showcasing scholars
A monthly publication of virtues & vocations, Good Thought pieces showcase scholars from various disciplines reflecting on how issues of virtue and vocation intersect with their work in higher education.
According to a recent National Business Ethics Survey (2013), almost one out of two U.S. employees has witnessed wrongdoing in their workplace. Half of them did not report the wrongdoing or take any action. Why do some individuals display courage at work while many of their co-workers — when faced with the same situation — do not?
Growing up, I had a lot of questions. As a toddler, I asked all the usual “why” questions, and as I got older, my questions became ever more abstract. My mother wasn’t surprised when I eventually decided to study philosophy. I also learned that there were certain questions that you didn’t ask. In particular, I learned the old adage, “Never discuss religion or politics in polite company.”
In her analysis of the parable of The Good Samaritan, Simone Weil emphasizes the acute, gentle attentiveness of the Samaritan when he encounters someone in need: “Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity.” This generosity is something that must be cultivated. According to Weil, growing generosity for the other is a creative act, something that requires imagination and “is analogous to genius.”
I have upwards of sixteen years of formal education, and only once in any classroom was I encouraged to talk honestly and openly about the sense of mystery and depth that I frequently experience in my own life. […] Why can’t we ever talk in higher education about what gives lives real meaning?
Some character traits, such as humility and open-mindedness, help us learn and gain knowledge. They are virtues that enable us to think well. Other character traits, such as arrogance and closed-mindedness, impede our learning and ability to think well. Suppose that one of our aims, as educators, is to help our students develop virtues of thinking well. How can we do that? Are there classroom activities and assignments that could help? Would classroom activities and assignments be enough, or would broader systemic changes be needed? Are there particular virtues, like humility and open-mindedness, on which educators should focus? Or are there problems with focusing on virtues like humility at the expense of other virtues like pride?
GOOD THOUGHT
According to a recent National Business Ethics Survey (2013), almost one out of two U.S. employees has witnessed wrongdoing in their workplace. Half of them did not report the wrongdoing or take any action. Why do some individuals display courage at work while many of their co-workers — when faced with the same situation — do not?
GOOD READ
Claire Keegan’s Christmas novella, Small Things Like These, will not only draw your imagination into the lives of characters in an Irish town during Christmas week in the 1980s; it could also be an argument for liberal education.
GOOD WORK
How can universities encourage students to move beyond cognitive engagement with ideas about flourishing into habits and ways of being? For students in Villanova University’s Honors Program, a Living Learning Community with a focus on “The Examined Life: the Good, the True, the Beautiful,” aims to do just that.
This monthly digest will provide you with articles of interest, examples of character initiatives in higher education, book recommendations, and news about upcoming events.