The Catholic Thing

Latin and the Big Questions


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By Daniel B. Gallagher.
But first a note from Robert Royal: So it's Lent. Would you like to energize your spiritual life under the guidance of one of the great Catholic spiritual masters? Of course you do. And that's why you should enroll in TCT's course on St. Bonaventure's The Soul's Journey into God, which starts next week. Your professor is TCT's own Randall Smith. So Lent, Bonaventure, Smith. What are you waiting for? Click the button below and make the rest of your Lent an even richer spiritual experience.
Now for today's column...
William Sitwell, praising the decision of the British Department of Education to cease funding the Latin Excellence Programme (LEP), recently wrote in London's The Telegraph that "the loss of Latin from schools is a triumph, not a tragedy," explaining that "the ancient language has little relevance in today's society."
No one in America would have been more eager to join Sitwell than John Dewey (1859-1952), arguably a greater influence on American public education than anyone else. In Democracy and Education (1916), Dewey wrote that literary culture was "aloof from the practical needs of the mass of men" and nothing more than an "alleged humanism" that "bases its educational schemes upon the specialized interests of a leisure class." Members of this culture "reduce themselves to exclusively literary and linguistic studies, which tend to shrink to 'the classics,' to languages no longer spoken."
Although Dewey acknowledged a place for Latin and Greek based on "the important contributions" those civilizations have made to our own, he also wrote that to regard the classics "as par excellence the human studies involves a deliberate neglect of the possibilities of the subject matter which is accessible in education to the masses, and tends to cultivate a narrow snobbery." In short, the classics - and the languages in which they were written - were not only impractical but because they were inaccessible to the masses, therefore, in no way preeminently "humanistic."
I don't know how strong the influence of Dewey's pragmatism has been on the other side of the Atlantic, but Sitwell certainly represents it. "What those Latin classes did do," Sitwell writes, "was fill my childhood with countless hours of pointless education when I should instead have been forced to study the likes of economics, business [and] entrepreneurialism."
I have nothing against economics, business, and entrepreneurialism. In fact, I'm all for them. But I don't think they ultimately make us human. What makes us human is the capacity to probe what lies beyond such practical endeavors and the willingness to ask "big questions." What makes us human is not the ability to come up with the best business model, but to understand why we even engage in business in the first place. What makes us human is ultimately not what we make, but who we are and who we become.
Such was the thinking of Erasmus of Rotterdam, among many other eminent humanists, whom Sitwell dismisses as "a gloomy Dutchman with a propensity to contract lumbago. . .before succumbing to dysentery." Perhaps. But Erasmus also dedicated his life to education, and more specifically to the bonae litterae ("good letters"), which he believed not only dealt with the "big questions" but empowered us to acquire virtues that would make us excel both in public life and in the life of contemplation.

As for "economics, business, and entrepreneurialism," Erasmus issued a perennial warning: "Anyone who actually admires money as the most precious thing in life" and believes that "as long as he possesses it, he will be happy, has fashioned too many false gods for himself." (The Handbook of the Militant Christian, 1514).
For all his "lumbago" and "dysentery," Erasmus was a far less gloomy figure than Sitwell's teachers, who seem ultimately to blame for his deep distaste for Latin. Mr. Scott, Sitwell's instructor at Maidwell Hall, wrote that if the ten-year-old Sitwell could only "understan...
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