The Truth of Things: Liberal Arts and the Recovery of Reality
Book Details
Description
No longer grounded in an understanding of man as a being of inherent worth, higher education ceased to be about the pursuit of wisdom and became merely a means for man's comfortable self-preservation. Montgomery, who detected the consequences of this flight from reality long before open attacks on the liberal arts tradition became common, points out that other critiques of contemporary higher education refuse to address the underlying philosophical issues and so partake of the very errors they criticize. With the vision of a poet and the precision of a philosopher, Montgomery unmasks the fallacy that education is justified only by its production of a conspicuous material reward, and he points the way toward a recovery of true education. There can be no reform, he insists, without a new openness to the "truth of things," which marks the character and work of the good teacher.
