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Dr.
Dunning went on to find that the ignorant overestimate their abilities
for a good reason. The skills
they lack for competence are usually the same skills they
need to recognize incompetence.
In fact, according to one of Dunning's colleagues, "not
only do [incompetent people] reach erroneous conclusions and make
unfortunate choices, but their incompetence robs them of the ability
to realize it." By
the way, as a result of his study, Dr. Dunning now worries about
his own competence.
Now
that's a true story, and we can smile at it.
But the lesson I want to draw from it tonight is a serious
one. As a nation and as individuals, we're not as
smart as we think. If we
learned anything on September 11, it's that we bleed just like everybody
else. We pay for our overconfidence and self-absorption
just like everybody else. Fools
with tools are still fools. Technology,
wealth and power are not the same as wisdom, purpose and character.
And they don't give us any security, because only God can
do that.
Like
all of us here tonight, I love my country.
I believe that Americans are a great people, a good
people. I believe that America remains a great experiment
in human dignity. But it's
an experiment that depends on certain assumptions -- and first among
them is the sanctity of the human person.
"Sanctity" is an idea that makes no sense without
God. The historian Gertrude Himmelfarb put it this
way: America today is "living
off the religious capital of a previous generation, and [that] capital
is being perilously depleted."
The more we remove God from our public life, the more we
remove the moral vocabulary that gives our public institutions meaning. The more secular we become, the more we feed
four problems that are killing us as a community.
Here’s
the first problem: our inability to think clearly.
Reasoning requires time.
It needs a reverence for ideas.
It involves the testing and comparison of arguments.
But the America we have today is a culture built on marketing
-- and marketing works in exactly the opposite way.
Marketing appeals to desire and emotion.
It depends on the suppression of critical thought, because
thinking can get in the way of buying the product or the message.
That explains why marketing is tied so tightly to images. Images operate underneath the radar of critical thought. That's why car dealers usually put an attractive
young woman in front of their latest sports car, instead of a stack
of performance statistics.
Here’s
the second problem: our inability to remember. Christopher Lasch once observed that Americans
have a kind of addiction to the new.
We’re a people of the “now."
We enjoy nostalgia, because it’s a kind of entertainment. But we don’t really like history because
the past -- as it really happened -- burdens us with memories and
unfinished business. It
imposes obligations on the present.
Americans like to think that we can invent and reinvent ourselves. But the cost of that illusion is that we tend
to have a very poor grasp of history.
We learn too little from the lessons of the past.
Here’s
problem three: our inability to imagine and hope.
Americans have never been ideologues.
We’re pragmatists and toolmakers.
We believe in results. So it’s really no surprise that we have the
strongest economic machine in the world; or that we excel at science
and technology; or that these disciplines enjoy such esteem in our
culture.
But
technology always carries with it a “revenge of unintended consequences."
And one of the unintended consequences of our science is
that we've become its objects and its victims.
The price tag for our science has been a decline in our vocabulary
of the soul, a rise in the materialist view of the world, and a
collapse in our confidence that humanity is somehow unique in creation.
Hope and imagination flow out of a belief in a higher purpose
to our lives. If all we are is very intelligent carbon --
well, then hope and imagination are just quirks of the species. And so is any talk about the sanctity of the
human person.
Here's
problem four: our inability to recognize and live real freedom.
Freedom is not an endless supply of choices.
Choice for its own sake is just another form of idolatry. Freedom is the ability to see -- and the courage to do -- what is
right. But if Americans
stop believing that absolute principles of right and wrong exist,
then how can we even begin to discuss things like freedom, truth
and the dignity of the human person in a common vocabulary?
How can we agree on which rights take precedence, or who
has responsibility for what?
What
we get in place of freedom is a kind of anarchy of conflicting pressure
groups and personal agendas held together by just one fragile thing:
the economy we all share . . . and that’s not the basis of a community.
In fact our economy, more than anything else in American
life, teaches us to see almost everything as a commodity
to be bought or sold. This
is what Jeremy Rifkin means when he describes American culture as
increasingly a “paid-for experience” based on the commodification
of passion, ideals, relationships and even time.
If we want freedom, we buy it by purchasing this car
or that computer. If we want romance, we buy it by purchasing
this cruise or that hotel package.
The
trouble is, the more our advertising misuses the language of our
dreams and ideals to sell consumer goods . . . the more mixed up
our dreams and ideals become. We
confuse ourselves to the point where we no longer recognize what
real love, honest work, freedom, family, patriotism -- and even
life itself -- look like.
So
those are the problems. What
do we do about them?
Well,
the only thing we can do about them is fix them one heart,
one intellect, one potential leader at a time.
That's why the vocation of a college like Thomas Aquinas
is even more important today than it was 30 years ago.
It's easy to praise the obvious successes of any school. More than 30 young men have graduated from
TAC and gone on to be priests.
More than 20 young women have graduated and entered religious
life. Many, many others have formed strong Catholic
families, developed fruitful careers, and now live an active and
faithful lay life. These
are tremendous gifts not just to the Church, but to wider society,
because men and women who live lives of virtue have a ripple effect.
They ennoble the whole community.
And that's the kind of "good infection" that little
by little can heal the whole body.
But
I think the real greatness of this college is written into its gene
code. Neil Postman once said that "Any fool
can have an opinion; [but] to know what one needs to know
in order to have an opinion is wisdom -- which is another
way of saying that wisdom means knowing what questions to ask about
knowledge."
As
I worked on my thoughts for this evening, I paged through the curriculum. I read about the seminars. I reviewed the syllabus. And I was reminded why the old so often envy
the young. What a priceless
education this college offers.
Homer, Aquinas, Plato, Tocqueville, Marx, Sacred Scripture:
These are the real teachers and challengers of every TAC
student. It's not a bad
list of tutors. The genius
of Thomas Aquinas College is that it teaches wisdom first -- the
things one needs to know in order to have an opinion
. . .and the questions one
needs to ask about knowledge. Nobody
can give or get a better gift.
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