Thursday, August 21, 2014

Thirteenth Ten Postings of Gravitas

The following list of titles and accompanying dates refers to past postings on the blog, Gravitas: A Voice for Civics Education, that have been deleted.  After each title and date, the entries below include the first paragraph of each respective posting.  If you care to receive a copy of a particular posting, send your request via email to gravitascivics@gmail.com .  One posting per request.

121 AN IMPORTANT DISTINCTION FROM UTILITARIANISM
(November 4, 2011)

While absent from many of our classrooms for many years, formal values education (as opposed to unintentional values education) should be part of the curriculum of public schools. Assuming you agree, to which grand theory should such an effort ascribe? I believe that a grand theory is called for because teachers in such an effort need to know what's all right to talk about and what's not. If that be the case, then I firmly believe that affected educators should be serious about such a choice and invest due diligence in making their decision. Even with such approaches that turn out to be unintentional efforts, as is the case in most classrooms today, educators should be aware of what they are about. For example, civics and social education that utilize the natural rights perspective as a grand theory – a perspective that limits the formulation of values, as well as other life defining decisions, to the individual – do subtly promote a value position. That position is valuing that any public entity, including public schools, should not dictate a value orientation to students; it is simply not a public issue. The practical consequence of such a position, as I have argued in this blog, is to create a vacuum which is filled by the mass media with its materialistic and salacious proclivities and the youth culture that has evolved in many of our schools, especially in large urban facilities. I have concluded that such a state of affairs has enabled the development of levels of narcissism, nihilism, and incivility that the nation has experienced in ever growing levels over the last fifty or so years. Much space in this blog has been dedicated to substantiating the conclusion that those levels have become definite social and political problems plaguing the nation.

122 A SECOND LOOK AT ARISTOTLE
(November 7, 2011)

A review of my last couple of postings will convey to you my understanding of utilitarianism. I, while seeing it as a secular view of morality (a legally necessary requirement for pedagogic uses in public schools), judge it to be wanting in terms of providing us with a construct on which to build a moral theory suitable for values education. My chief complaint is that its foundation relies on individual desires; that is, what is moral equates to what is desired by the most people in a given society. This approach calls for relevant policy makers engaging in complicated calculations to determine what constitutes moral choices among public policy options. Also into the mix are concerns for individual rights which are threatened by a radical utilitarianism. The writings of John Stuart Mill assist us in dealing with this problem although not, in my estimation, entirely.

123 OH, IMMANUEL KANT
(November 11, 2011)

In trying to develop a moral code which educators can use as a foundation to build a values curriculum, I have combed western philosophic tradition to seek ideas. To date, my postings have reviewed the ideas of Aristotle and the utilitarians. The utilitarians offer an essential element. That is, they argue for a secular approach to moral thinking. Constitutional constraints dictate that any approach in our public schools to develop a values curriculum needs to be secular due to the “establishment” clause of the First Amendment. In terms of Aristotle, I argued that the ancient philosopher gives us a communal approach to morals that relegates the starting point of utilitarianism as being detrimental. He does that by providing a communal basis for morality, which undermines the utilitarian starting point, individual desires. This blog has expressed in previous postings my concerns with an individualistic approach to curricular content and that extends to values education. I judge utilitarian thought as being excessively individualistic.

124 THREE IDEAS OF PRAGMATIC MORALS
(November 14, 2011)

To date, this blog, over the last several postings, has reviewed the works of western philosophers to find useful ideas in an attempt to develop a moral code. That code will then be utilized in designing the basis for a values education curriculum theory – at least that's its purpose. The need for such a theory is justified by a lack of moral direction among our youth and the overwhelming failure of public schools to address this shortfall. My justification for this latter claim is made based on my years as an educator, the evidence of the lack of civility among the young I have reported in previous postings, and the work of James Hunter in his book, The Death of Character: Moral Education in an Age without Good and Evil. As for relevant, philosophic ideas, this blog has cited Aristotle (morality based on the communal concern for the polity), utilitarians such as John Stuart Mill (morality based on consequential results and individual desires), Immanuel Kant (morality based on the centrality of the rational individual and the universalizing consequences of behavior), and David Hume (admonishment to not derive “oughts” from “its”). Interested readers are encouraged to review the postings of this blog since October 17, 2011, to see how these contributions were incorporated.

125 WISHY-WASHY
(November 18, 2011)

In the last posting, I wrote a short review of pragmatism's view of morality. I summarized those beliefs around three ideas: the future orientation of pragmatic thinking, the inexorable connection between means and ends, and the tie between what is moral and the interests of associations. Within this construct there are related biases such as the qualified reliance on history and an avoidance of an a priori set of values. You are invited to click on the last posting to see how I developed these ideas.

126 A MORAL FUNCTION FOR HISTORY
(November 21, 2011)

I have argued that the effort to determine what is moral behavior can benefit from the study of history. I made this claim as part of my attempt at developing a moral code suitable as a basis for a social education curriculum, especially in civics. I observed that our civics and social studies instruction has shied away from moral questions or any effort at instructing students as to what is moral or immoral – a situation that has prevailed in our public schools the last fifty or so years. I have claimed that such a neglect has been unfortunate in that it has deprived our youngsters needed instruction in this area of concern. In pursuit of this moral code, I have cited the works of several western philosophers. Specifically, in my last posting I introduced a “history” angle to my ongoing effort and it was prompted by the works of the pragmatists, especially that of John Dewey. They, the pragmatists, give a guarded call for the study of history as a “tool” in addressing moral questions. I judged that despite their use of history, the pragmatists' reliance on it was somewhat reluctant – their claim being that the discipline suffered from a lack of objectivity. In this posting, I will further the promotion of history, beyond that of the pragmatists, for the purposes of informing our moral decision-making.

127 SOCIETAL WELFARE AS A TRUMP VALUE
(November 25, 2011)

I suppose that if you have kids, you feel it is very important to instill in them a sense of right and wrong, moral and immoral, good and bad. Even if you were not to feel this way, you would end up doing so either by the house rules you have imposed or, if not even at that level, by your indifference to such concerns – the value of indifference. Our communication of values is unavoidable, either from a proactive effort or a passive posture. So it is with our schools. In the last fifty or so years, we have mostly adopted a passive approach. We have reaped the consequences of such a strategy and those consequences have in many ways been experienced in the highly nihilistic youth subculture we observe among too many of our youths. Such a state is realized in the heightened levels of bullying, drug consumption, criminal behavior, anti communal biases, and general narcissism expressed in our popular media and arts. I have, in previous postings, cited either empirical evidence or expert opinion to support these claims. For this blog, it is time to begin formulating a moral code that can be utilized by our educators in order to form a values education curriculum to combat these trends. Such a code has to be more than just any old listing of good and bad values and behaviors. It must meet certain requirements. Yes, it has to offer a definite, but overall sense of good and bad, right and wrong behavior. Any list of values it purports must have a hierarchical dimension (reality often pits desired values against themselves and one must be able to determine what's more important in a given situation). It must be secular and therefore have a consequential view of morals – things are good or bad not because some authority claims them to be so in absolute terms (be it supernatural or not). Since my efforts are geared toward American education, the code must be applicable to American classroom instruction. The code must provide a rationale for what is considered moral or immoral. I will also add that the code must provide a transcendent force which gives young people a legitimate reason or motivation to be good. Further, for purposes of instructional effectiveness, the code should be amenable to stories; i. e., be illustrated through narratives that help personalize its messages of goodness and evil. I want to begin by presenting a set of attributes of a code that strives to meet these requirements.

128 DIRECTIONAL VALUES FOR A FEDERATED CONSTRUCT
(November 28, 2011)

This blog is currently about developing a moral code suitable to provide a foundation for a values curriculum in our public schools. Prior postings, beginning with the one dated October 17, 2011, have laid a foundation for presenting a code by reviewing relevant ideas from the western philosophic tradition. In the last posting, I identified this code's trump value: societal welfare. This value has a two dimensional structure. The dimensions are societal survival and societal advancement. The purpose of this posting is to continue in the development of this proposed moral code by listing more substantive elements to the code.

Last night, quite by accident, my channel surfing hit upon a scene from a 1943 film set in England. The part I saw was about an elderly general who was being eased out of service because his ideas were of World War I vintage and unsuitable for the realities of World War II. In short, he was holding on to a notion that war was a gentleman's endeavor – an ideal that was antiquated in World War I. His take was that, yes, the other side were not gentlemen in the last war either, but who won? The gentlemen did. The historical accuracy of such descriptions might be in doubt, but the exchange this general has with a friend is telling. When discussing the pending removal of the old guy from service, the friend said something to the effect, you are wrong about the challenge the Nazis are posing. It is different than that of the Kaiser in 1914. They, the Nazis, are threatening our very existence as a nation and society; all other values in effect have to take second billing to the overall goal of defeating this threat. While this scene references the extreme, the existential threat to a society, it does make the point of the proposed moral code: everything takes a subordinate position to the ultimate concern of saving the society.

129 SOCIETAL HEALTH AND PRACTICALITY
(December 2, 2011)

For those of you who have been following this blog, you know that I have been developing a moral code suitable to serve as a foundation for a values curriculum. In turn, such a curriculum can be part of an overall civics approach in that values education allows civics instructors to delve into moral and ethical questions that would be derived from such a code. If an instructional strategy can propose so and so as good or evil, then it would be legitimate to organize lessons that have students analyze what should be done in given situations where relevant options are presented and debated. On a personal level, having gone to parochial schools, I was exposed to such a curriculum with the exception that that instruction was based on a sectarian moral code. What I am proposing here is a secular moral code for our public schools – secular due to many reasons, not the least the legal/constitutional requirements under which our public schools operate.

130 FEDERALLY ACHIEVING GREATNESS
(December 5, 2011)

Continuing with this blog's effort to present a moral code suitable as a base for a values curriculum in our public schools, I want to take a look at a study that Jim Collins' team of researchers conducted (Collins, J. (2001). Good to great: Why some companies make the leap … and others don't. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.). That study looked at an array of businesses that were deemed to have been good initially but, due to some changes, became great. The primary question the study set out to answer was what made these commercial entities great.
ontinuing with this blog's effort to present a moral code suitable as a base for a values curriculum in our public schools, I want to take a look at a study that Jim Collins' team of researchers conducted (Collins, J. (2001). Good to great: Why some companies make the leap … and others don't. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.). That study looked at an array of businesses that were deemed to have been good initially but, due to some changes, became great. The primary question the study set out to answer was what made these commercial entities great.
ontinuing with this blog's effort to present a moral code suitable as a base for a values curriculum in our public schools, I want to take a look at a study that Jim Collins' team of researchers conducted (Collins, J. (2001). Good to great: Why some companies make the leap … and others don't. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.). That study looked at an array of businesses that were deemed to have been good initially but, due to some changes, became great. The primary question the study set out to answer was what made these commercial entities great.

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