The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast XX
[0] Hello everyone.
[1] I have the great good fortune today, well, first of all, to be sitting outside, which is quite nice, and also to be speaking to Dr. Larry Arne, who is president of Hillsdale College.
[2] Hillsdale College is a liberal arts institution in Hillsdale, Michigan.
[3] And it's quite a remarkable place.
[4] I was asked to deliver a commencement address there earlier this year and went up for the day I knew about Hillsdale a little bit but hadn't visited there it's a remarkable island of educational sanity in the midst of a sea of educational chaos and I'm going to be talking today to Dr. Arne who's been president of this august institution for a number of decades about well about Hillsdale College in general about its history about his tenure there and his activities and occupation and enterprise, and about the state, the dismal state, let's say, of the higher education enterprise in general in the United States and in the Westmore broadly.
[5] So I hope you enjoy the conversation.
[6] Welcome, Dr. Orne.
[7] Thank you very much for coming to see me and also for the commencement invitation and for agreeing to do this podcast.
[8] I'm really looking forward to it.
[9] Well, you're a tremendous host and a tremendous man. It's a great pleasure for me to be with you today.
[10] Yeah, it's been fun.
[11] It's been fun.
[12] We had, uh, we were out in the boat for the sunsets and we had some fireworks at night and it's quiet and peaceful here and away from the fray, let's say.
[13] So that's been lovely.
[14] And Dr. Arne and I've been talking a lot about plans for educational revival in some sense in the future.
[15] And so there'll be lots of things coming down the pipelines on that front.
[16] But to begin with, I think we'll start by talking about Hillsdale and about its singular vision and its founding.
[17] And so, why don't we start?
[18] Tell me about how Hillsdale, tell everybody about how Hillsdale got its beginning.
[19] And let's walk through the history of the institution.
[20] History starts in 1844.
[21] It was on the frontier in Michigan.
[22] That was far as the country went back then.
[23] A bunch of New England preachers who were classically educated.
[24] They read Latin and Greek, which means that they knew the books that were written before Jesus, and they were very loyal to Jesus, and they brought the tradition of a liberal education with them out to the frontier.
[25] And they founded a college, and they met in the town hall.
[26] They just, one particular one of them, and they ran some done, wrote a horse into town, and there were two hotels, two hotels, thriving metropolis.
[27] And he said, I would like to talk to the leading citizens who care about education.
[28] And a bunch of them gathered, and they used City Hall.
[29] It wasn't a government thing.
[30] The college had never had any money from the government.
[31] But City Hall back then was conceived a place where the city could use it, the citizens could use it.
[32] And they made a deal, and they started the college.
[33] The city pledged $10 ,000.
[34] if the college would raise $10 ,000.
[35] And that came from this ransom done and some other people.
[36] They were preachers.
[37] And they went riding around the countryside all over Wisconsin and Illinois and Indiana and Michigan.
[38] And they'd give sermons and they'd ask for money.
[39] And the money came $2 and $5 at a time.
[40] We still have the list.
[41] And what did they want to do?
[42] Well, they were very clear about that.
[43] The college has a very beautiful founding document.
[44] It's the discovery of that that made me think I could find a calling and managing the college.
[45] And it commits the college to four things.
[46] They are learning, freedom, faith, and character.
[47] and those are all drawn out of the great tradition of the liberal arts that goes back to medieval times indeed back to Plato's academy before that and so they you know you need to be free in order to what does the liberal arts mean it means the study of the ultimate things the things that are good to know just because they're good to know and then you need to be able to you need to have your freedom to do that.
[48] The college has always been interested in the Constitution, and you need to have a strong character.
[49] You need to not be overcome by vice, but pursue virtue.
[50] And what else?
[51] And you need to, and God is a big figure.
[52] So those are the points.
[53] And then, you know, this is in 1844, and 16 years later, the world fell apart.
[54] The Civil War began in 1861.
[55] And it's curious about that because we didn't have any military training at the college.
[56] But effectively, all of the young men joined the Union Army.
[57] And there were more than 40 of them at the Battle of Gettysburg in the Peach Orchard on the second day, helped to turn the tide.
[58] All in all, about 500 of our students went more than any place except Yale, which was older and larger than we were then.
[59] And the faculty had been very involved.
[60] So why do you think these preachers that started Hillsdale Christians were also interested in the benefits of a liberal arts education?
[61] Why didn't they just agitate to start a seminary?
[62] That's, you know, great political philosopher writes, religion is not, can't be simply open to philosophy, but the most open is the Christian religion.
[63] He talks about the Spanish name is Harry Jaffa, a teacher mine.
[64] No, his teacher, Leo Strauss.
[65] He talks about the fact that Moses, my embodied, he's a Jew, and Al -Farabi a Muslim and Thomas Aquinas are rough contemporaries and Thomas Aquinas could write most openly about God about the truth is known by reason in the great Sumo Theologica the first query is whether anything apart from reason is necessary to know God and he says you know, that book, a wonderful book, is written in the form of the disputed question.
[66] So, here's the question, then two or three opinions about it, and two or three answers, and then his own opinion.
[67] And his own opinion is, yes, there are some things apart from reason you need, but you can know a heck of a lot by reason.
[68] Right, so there's this alignment and reason in that sense.
[69] That's the alignment in some sense between the Greek tradition, the platonic tradition and the philosophical tradition, and the emergent Christian tradition, there is an overlap there that's really quite remarkable that comes together with the joint conceptualization of the logos.
[70] Because that conception of reason that you're describing, that's the Greek notion of the logos.
[71] And that was adjoined, oddly, to the Christian notion of the logos, which I think is a kind of historical mystery.
[72] But the fact that those things actually overlaid and overlapped is a remarkable synchronicity, we could say.
[73] And so the Greeks believed that you could move towards the good and the sum of all goods as a consequence of Logos, as a consequence of reason.
[74] And then the Christians insisted that that Logos had been embodied in a particular figure and that there were divine attributes associated with that.
[75] And so maybe that's part of what's underneath the allowance on the Christian side for the Greek philosophical tradition underneath the rubic in some sense of a modified Judaism.
[76] It's not something you'd necessarily expect, but it's definitely something that happened.
[77] And I think there's an important thing to lay out in that regard, too, because a lot of modern people are taught that there's a real antithesis between the religious, say the Catholic in particular, and education in general and science in particular.
[78] But as I've looked into that more deeply, I've become convinced that exactly the opposite is the case and that the university tradition, certainly which grew out of the monastic tradition just as clearly as can be, but also the scientific tradition are deeply embedded inside the religious substrate rather than operating in a manner that's antithetical.
[79] And I think the fact that the preachers, preachers knew that even in 18, well, even, they knew that in the mid -1800s, and that drove them to decide that a liberal arts education, studying people like Plato and Aristotle, for example, was actually commensurate with a broader, let's say, ethical and Christian goal.
[80] It's not obvious why that would be the case, to pull in these pagans.
[81] It does.
[82] So, first of all, a prerequisite for entry to Hillsdale College in 1844 was you had to read both Greek and Latin.
[83] And so they started prep school for people who couldn't do that, and you learn those, and then you could come.
[84] But the way they looked at the world, and I, you know, I think it's a wonderful way to look at the world myself, is that this account of Logos, which you bring up, that's the Greek word both for reason and for speech.
[85] and that means that whatever you can think you can say and whatever you can say you can think and that means that this conversation is a kind of sharing that no other creature is capable of and it's a transformative process as well a redemptive and transformative process and that's right and connected aristotle rights that were more gregarious that comes to the Greek word for flock than horses or bees, right?
[86] And that means, and so it's this nature of man, but then Logos is not, when we talk, we can see how to get from A to B, we can also think about whether to go from A to B. And that brings in the divine, because that would be in both Greek philosophy and in the Christian faith and the Jewish faith, and I think the Islamic faith, that would be the ultimate destination for God.
[87] Right.
[88] That's like a definition, right?
[89] If you think about this as a mapping problem and that part of what we're doing, well, dialoguing, exchanging logos, is to map out the terrain that includes the destination and the details of the journey, all of that.
[90] And then the ultimate destination is a destination that would be guided by the highest good.
[91] By definition, right?
[92] Because your destination is a good.
[93] You wouldn't be going there if you didn't think it was better.
[94] unless you're aiming down.
[95] And so the ultimate destination in some sense is the transcendent destination.
[96] And so that's like a definition of the divine path.
[97] And in some sense, a definition of the spirit that animates you while you're walking down that path.
[98] And then you say, and I think there's an instinctual element to this that's associated with that gregariousness.
[99] So, you know, people are unbelievable mimics.
[100] We imitate each other on a scale that's unparalleled among other creatures.
[101] And we do that with language.
[102] but we can literally inhabit each other's bodies, each other's frames of reference.
[103] So we do that by exchanging viewpoints, essentially.
[104] And so we're negotiating together this pathway to the highest possible point.
[105] And I think that's marked.
[106] So, you know, what I was hoping when we started this discussion, like I always hope with my podcast, is that we would fall into a discussion and be engaged by it, right?
[107] And then it would be animated by a spirit that was its own, not instrumental, not planned, but something that would emerge automatically as a consequence of goodwill and honest communication.
[108] And what's so fascinating about that, literally, is that if that happens, it's intrinsically and instinctually engaging.
[109] You feel the conversation as meaningful.
[110] And that's a marker, as far as I can tell, for the manifestation of that logos, that instinct for meaning.
[111] It's not something rational.
[112] It's way, it's the thing upon which rational discourse fundamentally depends, and maybe the goal of rational discourse.
[113] And then you could also think, this is a wonderful way of thinking about it too, you know, is that if you're listening to a symphony, in some sense, you're apprehending its completion, right?
[114] So there's a voyage to the end, but getting to the end of the symphony is not the purpose of listening to the music, even though you know that end is there.
[115] So you have the end in mind, but if the end is appropriate, then the journey becomes intrinsically meaningful in and of itself.
[116] And so you get the destination tied to the journey in that intrinsic sense.
[117] And I do believe that people experience that as deep engagement in meaning.
[118] And that's the purpose of dialogue.
[119] And there's that Christian idea that goes along with that too.
[120] And it's an idea certainly that therapists have picked up on is that that redempt, that dialogue, honest dialogue.
[121] is genuinely spiritually redemptive.
[122] We'll get back to more with Larry Arne in just a moment.
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[138] So I think all that you just said is breast -checkingly good.
[139] And it shows you understand what teaching is.
[140] Today, we think of teaching is doing something to somebody, right?
[141] It's not.
[142] It's doing something with somebody.
[143] Plato writes a letter.
[144] He wrote 13 letters, but one of them apparently, is his, the seventh, and he says, how would you capture the teaching of Socrates?
[145] It's just in these conversations.
[146] And so he invented the dialogue for that purpose.
[147] And then his student, Aristotle, invented the dialectical treatise, where they introduce a thing and you talk about it a while and you have to go back over and something else comes up.
[148] So it's like a conversation.
[149] And the point is, we learn together talking.
[150] and thinking are the same thing.
[151] Yeah, that's why free speech is, so you think, well, why think?
[152] Well, so that you think before you act.
[153] Why think before you act?
[154] So you don't fall into a pit.
[155] How do you think?
[156] You think dialogically, even if you're thinking only internally.
[157] What that means is you've trained yourself to be more than one person at the same time.
[158] Very difficult thing to manage.
[159] Most of the time, we think through dialogue.
[160] And it's so interesting to me, too, that these long -form podcasts have become, a cultural phenomenon, right?
[161] Because in some sense, people like Rogan in particular pioneered this, these long -form dialogues.
[162] In some real sense, that is a return to that platonic tradition of dialectical learning.
[163] And part of the reason that people like these podcasts as well isn't because necessarily because of the content, although that's relevant, but this is also relevant to the teaching enterprise.
[164] It's because they love to see the process of dialogue modeled.
[165] And so a lot of the comments on the YouTube It's like I had a conversation with my father and I put it up on my channel.
[166] I interviewed him about his life and I wanted to do that personally.
[167] I had my reasons, but it turned out to be a very popular podcast much more than I had expected it to be.
[168] And I don't think it was because the content per se was like universally fascinated.
[169] You know, it was the details of my father's life in a particular time and place in northern Saskatchewan when he was growing up really on the frontier.
[170] But people really like to see.
[171] the genuine intergenerational dialogue modeled.
[172] And we have no idea how important an element of education that is, right?
[173] Is that because as a professor, partly what you're doing is inculcating knowledge, which is doing something to someone, let's say.
[174] But a huge part of it is modeling the process by which knowledge itself is generated and expanded.
[175] So one can understand Aristotle by reading the first lines.
[176] the first line of the metaphysics is the human being stretches himself out to know we want to know and so your father anybody talking with this father is a demonstration how one generation affects the next but your father you're a remarkable man and people wonder where does that guy come from and so to find out that information and then to find out that it's uh normal normal.
[177] Your father was not a professor at Cambridge, right?
[178] Your father was a normal man and a heck of a man. A normal man is a fine thing to be.
[179] Just think of the conclusion you can draw about the form of government of aristocracy.
[180] It is one of the most worthy forms of government, but is also fatally flawed.
[181] Because, sons are not necessarily like their fathers and daughters like their mothers and fathers.
[182] So that, you see, in other words, there's an account of how nature works in hearing you talk to your father.
[183] And it's, hearing a lecture about it is different, right?
[184] Because they're seeing the, if you're talking to your dad, they're seeing the raw material.
[185] And we've been talking a lot the last couple days, and your dad comes up a lot.
[186] There's a couple of things I realized about him.
[187] I thought about this for a long time.
[188] So my father has a very large collection of single shot rifles, 300 of them or something, like a lot.
[189] And he's been, I would say, compelled and obsessed by collecting them, learning about them, and becoming an expert marksman because he was, and he is an expert marksman.
[190] He was competing at provincial levels.
[191] So very good marksman.
[192] And when he hunted, he was, he was he hunted with single shot rifles because the goal was to hit the target with one shot and it really I wasn't interested in rifles the same way he was and he had a craftsman interest in them too because he made gunstocks and he was a good good carpenter and handyman very artistically gifted and very precise in his in his in his in his workings his grandfather who raised him was a blacksmith who could make virtually anything out of nothing.
[193] And so, but his, his, his, his preoccupation with guns really was a mystery to me because I didn't share the same thing temperamentally, you know, I was probably too tenderhearted to be a, to be a hunter.
[194] But I, it came to me at one point, after having meditated on this for a long time, that the reason my dad was so interested in rifles was because he wanted to hit the target with a single shot.
[195] And he realized that that was the purpose of life.
[196] And I knew at that point that the word sin was a derivation.
[197] It's also derived through the Jewish equivalent of the word sin.
[198] The Hamartia, which is the Greek word, means to miss the target.
[199] It's an archery term.
[200] And the Jewish equivalent of the word for sin has the same kind of derivation.
[201] Means to miss the target.
[202] And so I thought, oh, I see what my dad was doing.
[203] He didn't know this either.
[204] He was practicing to aim in the most deadly possible manner, one shot, dead center of the right target and all of that perfectionism that goes along with mechanical machining let's say and the precision that's necessary to make a rifle it's all associated with that hunting tradition that characterizes human being so deeply like i mean our our whole physical platform is a throwing platform and we aim at everything all our sports are aims at targets it's really deeply embedded inside of me of us and so i realized that about my father and i told him that i said i think i figured out why you're so interested in rifles and shooting.
[205] So I outlined that and he said, yeah, I think that's right.
[206] He didn't know that.
[207] And then, so that was very interesting, that precision element of him.
[208] But also one of the things that my father gave me as a gift, and I think my mother did this as well, is that he was really 100 % behind me, the best in me. I always knew, even when I was a little kid, that he had, he didn't have my back exactly.
[209] He was a firm supporter of the best being made manifest in me. And many of my friends didn't have that with their fathers.
[210] And of course, people who lack fathers entirely, unless they're very fortunate, often don't have that at all.
[211] And so my dad spent a lot of time with me when I was a very little kid, teaching me to read an hours a day when he came home from work for months on end.
[212] And I became an expert reader because of that.
[213] And that was an unbelievable, unbelievable gift.
[214] And the time he spent, that wasn't just the fact that he taught me how to do it, because he was a school teacher, but that he spent all that time and valued it so intently.
[215] It gave me this deep, rooted admiration and love for literacy that was, maybe that's the most fundamental element of my existence, I suppose, is that, that love.
[216] But I know that having that male encouragement firmly on the side of the promotion of your development, that is something that's just of inestable importance, and something, of course, that should be offered by teachers to their students, male, a female alike.
[217] If, you know, there's, you hear stories, I guess it happens, that parents want to dominate their kids.
[218] Fathers might want the kid to be like them, right?
[219] And that's not the natural thing.
[220] The natural thing is you think one of the contributions I, a parent, can make in my life is for my children to have benefits I didn't have and to have character better than mine.
[221] And that is fundamental to the teaching business.
[222] I think today in the teaching business, in all of it, right, so I'm a teacher at Hillsdale College.
[223] I'm the president, but I'm a teacher too.
[224] And we think today, if you read about it, we want them to think something.
[225] We want them to, we want to do something to them to make them the way we want.
[226] But that violates the spirit of the dialogue that you just, that you brought up earlier, right?
[227] In other words, that's conversion therapy.
[228] That's what that is.
[229] That is.
[230] That is what it is.
[231] And we're going to, so I'm, we are going to set up a system to work on you.
[232] And then what you know and what you are.
[233] will be a product of our work.
[234] And that is the most uncharitable approach to education and it's dominating these days.
[235] Yeah, well, it's not education, it's ideological inculcation, it's propaganda.
[236] It kind of reminds me of the Prussian education model.
[237] And you know, a lot of that was the foundation, the philosophical foundation of the American public education system.
[238] One of the things that was a mystery to me, I built this program a long while back called self -authoring.
[239] And there's an element of that future authoring that helps people walk through the process of developing a personal vision.
[240] And so, first of all, people are asked to envision what their life could be like five years down the road if they had what they needed and wanted in a manner that would be best for them if they were taken care of themselves.
[241] So imagine that you're worthwhile.
[242] Now you get to have what you need and want, but you have to aim at it.
[243] And so you ask yourself, what would that be if I could have it?
[244] And so that's the first part of the exercise.
[245] And then the next part steps you through seven major components of your life.
[246] Your education, your career, your intimate relationship, your family, your physical health, etc. Major sub -components of your life asking you to detail out a vision for each of those and then to make a relatively concretized plan.
[247] And then to outline a vision of hell, which is where you might end up if you let your bad habits carry you away.
[248] So I use a I used this in my classes, and we did a bunch of research with it as well, showing that it decreased the probability that students would drop out of college by about 50%, which is stunning.
[249] For a 90 minute, it's stunning.
[250] And what's even more stunning is no universities have picked it up.
[251] But in any case, one of the things that really struck me as a mystery after that, I started using it in my classes, was, okay, why the hell do we have an education system where kids are taught for 12 years, minimum, if they graduate from high school.
[252] And never once do we sit them down and say, all right, you could be who you wanted to be in the best of all possible ways, but you have to know what that would be and then you have to aim at it, even no matter how imperfectly, right, you have to start to flesh out that vision.
[253] Why don't we do that?
[254] I thought, well, that's such an oversight.
[255] How can we have structured an entire education system where we spent 12 years doing everything except the one thing that we should clearly do, which is to help students elucidate a vision for the development of their character, which is what Hillsdale concentrates on.
[256] And then I did some background historical investigation and found out that the American public school system, and then public school systems in general, Japan, throughout Europe, were based on the Prussian military model.
[257] And so the American idea was that when the rural types were flooding into the cities in the midst of the high end of the Industrial Revolution, that there was going to be a demand for disciplined workers.
[258] And so the Prussian governmental authorities wanted to produce surf -like soldiers who were nothing but obedient.
[259] And so the Prussian education model, first state education system, was adopted in the U .S. and then broadly in the West.
[260] And the underlying ethos was, will produce obedient soldiers and then workers.
[261] Obedient.
[262] Same thing, inculcation of an ideological.
[263] mode of life, right?
[264] And so that's what we have for an education system.
[265] And then I would say that ethos to a large degree spread up into the higher education systems too.
[266] And so now we have a situation where, well, you know, the proper thing to do with students is to train them to be activists, social justice warriors, and people who are saving the planet in a particular ideologically riddled manner.
[267] Without this dialogical exploration, that's actually the basis of education, which is, by the way, why we're talking about Hillsdale today.
[268] Yeah, see, I realize now why they won't use the self -authoring program, which we will at Hillstale College.
[269] The point is, if they arrive and you think the purpose is to do something to them, then you're not as interested in what they want to do.
[270] And yet, and, you know, I think, it's, you know, the only rule that works in a college, in my opinion, is be good.
[271] You know, there are a few details, too, but, you know, is that a good thing to do?
[272] Don't do it if it's not, you know.
[273] And so you want to teach them to be good human beings, excellent human beings, but most of the work is in them.
[274] I told you a story.
[275] When I came to Hillsdale College, about 25 % of the freshman left at the end of the freshman year.
[276] And that means that at least one in four are dissatisfied.
[277] And that changes everything.
[278] Now, 25 % is a very good number.
[279] Yeah, because it's more like 50 % or 60%.
[280] That's right.
[281] Especially among young men.
[282] But it's, you know, my favorite activity is eating in the dining hall with the students.
[283] which I've been doing now for 22 years.
[284] And it's delightful.
[285] And, you know, they soon forget who you are and you just have a talk.
[286] And I discovered doing that that a lot of them were angry with the college.
[287] And why were they?
[288] It took a long time for me to figure this out.
[289] But the summary of the arguments was, I finally found a phrase that explained it to me, nobody told me. Nobody told me about this.
[290] Nobody told me about that.
[291] About what sort of things?
[292] And when was this?
[293] This is in year 2000, 2002.
[294] The breakthrough came in 2002.
[295] And, you know, like we're a very old -fashioned college.
[296] We have, the sexes are separated in the dormitories.
[297] And there's no drinking in the dormitories and all that.
[298] And so, you know, and that's in the curriculum.
[299] It was an anti -animal house institution.
[300] It is very much, you know, and the curriculum is one half of the curriculum is the same for every student.
[301] You know, because there's, we argue, they're great things to know, and you have to be introduced to them, all of them.
[302] And you figure out your major, sure, but you won't be able to practice your major if you go into a particular line of work unless you know something about the world as it's.
[303] So, anyway, we, so that's all very strict, and it was stricter now, but it was strict when I came there somewhat.
[304] Well, I finally got to the bottom of it.
[305] They have to agree.
[306] You can't be doing things to people unless they agree that you may do.
[307] Right.
[308] Policy, policy that involves compulsion is by definition bad policy.
[309] It is, isn't it, though?
[310] You have to spend all the time enforcing it, and you produce resistances.
[311] And so your students were telling you 25 % of them that they didn't feel that they had entered into this agreement on a sufficiently informed and voluntary basis.
[312] That's right.
[313] And that, and I was missing that.
[314] I thought they had a disagreement with me about whether they ought to be having sex before they get married.
[315] And they may have that disagreement, but that wasn't the operative one.
[316] The operative one was nobody told me. And so we, when I saw that, It was a revelation at a dinner with a bunch of frat boys who I saw what the rub was and the next morning we wrote the honor code and now we don't lose one percent of our students from from yeah so we need to say that again so your dropout rate is what after the freshman year one percent one percent compared to sixty percent well it's pretty percent no yeah compared to what was it um 40 percent Right.
[317] Right.
[318] And what's the average for institutions?
[319] It's more than that.
[320] No, I'm messed up my number.
[321] That's okay.
[322] Ours was 20%.
[323] And the run in colleges generally is around 40%, 40 % to 45.
[324] And so, and you know, 20 % is huge, by the way.
[325] It means every time you sit down at a table, there's a couple of people who are unhappy.
[326] Right, right.
[327] And you don't want that.
[328] You want, because college means partnership.
[329] It's so strange, eh, that you have a. have this strict and traditionalist college, but aligned with that is an ethos of self -determination and self -development.
[330] And so it's a very paradoxical, paradoxical juxtaposition of order and opportunity.
[331] And an interesting one because people, this is, I think, part of the downfall of an excessive Protestantism in some sense, is that, and it's also a downfall of small L liberal philosophy is that we tend to think of all external constraints as inhibitions on self -actualization, right?
[332] It's just limits.
[333] It's just arbitrary walls that you're running into to stop the flowering of the wonder that is you.
[334] But it's a very perverse way of conceptualizing opportunity, because it does turn out that under many circumstances, if you accept a strict regimen of a priori rules, like in a chess game, that what that does is open up a wealth of opportunities to you that you wouldn't have otherwise had.
[335] So there's this weird relationship between strict rules and freedom.
[336] And one of the things that I love is why we're having this conversation too is when I went to Hillsdale, I've been to lots of university campuses in my life and many in the more recent years.
[337] And there's a sense of resentment, entitled resentment that permeates the establishment.
[338] You see that in the faculty, the administrators, and most of all in the students.
[339] And it's very unsettling and uncomfortable and I really felt the absence of that at Hillsdale talking to all the students talking to the faculty talking to the administrators there was a harmony there like a musical harmony and I know your campus is also one one third of the students are involved in the music program in so 40 % right 40 yeah it's amazing and there was music everywhere in the campus which I thought was just wonderful and so and it's also so interesting to hear you talk about this old fashioned approach with sex segregated dormitories and so forth and these 1950s rules are before that let's say and that students actually find that acceptable if they're brought on voluntarily so let's talk about that honor code more so why did you decide that the solution to the problem of their discomfort wasn't alteration of the rules it was more clear explication of the a priori rules why did you go that route and why do you think it what was the root and why did it work?
[340] What I thought before I had this revelation, just quickly, how did I have it?
[341] A national class long jumper, a very beautiful young man, a frat boy, began senior dinner.
[342] They come over to our house and we have dinner with them, and this was a senior dinner.
[343] And he began by forgiving me for the rules.
[344] And, you know, and I was cranky that night, and I said, why did you come here?
[345] And he loved it, he said, and I said, what do you love about it?
[346] You want us to be just the same as the University of Michigan?
[347] And then I said, the golden thing, I said, could you read when you came here?
[348] And he said, yes.
[349] And I said, did you?
[350] Because if you'd read, you'd know.
[351] And how can you be complaining about it four years later?
[352] And I just noticed I had the moral high ground.
[353] And in the end, it wasn't really the particular rules.
[354] If you had the most libertine rules in the world, there'd be plenty of people who object to that, right?
[355] Right, right.
[356] It's that their will had been consulted.
[357] And so...
[358] Right, and that was made thoroughly explicit and understood.
[359] That's the trick, right?
[360] That's what the Honor Code does.
[361] And see, we were afraid of the Honor Code because we weren't very strong in applications.
[362] We were very strong now.
[363] And afraid we wouldn't get enough.
[364] And what if they don't come?
[365] That's the same sort of fear that's, I would say, paralyzed and castrated, let's say, the Catholic Church.
[366] And it's liberalization.
[367] It's, well, we're making it too difficult for people.
[368] We just have to make it easier.
[369] We make it easy enough than everyone will come.
[370] I read Kierkegaard, you know, and Kierkegaard has a famous passage where he describes just how useless an idler he really is and how it's impossible for him to be a benefactor of the industrial age and to make everything that's already been made easy, even easier for people.
[371] And so that his signal contribution was to do everything he could to make things more difficult because there would come a time when everything had become so easy that the cry for something difficult would become overwhelming.
[372] And I love that.
[373] And that's a good example of the necessity of these...
[374] That's an excellent rule of thumb when dealing with the young.
[375] Because what is their drive?
[376] They're like, you know, I think of them like plants.
[377] I think they grow.
[378] I don't think you're making them into anything.
[379] I think they grow.
[380] You can stunt them, though.
[381] You can do that.
[382] Oh, boy, can't you, though.
[383] And so they want to grow.
[384] They don't even fully understand.
[385] the process, but they want to grow up.
[386] It's the reason why a one -year -old, or a three -year -olds probably, will get cranky if the five -year -old is treated like more of an adult.
[387] Right, right.
[388] They want to grow up, right?
[389] And so you have to harness that.
[390] It's not really even a harness.
[391] You have to get that on your side.
[392] And that means this coming here to Hillsdale College is an act of maturity.
[393] Right, right, right.
[394] And maturity is a desirable thing.
[395] It's better in all ways than being immature.
[396] It opens up more possibilities.
[397] It's not subjugation to more constraint.
[398] That's right.
[399] It's the acceptance of a voluntary system of discipline, striving, and the opening up of an immense vista of opportunity.
[400] Yeah.
[401] If I was as good as psychology as you are, I'd trade jobs with.
[402] It's, yeah, see that, and you know, I'll just tell you, when you approach it like that, happiness blossoms everywhere.
[403] I mean, Hillsdale College, I used to sit down in the dining hall, lunchtime in the dining hall is, come to visit Hillsdale College, I'll take you to the dining hall, we'll have lunch.
[404] And you sit down with these kids, I'm the only old guy who said, with the kids all the time.
[405] And it's delightful.
[406] It wasn't always.
[407] They had complaints, you know?
[408] And I would leave the table thinking, we're subsidizing the daylights out of these kids, and they're not happy.
[409] What are we spending our money for?
[410] And, you know.
[411] It's still very perverse and strange that what you decided to do was to implement an honor code.
[412] So first of all, why honor, why that archaic and old -fashioned word and maybe we could walk through what the code is and how you introduce that to students and then why they not only appear to accept it but to accept it so assiduously that they all stay in the college which is that's an amazing achievement right that's that's remarkable and very unlikely achievement so and it's such a strange route to get there yeah so so let so why an honor code well honor so uh you know i have device reading aristotle and teaching aristotle and that's good for one, in my opinion.
[413] And so what you learn about honor, honor is, you know, a great thing, right?
[414] It's, you know, to be honorable, to commit a great act of honor, right?
[415] You find out that honor is not the highest good.
[416] You find out soon, because honor depends on other people's opinion.
[417] And a much higher, in fact, the highest human relationship is friendship.
[418] But you can't start with friendship.
[419] Honor does have the advantage of being civic in its nature.
[420] It's something that we adopt together and win respect from each other.
[421] Sort of like identity in its real sense.
[422] That's right.
[423] That's right.
[424] Honorable identity.
[425] So, and we agree what that is.
[426] What the code says is a Hillsdale College student is honest, in word, indeed, respectful.
[427] of the rights of others, dutiful in study and service, and through education, the student rises to self -government.
[428] Right, right, rises to self -government, right.
[429] So it's an apprenticeship with mastery as the goal.
[430] That's it.
[431] And then, and, you know, and see, commencement is the culminating ceremony.
[432] You gave one of the best commencement speeches I've ever heard, and I've heard a pass eleven.
[433] and that is the annual signification that the college has done its work.
[434] And when I say the college, the word means partnership.
[435] It means everybody in the room.
[436] And, you know, there were close to 6 ,000 people at commencement when you spoke.
[437] And who were those people?
[438] They were the people who had made it happen.
[439] They were the students and the faculty.
[440] They were the parents.
[441] they were the friends of the college and they're all there in an official capacity we have come together to do this thing and it's to produce these remarkable young people that's right no to not to produce to see there's that bloody word again factory word to encourage the development of these remarkable young people to have had the privilege of encouraging the development of these young people That's it, yeah.
[442] You know, if you just think, so I know a lot about Winston Churchill because if you know about him, I argue you will come to love him.
[443] And I did.
[444] And people always say to me, what explains Winston Churchill?
[445] Well, the only possible answer to that is God and Winston Churchill.
[446] Winston Churchill was relatively well -born You know Winston Churchill was very smart And a tremendous memory But you know there's Millions of people who have those qualities And every one of them is different from him And every one of them is different from each other And that means you know You are to some extent the maker of yourself That's a beautiful doctrine in Aristotle.
[447] And so in education, the first thing, you just need to know two things when you admit them.
[448] You need to know that they want to and you need to know that they can, willing and able.
[449] After that, they're going to do the work and you're going to help them.
[450] They have to agree on what the work is.
[451] Because remember it's...
[452] Yeah, so how do you make the honor?
[453] code, not just a pro forma document that's empty words.
[454] Like, what is it?
[455] Because there must be specific things you do with the honor code that bring it to life.
[456] Yeah, well, we govern by it.
[457] Okay.
[458] So it is actually the ethos of the institution.
[459] That's right.
[460] There's a, there's a congruence there.
[461] But you talk to the students when they first come to the college.
[462] Yeah.
[463] And so, and I understand that that's part of the transmission of the honor code.
[464] Yeah, they get it.
[465] After they're admitted, first of all, if you look at admissions materials from Halesdale College, the honor code is featured in them.
[466] And that means that we're giving you the information from the first step that this place is like this.
[467] And if you want it, you'll have a hard time finding an alternative.
[468] And if you don't want it, the world is your oyster.
[469] Because they're different, or most of them are different.
[470] So you start with that.
[471] But then, I Then, along about the 1st of June, after the class is formed and the deposits are in, I send them a letter.
[472] It's a page and a half letter, and it says, here's the honor code.
[473] It's a serious commitment.
[474] You should read it carefully.
[475] If you think that you might not be willing to sign it, you should tell us now.
[476] We'll help you find some place to go to college.
[477] It tells them that on the Monday, after you arrive on Sunday for freshman convocation, we will have a talk, me and the senior class, about this document, and then you will sign it altogether.
[478] Or go home.
[479] And that's, and you know, I have signed it, see, and so we've all, we've all made oath to be committed to Hillsdale College.
[480] Now, one of the things that happens, you do it like that, is that enforcement becomes much less important.
[481] Right.
[482] Well, that's also the sign of good policy, right?
[483] Yeah.
[484] I mean, Piaget, the developmental psychologist, he was very interested in laying out the rational grounds for the emergence of a moral system.
[485] And so one of his propositions, which I love, is that a goal -oriented system established on consensual grounds will out -compete a goal -oriented system same goal on on grounds of compulsion not least because the system that requires compulsion will waste time and resources in the enforcement so it's a priority less efficient and then you can add to that the fact that most positive human emotion and so that's the emotion that literally makes you enthusiastic which is to be filled with the spirit of god because that's what enthusiasm means right is that you experience the positive emotion that propels you forward in relationship to a goal and the goal has to be established voluntarily or the positive emotion systems won't kick in so if you use compulsion not only do you waste time and resources on enforcement but you don't harness the most fundamental motivational systems and those are so fundamental by the way that the drugs that people abuse cocaine perhaps foremost among them in terms of a it's instantaneously attractive and addictive qualities.
[486] Cocaine directly activates that positive emotion system, which is why people love it.
[487] And so because it's an analog of purposeful, goal -directed activity.
[488] And if you establish a high goal, the higher the goal, the more rewarding in the technical sense every step towards that goal is.
[489] But that has to all be done voluntarily, because otherwise it's an imposition, an entirely different psychophysiological systems come into play.
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[507] Here's Winston Churchill.
[508] It is at once the safeguard and the glory of mankind that it is easy to lead and hard to drive.
[509] And that's when I was hired for this job, there was an MBA fine man on the committee and you can spot him a mile away.
[510] They asked NBA questions.
[511] And, uh, if you have to drive, you're not leading.
[512] That's right.
[513] Yeah.
[514] And you're and they, uh, Churchill believed, by the way, that particular thing, he says that in the context of how the implausible thing could happen that Britain could defeat Adolf Hitler.
[515] And that's why.
[516] And they, they, they, people hate that.
[517] And, and, you know, So if you want, and, you know, I've become experienced and stubborn now, I don't like to be in a relationship where I'm telling anybody what to do if they don't want to do it.
[518] Well, you know, I really learned this as a psychotherapist, and this is partly why I've been so upset with these anti -conversion laws lately.
[519] It's like in a therapeutic conversation, which is any genuine conversation, by the way, any genuine dialogue, you need here.
[520] humility.
[521] And the humility is something like this person that I'm talking to is actually different than me. They're different in their presuppositions.
[522] They're different in their knowledge and they're different in their destiny.
[523] And they're importantly and vitally different in that because I think that each person plays a signal role in manifesting or failing to manifest part of the reality that moves us towards paradise, let's say, in some fundamental sense.
[524] Everyone has a signal role to play in that.
[525] That's part of the destiny of their soul.
[526] And you are not to interfere with that, because you don't know.
[527] And so in a therapeutic conversation about identity, so now, for example, therapists are required to affirm the identity of their clients, gender identity, but more broadly, to affirm it.
[528] And that's never the role of a conversation.
[529] The role of a therapeutic conversation is always to inquire about identity.
[530] But in the spirit of humility, it's right?
[531] Like you and I have been trying to work out a working relationship over the last couple of days and also with Stephen Blackwood down at Ralston.
[532] And one of the guiding principles of our attempts to do that isn't that I want something from you or that you want something from me. And I think it's partly because both of us know that we don't necessarily know what we want or should want from each other, but that if goodwill prevails and if we're both aiming up in the highest sense, that we could mutually discover the pathway forward that would be, not only mutually beneficial for us in a sense that's way transcends the merely instrumental, but potentially beneficial for the movement towards that higher good.
[533] And that is, I think, in some real sense, the foundation of the most genuine friendships, right?
[534] Because in a genuine friendship, you want the best for the other person, as well as yourself.
[535] But in Aristotle, friendship is the highest human association.
[536] And there are three kinds.
[537] In one kind, it's transactional commercial friendships are often like that.
[538] That's why somebody who sells you wood might send you Christmas king.
[539] And then another kind is pleasure.
[540] Aristotle says that's higher.
[541] Aristotle says the young are particularly given to that.
[542] Their bodies are really great and getting better all the time.
[543] And then there's this ultimate kind.
[544] And that's the rarest, and it's the permanent kind.
[545] And the permanent kind is a shared love of something ultimate and a commitment to pursue it.
[546] And that's the only map you can have in a relationship that's likely to sustain it.
[547] And see, I've discovered...
[548] And you get the additional benefit there of not only the hypothetical movement towards that goal, but the deep engagement and pleasure that accompanies each step along the way to that goal.
[549] And that's a good marker for the quality of the relationship, right?
[550] It's that it's interesting in and of itself.
[551] That's it.
[552] For its own sake.
[553] So in book 10 of the ethics, he describes this beautiful activity and that is, and you have to become, you have to get the moral virtues first.
[554] You have to be courageous and you have to be moderate and you have to be just and you have to be what and you have to be wise prudent, practically wise.
[555] You have to be able to manage your life.
[556] You have to be able to control your passions.
[557] You have to, and it goes beyond controlling them too.
[558] It means an act of love for the right thing.
[559] Right.
[560] Yeah, well that, I'm just going to interrupt very briefly.
[561] That's a distinction between a Freudian view of emotion regulation and a Piagetian view.
[562] Because the Freudians, this is one of Freud's signal errors.
[563] It makes him a Protestant of sorts, I would say, and a liberal of sorts, is that the regulation of aggression and sexuality is held to be a consequence in some sense of compulsion.
[564] That's the super ego.
[565] So that's like the internal tyrant saying no to aggression and no to sexuality.
[566] But the Piagetian view, which is much more subtle and appropriate, is that those impulses are not inhibited.
[567] They are integrated into a higher mode of being.
[568] And so Jung carried on this idea with his idea of the integration of the shadow.
[569] And so for Freud in some sense, aggression was inhibited by the superego.
[570] You need to be aggressive, you want to be aggressive.
[571] But the society imposes a limit on you that's essentially a form of compulsion.
[572] But for Jung, for example, with the idea of the integration of both the shadow and the anima or the animus, which would be the contrasexual tendency, it's a matter of bringing the devil in, some sense to play.
[573] It's like, well, you need that aggression.
[574] You absolutely 100 % need it.
[575] One of the things that struck me about you when we first met, which I really liked, was that you were someone who was capable of saying no. And I know what no means, because I thought about it a lot, partly because I was interested in childhood development.
[576] No means if you keep doing that around me, something you do not like will absolutely 100 % certainly have.
[577] happened to you.
[578] And you have to be willing to enforce that, or you can't say no. If you can say no, you almost never have to enforce it.
[579] But you can't say no also without the integration of that shadow.
[580] And so it isn't that aggression is inhibited.
[581] It's that it's integrated into a higher order game.
[582] This is really relevant for aggressive young men because they're competitive.
[583] Say, well, we have to socialize them to be more like little girls, which is like the idiot plan of a multitude of psychologists and social workers.
[584] It's like, no. you don't you have to you have to integrate that competitive impulse towards a much higher end and then that capacity for aggression starts to become unstoppable and implacability and the ability to with stalwart and noble and to abide by a code of honor let's say so a much a much more optimistic way of viewing yeah well and see that energy uh you know i'm heavily under the influence of the greeks and the Christians, and the Americans, because the Founders of America were really great, too.
[585] The point is, your motive, action, everything that has a soul, you said some form of the word animation or animal about Freud.
[586] That just means it moves itself.
[587] Anything that's an animal moves itself.
[588] And that's the Latin word for soul.
[589] Anima.
[590] Yeah, and so we move ourselves.
[591] And the point is, by nature, we can.
[592] And that means we want to.
[593] And so the question is, toward what do we move?
[594] That is the question.
[595] And you know, reckless little boys, you know, I was one myself.
[596] Lord knows what they'll do, right?
[597] but harness that to some high cause and first of all you make their life meaningful like we don't want our students tearing up our campus over political causes.
[598] We're a very conservative college, we have fame for that you know, we publish a newsletter to six and a half million people but we don't talk about the stuff public policy very much on the campus and we discourage it.
[599] Because, why?
[600] Because they're young and ignorant, and they get a chance to learn a lot, and then they can figure out what to do with the world.
[601] And, you know, it happens often because, you know, kids who come to Hillsdale College, any good college, you're ambitious.
[602] And so they want to, you know, this and this and this.
[603] Yeah, they're looking to take their place in a meaningful way at the table in an important sense, and they're eager to get on with that.
[604] So it's no use saying you've got to wait.
[605] you just show them the place at the table that's available to them now and that place, by the way, is difficult, very, very challenging, you know.
[606] You want to learn a bunch of boys and girls, mostly boys, though.
[607] I don't think that a constitutional convention is a good idea.
[608] And, you know, a lot of people in my line of work and my political persuasion do.
[609] And so a bunch of kids get to debate.
[610] me one time because they know that I'm against it and some other famous people I'm not famous but they are for it and they want to get up a debate I want me to debate these people and them and I said okay I'll be that I said the stipulation is that you not spend very much time on this and they said why not it'll be fun And I said, yeah, maybe.
[611] I said, but you're not ready to define for me the meaning of the term politics, which is not an easy word to define.
[612] It's a form of human community that takes its nature from specific things about the human being that are unique to the human being, right?
[613] And so I said, and until you can do that, I don't want you waste in your time figuring out about this arcane point about the Constitution.
[614] And, you know, do you want to be just another policy walk?
[615] Or do you want to be a learned person?
[616] And they, you know...
[617] And do you, and have you noticed that there's actually a difference between those two things?
[618] And it's an important difference.
[619] See, it calms them down, you see?
[620] Yeah.
[621] Because what you said, see, I'm going to come to you for counseling.
[622] I guess I'm doing that right now.
[623] Mutual.
[624] It's usually a great idea to suggest something better than the bad thing they want.
[625] You know, if it's bad, and it's usually not bad, just not bad right, not good right now.
[626] And that, in other words, you stoke their ambitions.
[627] Because that's the fuel that makes them go.
[628] And, you know.
[629] Well, and what a dismal proposition it is to set forth to a young person who's 18 and say, well, your axiomatic apriary political convictions, shallow and unmoored, though they are, unabetted by any apprenticeship or knowledge, are sufficient for you to go out and transform the world right now.
[630] It's like what a dismal view that is.
[631] And instead, you can say, look, if you applied yourself with all due diligence for like 10 years in every direction you could possibly manage, you might be ready to set a tentative toe out on the world stage.
[632] In whatever manner you could have earned, by that point.
[633] You know, the greatness of, and see, that's another thing.
[634] If you can teach somebody, you know, the highest human activity in Aristotle is a secular version of the highest human activity in Christianity or any religion, community with God.
[635] And that's contemplation is called in the ethnic community ethics.
[636] And it's hard to get your soul to a state to be able to do that.
[637] You have to be courageous.
[638] You have to me, you know, Aristotle says, if you're afraid of the bees buzzing around you, you will not be capable of this.
[639] See?
[640] It requires all the virtues and years of work, right?
[641] And if you get it, and it's an immediate beholding, he says.
[642] And you don't think about anything else at the time.
[643] And then he says, no other, nothing can help you with this.
[644] except a friend.
[645] That's the highest kind of friendship.
[646] You do that with people.
[647] Right.
[648] You see something beautiful.
[649] Well, that's what you have when you have a friend.
[650] There's something that they see in you, if they're your friend, that they love and want to nurture and cherish.
[651] And they aim at precisely that.
[652] And maybe they're even better at doing that for you than you are for you.
[653] and that they are for them.
[654] So a friend in that sense is in some sense the best ally.
[655] I had a friend University.
[656] Morgan Abbott is his name.
[657] Tough guy from a rough background, poor background.
[658] He lived in a, in a, he was poor in a serious way.
[659] Northern Alberta, rural poor.
[660] That's frontier level poor, man. His dad was a longshoreman.
[661] He's a tough kid, this Morgan Abbott.
[662] And he's worked with the worst delinquents in Canada for like 20 years.
[663] and then worked with brain damage people.
[664] And he's a tough guy.
[665] He was a good friend of mine when I went to college.
[666] He was older than me. He came back working in the lead smelters in British Columbia and then came back to college to get himself educated.
[667] And he's the person who really talked me out of my initial socialism, not politically.
[668] He just said something like, there's a hell of a lot more to the world that is encapsulated in the socialist philosophy.
[669] And he said, you know, most people join the socialist political parties.
[670] to get out of the working class by adopting a leadership position, which I liked a lot and was commensurate with my experience.
[671] And he was a very, what would you say?
[672] He was a inspiring figure for me, probably more for me even than for himself, I would say in some sense.
[673] And last year, two years ago, when I was unbelievably ill, him and I have kept in contact over the years, you know, less intensely than we had, but in contact.
[674] and he walked five to 12 miles with me for almost a year every single day.
[675] Yeah.
[676] See?
[677] Now that's, if you study the Greeks properly, you learn to love the word beauty because beauty is the perfection of good.
[678] And so what you just said, that was a beautiful thing.
[679] It was, you know, to know that a thing like that happened is worthy and worthy making to everyone who hears it.
[680] And so the education of the young is, it involves helping them understand how much they want that.
[681] Everybody wants that.
[682] And how noble it is to want that.
[683] Yeah, that's right.
[684] And that's so, and see, if you can get that through to them.
[685] And you can, by the way, because they're made to know it, you know.
[686] And then college also offers that stellar opportunity.
[687] I mean, when I went from my little town, my pack of near -do -well friends there, a few of us went off to college, not very many.
[688] Then I had this opportunity to shed who I was and to find a new peer group and to become someone else in a radical way and to do that to some degree voluntarily, right, to pick a new set of people that I wanted to associate with, to pick a new peer group, some of whom were the great thinkers of the past, right?
[689] Because that's one thing college offers you the opportunity to do, is to pick a peer group in some sense that's the great figures of the past.
[690] It's a daunting endeavor, but that's what's there before you.
[691] And so it is definitely the case that that's a stellar opportunity and a signal contribution of educational establishments, something difficult to replicate online too.
[692] So you open the door for students to do that and say this is what you should be doing at that point.
[693] Stellar group of peers who will ennoble you as you move forward and a shared goal of apprenticeship and maturation and the opportunity to take your place at the table as an adult.
[694] A great adventure, all of that.
[695] Yeah and that's and you know you don't want to take the magic out of it.
[696] It's it's not working on them.
[697] It's mostly them working, and you work with them.
[698] And it's so fun when you get it right, you know?
[699] And, you know, we have, because we're trying, in my opinion, these days, and this is mostly because of changes in philosophy that go back in 400 years.
[700] We're trying to re -engineer the society all the time.
[701] And that means you have to re -engineer the people in it.
[702] And that means school becomes...
[703] That's its purpose.
[704] You're going to come here and we're going to do things to you, right?
[705] Why is that an attractive proposition?
[706] It's attractive if you want to be a slave.
[707] That's it.
[708] That's it.
[709] And so the truth is, like the best teachers, I know a kindergarten teacher who does this, and I know many at the college where I work who do this, in the first 10 minutes of class there's tingling anticipation and there are two kinds of best teachers at Hillsdale one kind just says this is going to be great the other kind says this is going to be great and this is going to be hard I'm afraid I'm in the second camp and I'm not claiming I'm the best but I'm pretty good and mostly because I know that I know this is a beautiful thing and we are going to learn it and it's and and and we'll be different after we know it for all time.
[710] There's a great antidote to cynicism in that too because part of the culture war that's going on right now is the consequence of an insistence that the fundamental motivation of people who are in positions of authority like you is one of power and domination.
[711] So imagine that there is there's no there's almost nothing positive.
[712] in abject and dependent subordination.
[713] That's a pretty bad outcome.
[714] And so then you might say that the ability to use compulsion and to attain domination is a higher moral good than abject subjugation and dependence.
[715] Now, I'm not saying it is, but I think you could make that case.
[716] And then you could also make the case, and the postmodern Marxist types do this, that that's really the fundamental motivation of mankind in every relationship, marital relationships, historical relationships, business relationships.
[717] It's like the willingness and ability to use compulsion to manifest power, power.
[718] And I think, well, that's probably better than dependency, but compared to the pleasure of, let's say, genuine friendship or mentorship.
[719] It's not even in the same conceptual universe.
[720] And so one of the things that the cynics about business organizations, for example don't understand by emphasizing the role of power is how much pleasure there is and this is a paternal pleasure i think a patriarchal pleasure in the most fundamental sense in having the opportunity to find someone who's rife with potential and to offer them a multitude of beneficial pathways forward to be able to participate in that my graduate supervisor robert peel great guy still alive i'm going to talk to him on the podcast soon he was a great mentor he had his wheelhouse of authority and knowledge, encyclopedic knowledge of the relevant psychological literature, great administrator and great manager of people.
[721] And he took immense pleasure in forming a stable of graduate students and undergraduates and facilitating their development forward.
[722] And that was the primary motivating purpose of his life.
[723] And he was interested in being an author on the papers and getting credit for his role, all of that.
[724] But fundamentally, he was a man who got obstacles the hell out of the way and enabled movement forward for those who wanted to move forward.
[725] And then there was immense intrinsic pleasure in that.
[726] I mean, that was really the hallmark of his life.
[727] I went to his festrift when he retired with my former colleagues.
[728] It was a lovely affair.
[729] There was a hundred people there about and every single one of them got up and said, here's the signal manner in which this man transformed my life.
[730] That beats the hell of power.
[731] Isn't it so?
[732] And it's not only not power, it is the literal antithesis of power.
[733] And not this, also not this corrupt collapsing into an ineffectual dependency that you might attain by abdicating all your pretensions to power.
[734] I have, see, I'll bet when you have that fashift interview yourself, you'll have a thousand there.
[735] I have some protesters.
[736] Yeah, you'll have, you know, we both get that, right?
[737] I have about 30 students who become powerful people, boys and girls, big in the government, and they are still my student.
[738] And when I see them, I don't talk about their power.
[739] I talk about their character.
[740] And they, and, you know, they, and, you know, these are people who can go.
[741] and you know I have equally talented students who are not at all powerful and I have the same relationship with them and you know that's because you get you know there's I teach one class a term and I have about 30 students in it which is big for Hillsdale standards but I'm the president and I don't teach much so I let more in and then that means that every year 60 I get to know in detail, except then we have senior dinner and all that, and there's 1650 on the campus.
[742] That means most of them I don't know them very well.
[743] But in another way, I know them all, and the ones I get to know well, I remember.
[744] And that means, you see, what, it would be a better life than I am living to be Abraham Lincoln because he was a beautiful human being.
[745] Winston Churchill, same thing.
[746] But to be president, just to be president, you and I are leading better lives than that.
[747] And you get your mind around.
[748] I also think, you know, there's nothing.
[749] I've watched university presidents sometimes.
[750] kowtow to the mob.
[751] And I think how dismal that must be from the perspective of making amends with your own conscience, that you've attained this position of power without the requisite moral competence.
[752] And then when the mob comes, because you strive for the position rather than for the character that would entitle you in some real sense, to the position, that you have to fold in the most ignominious of ways.
[753] And to me, that just shows the absolute hollowness of the attempt to attain power without attaining first the authority and the competence that would make that power, that would render that power justifiable.
[754] You know, the bad thing about authority, I have authority, I have a fair amount of authority.
[755] And the bad thing about it is, You're at risk when you use it.
[756] But if you use it badly in a way to protect yourself, you will do harm to other people and people who don't deserve it.
[757] And so somehow you have to find a way not to do that.
[758] And that's, you know, I had somebody say to me once, so I hear you're a pretty good teacher and I said, I'm okay.
[759] And he said, you've written some books.
[760] And I said, I have, I've written three.
[761] He said, I read one of them.
[762] It's good.
[763] And I said, thank you.
[764] And he said, why do you do this?
[765] You know, because, you know, to a faculty member, the most sensible ones, my job is a pain that and the took us.
[766] Why would you do it, right?
[767] And I looked up and I said, well, partly because I can so far, I'm made so that I can do this, probably.
[768] But yeah, it's very possible that when I leave it, unless I'm too old, I will find something better to do right here in this college because there are better jobs than mine.
[769] And that's, you know, if you know that, you've got to keep yourself from being a tyrant, you know.
[770] And it's because most people don't get to be a grand tyrant.
[771] They only get to be a petty tyrant.
[772] How contemplable is that.
[773] But, you know, there are wonderful classic books about people who are famous for making people do things they don't want to do.
[774] And it's universal.
[775] Rulers over hell.
[776] That's it.
[777] That's the accomplishment of untrammeled powers.
[778] You get to be the head demon in a chorus of demons.
[779] And to me, that's the most cataclysmic failure, not a sign of the success of the psychopathic and narcissistic.
[780] and that those people are always presented as miserable in the classic books in Shakespeare too uh even if surrounded by babbling sycophants yeah and schemers and the and even if your schemes are successful and not found out you know you know so yeah you don't you don't want a life like that and uh yeah and maybe you don't want to impose that other people either.
[781] No, you don't, you know, that's mustn't.
[782] You mustn't.
[783] And that means that it's an excellent guide.
[784] It's not the only way.
[785] Proper authority derives from the will of the person over whom it's exercised.
[786] That's the consent of the governed, if I remember correctly.
[787] That's right.
[788] And that's, and that means that then you don't have to fight, right?
[789] We're going to have to do one thing or another here, and there are people in favor of both.
[790] It means some people are going to be happy, but everybody's given their consent that we're going to decide this thing this way.
[791] Renewed honorably.
[792] That's right.
[793] Wouldn't that be lovely?
[794] Yeah, and you know, we've got to get back to that.
[795] Well, I really saw that at Hillsdale, and I'm going to talk to Dr. Arn Moore behind the Daily Wire Plus paywall.
[796] I've decided to do a more personal interview with people for an additional half an hour.
[797] as part of my contractual obligations to the partnership with this arrangement, with this group.
[798] And so I think that's a good way of splitting it up.
[799] And so, well, I talk today with Dr. Larry Arne, who's president of Hillsdale College, which I think is a remarkable institution, and I think one that's whose best days are still in front of it, which is quite interesting, and which is offering a proposition which at the moment has become of almost infinite value, which is a disciplined, stringent, stringent, strict educational doctrine voluntarily undertaken devoted towards the true ends of a true liberal arts education, man. And there's nothing more valuable than that, you know, accepting perhaps like servitude to God himself.
[800] And so thank you very much for talking to me. Thank you, Jordan.
[801] It's going to be a privilege and a pleasure working with you as we move forward.
[802] Mine, very much.
[803] Thank you.
[804] Hello, everyone.
[805] I would encourage you to continue listening to my conversation with my guest on dailywireplus .com.