected, admits the use of relatively new
and effective words and turns of expression, even
by fastidious persons. A discriminative avoidance
of neologisms is honorific, not only because it argues
that time has been wasted in acquiring the obsolescent
habit of speech, but also as showing that the speaker
has from infancy habitually associated with persons
who have been familiar with the obsolescent idiom.
It thereby goes to show his leisure-class antecedents.
Great purity of speech is presumptive evidence of
several lives spent in other than vulgarly useful
occupations; although its evidence is by no means
entirely conclusive to this point.
As felicitous an instance of futile
classicism as can well be found, outside of the Far
East, is the conventional spelling of the English
language. A breach of the proprieties in spelling
is extremely annoying and will discredit any writer
in the eyes of all persons who are possessed of a
developed sense of the true and beautiful. English
orthography satisfies all the requirements of the canons
of reputability under the law of conspicuous waste.
It is archaic, cumbrous, and ineffective; its acquisition
consumes much time and effort; failure to acquire
it is easy of detection. Therefore it is the first
and readiest test of reputability in learning, and
conformity to its ritual is indispensable to a blameless
scholastic life.
On this head of purity of speech,
as at other points where a conventional usage rests
on the canons of archaism and waste, the spokesmen
for the usage instinctively take an apologetic attitude.
It is contended, in substance, that a punctilious
use of ancient and accredited locutions will
serve to convey thought more adequately and more precisely
than would be the straightforward use of the latest
form of spoken English; whereas it is notorious that
the ideas of today are effectively expressed in the
slang of today. Classic speech has the honorific
virtue of dignity; it commands attention and respect
as being the accredited method of communication under
the leisure-class scheme of life, because it carries
a pointed suggestion of the industrial exemption of
the speaker. The advantage of the accredited locutions
lies in their reputability; they are reputable because
they are cumbrous and out of date, and therefore argue
waste of time and exemption from the use and the need
of direct and forcible speech.