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By 1989, when Michael Oakeshottâs Voice of Liberal Learning was first published by Yale University Press, books that held a negative view of education in the United States, such as Allan Bloomâs The Closing of the American Mind and E. D. Hirschâs Cultural Literacy, had garnered a remarkable amount of attention. There have been countless lamentations about the state of schooling in America in recent years, and there have been countless recommendations toward what is invariably called âeducational reform.â
To those weary and wary of the cacophony about whatâs wrong with education in America and what ought to be done about it, Oakeshottâs voice beckons. As usual, his approach to the subject is subtle, comprehensive, and radicalâin the sense of summoning readers to the root of the matter. That root, Oakeshott believed, is the very nature of learning itself and, concomitantly, the means (as distinct from the method) by which the life of learning is discovered, cultivated, and pursued. As Oakeshott has written, âThis, then, is what we are concerned with: adventures in human self-understanding. Not the bare protestation that a human being is a self-conscious, reflective intelligence and that he does not live by bread alone, but the actual enquiries, utterances, and actions in which human beings have expressed their understanding of the human condition. This is the stuff of what has come to be called a âliberalâ educationââliberalâ because it is liberated from the distracting business of satisfying contingent wants.â
Liberty Fundâs new edition of The Voice of Liberal Learning includes a foreword by Timothy Fuller that reiterates the timelessness of Oakeshottâs reflections amid the continuing clamor that characterizes discourse about liberal education.
Michael Oakeshott (1901â1990) was Professor of Political Science at the London School of Economics and a Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. He was the author of many works, including Rationalism in Politics and Other Essays, On History and Other Essays, and Hobbes on Civil Association, all of which are published by Liberty Fund.
About: By 1989, when Michael Oakeshottâs Voice of Liberal Learning was first published by Yale University Press, books that held a negative view of education in the United States, such as Allan Bloomâs The Closing of the American Mind and E.
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