God and Man at Yale
The Superstitions of Academic Freedom
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Narrated by:
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Michael Edwards
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Good book....narrated by a $10 answering machine
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The book is an in-depth study of the tendency of the faculty, students, and administration of Yale to Keynesian / Fabian socialism and atheism / agnosticism either through active pursuit of those ends or through inaction in the face of those who would pursue them. At the time the book was written, Yale was known as a "conservative" powerhouse and a Christian school, and the administration played up this image to win the financial gifts of the alumni, who, according to the author, it kept blissfully unaware of the new trends at the University. The book calls for the University and alumni to abandon banner of "academic freedom," which it used to guard the left-leaning faculty, and to narrow its enforced orthodoxy to exclude all faculty not committed to Christianity, "individualism" (capitalism, free market economics, small government, etc.), and democracy.
The book is dated and something of a time capsule. Some arguments withstand the test of time. Others are interesting precisely because of what they reveal about the past. The days when Yale (or any other major university) was a private institution in more than name or a bastion of conservatism are beyond memory. Buckley was prescient in seeing where things were heading, in the de facto nationalization and secularization of higher education. Nevertheless, he hardly realized just how radical this transformation would be.
Probably the most dated part of the book is its emphasis on capitalism, individualism, and democracy—its appeals to the consumer choice of the wealthy benefactors of higher education. Looking back it is easy to see that these wished for remedies were in many ways the true cause of the ailment.
Well-read conservative classic, dated
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