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<h2> Chapter Fourteen ~~ The Higher Learning as an Expression of the Pecuniary Culture </h2>
<p>To the end that suitable habits of thought on certain heads may be
conserved in the incoming generation, a scholastic discipline is
sanctioned by the common sense of the community and incorporated into the
accredited scheme of life. The habits of thought which are so formed under
the guidance of teachers and scholastic traditions have an economic value—a
value as affecting the serviceability of the individual—no less real
than the similar economic value of the habits of thought formed without
such guidance under the discipline of everyday life. Whatever
characteristics of the accredited scholastic scheme and discipline are
traceable to the predilections of the leisure class or to the guidance of
the canons of pecuniary merit are to be set down to the account of that
institution, and whatever economic value these features of the educational
scheme possess are the expression in detail of the value of that
institution. It will be in place, therefore, to point out any peculiar
features of the educational system which are traceable to the
leisure-class scheme of life, whether as regards the aim and method of the
discipline, or as regards the compass and character of the body of
knowledge inculcated. It is in learning proper, and more particularly in
the higher learning, that the influence of leisure-class ideals is most
patent; and since the purpose here is not to make an exhaustive collation
of data showing the effect of the pecuniary culture upon education, but
rather to illustrate the method and trend of the leisure-class influence
in education, a survey of certain salient features of the higher learning,
such as may serve this purpose, is all that will be attempted.</p>
<p>In point of derivation and early development, learning is somewhat closely
related to the devotional function of the community, particularly to the
body of observances in which the service rendered the supernatural leisure
class expresses itself. The service by which it is sought to conciliate
supernatural agencies in the primitive cults is not an industrially
profitable employment of the community's time and effort. It is,
therefore, in great part, to be classed as a vicarious leisure performed
for the supernatural powers with whom negotiations are carried on and
whose good-will the service and the professions of subservience are
conceived to procure. In great part, the early learning consisted in an
acquisition of knowledge and facility in the service of a supernatural
agent. It was therefore closely analogous in character to the training
required for the domestic service of a temporal master. To a great extent,
the knowledge acquired under the priestly teachers of the primitive
community was knowledge of ritual and ceremonial; that is to say, a
knowledge of the most proper, most effective, or most acceptable manner of
approaching and of serving the preternatural agents. What was learned was
how to make oneself indispensable to these powers, and so to put oneself
in a position to ask, or even to require, their intercession in the course
of events or their abstention from interference in any given enterprise.
Propitiation was the end, and this end was sought, in great part, by
acquiring facility in subservience. It appears to have been only gradually
that other elements than those of efficient service of the master found
their way into the stock of priestly or shamanistic instruction.</p>
<p>The priestly servitor of the inscrutable powers that move in the external
world came to stand in the position of a mediator between these powers and
the common run of unrestricted humanity; for he was possessed of a
knowledge of the supernatural etiquette which would admit him into the
presence. And as commonly happens with mediators between the vulgar and
their masters, whether the masters be natural or preternatural, he found
it expedient to have the means at hand tangibly to impress upon the vulgar
the fact that these inscrutable powers would do what he might ask of them.
Hence, presently, a knowledge of certain natural processes which could be
turned to account for spectacular effect, together with some sleight of
hand, came to be an integral part of priestly lore. Knowledge of this kind
passes for knowledge of the "unknowable", and it owes its serviceability
for the sacerdotal purpose to its recondite character. It appears to have
been from this source that learning, as an institution, arose, and its
differentiation from this its parent stock of magic ritual and shamanistic
fraud has been slow and tedious, and is scarcely yet complete even in the
most advanced of the higher seminaries of learning.</p>
<p>The recondite element in learning is still, as it has been in all ages, a
very attractive and effective element for the purpose of impressing, or
even imposing upon, the unlearned; and the standing of the savant in the
mind of the altogether unlettered is in great measure rated in terms of
intimacy with the occult forces. So, for instance, as a typical case, even
so late as the middle of this century, the Norwegian peasants have
instinctively formulated their sense of the superior erudition of such
doctors of divinity as Luther, Malanchthon, Peder Dass, and even so late a
scholar in divinity as Grundtvig, in terms of the Black Art. These,
together with a very comprehensive list of minor celebrities, both living
and dead, have been reputed masters in all magical arts; and a high
position in the ecclesiastical personnel has carried with it, in the
apprehension of these good people, an implication of profound familiarity
with magical practice and the occult sciences. There is a parallel fact
nearer home, similarly going to show the close relationship, in popular
apprehension, between erudition and the unknowable; and it will at the
same time serve to illustrate, in somewhat coarse outline, the bent which
leisure-class life gives to the cognitive interest. While the belief is by
no means confined to the leisure class, that class today comprises a
disproportionately large number of believers in occult sciences of all
kinds and shades. By those whose habits of thought are not shaped by
contact with modern industry, the knowledge of the unknowable is still
felt to the ultimate if not the only true knowledge.</p>
<p>Learning, then, set out by being in some sense a by-product of the
priestly vicarious leisure class; and, at least until a recent date, the
higher learning has since remained in some sense a by-product or
by-occupation of the priestly classes. As the body of systematized
knowledge increased, there presently arose a distinction, traceable very
far back in the history of education, between esoteric and exoteric
knowledge, the former—so far as there is a substantial difference
between the two—comprising such knowledge as is primarily of no
economic or industrial effect, and the latter comprising chiefly knowledge
of industrial processes and of natural phenomena which were habitually
turned to account for the material purposes of life. This line of
demarcation has in time become, at least in popular apprehension, the
normal line between the higher learning and the lower.</p>
<p>It is significant, not only as an evidence of their close affiliation with
the priestly craft, but also as indicating that their activity to a good
extent falls under that category of conspicuous leisure known as manners
and breeding, that the learned class in all primitive communities are
great sticklers for form, precedent, gradations of rank, ritual,
ceremonial vestments, and learned paraphernalia generally. This is of
course to be expected, and it goes to say that the higher learning, in its
incipient phase, is a leisure-class occupation—more specifically an
occupation of the vicarious leisure class employed in the service of the
supernatural leisure class. But this predilection for the paraphernalia of
learning goes also to indicate a further point of contact or of continuity
between the priestly office and the office of the savant. In point of
derivation, learning, as well as the priestly office, is largely an
outgrowth of sympathetic magic; and this magical apparatus of form and
ritual therefore finds its place with the learned class of the primitive
community as a matter of course. The ritual and paraphernalia have an
occult efficacy for the magical purpose; so that their presence as an
integral factor in the earlier phases of the development of magic and
science is a matter of expediency, quite as much as of affectionate regard
for symbolism simply.</p>
<p>This sense of the efficacy of symbolic ritual, and of sympathetic effect
to be wrought through dexterous rehearsal of the traditional accessories
of the act or end to be compassed, is of course present more obviously and
in larger measure in magical practice than in the discipline of the
sciences, even of the occult sciences. But there are, I apprehend, few
persons with a cultivated sense of scholastic merit to whom the
ritualistic accessories of science are altogether an idle matter. The very
great tenacity with which these ritualistic paraphernalia persist through
the later course of the development is evident to any one who will reflect
on what has been the history of learning in our civilization. Even today
there are such things in the usage of the learned community as the cap and
gown, matriculation, initiation, and graduation ceremonies, and the
conferring of scholastic degrees, dignities, and prerogatives in a way
which suggests some sort of a scholarly apostolic succession. The usage of
the priestly orders is no doubt the proximate source of all these features
of learned ritual, vestments, sacramental initiation, the transmission of
peculiar dignities and virtues by the imposition of hands, and the like;
but their derivation is traceable back of this point, to the source from
which the specialized priestly class proper came to be distinguished from
the sorcerer on the one hand and from the menial servant of a temporal
master on the other hand. So far as regards both their derivation and
their psychological content, these usages and the conceptions on which
they rest belong to a stage in cultural development no later than that of
the angekok and the rain-maker. Their place in the later phases of devout
observance, as well as in the higher educational system, is that of a
survival from a very early animistic phase of the development of human
nature.</p>
<p>These ritualistic features of the educational system of the present and of
the recent past, it is quite safe to say, have their place primarily in
the higher, liberal, and classic institutions and grades of learning,
rather than in the lower, technological, or practical grades, and branches
of the system. So far as they possess them, the lower and less reputable
branches of the educational scheme have evidently borrowed these things
from the higher grades; and their continued persistence among the
practical schools, without the sanction of the continued example of the
higher and classic grades, would be highly improbable, to say the least.
With the lower and practical schools and scholars, the adoption and
cultivation of these usages is a case of mimicry—due to a desire to
conform as far as may be to the standards of scholastic reputability
maintained by the upper grades and classes, who have come by these
accessory features legitimately, by the right of lineal devolution.</p>
<p>The analysis may even be safely carried a step farther. Ritualistic
survivals and reversions come out in fullest vigor and with the freest air
of spontaneity among those seminaries of learning which have to do
primarily with the education of the priestly and leisure classes.
Accordingly it should appear, and it does pretty plainly appear, on a
survey of recent developments in college and university life, that
wherever schools founded for the instruction of the lower classes in the
immediately useful branches of knowledge grow into institutions of the
higher learning, the growth of ritualistic ceremonial and paraphernalia
and of elaborate scholastic "functions" goes hand in hand with the
transition of the schools in question from the field of homely
practicality into the higher, classical sphere. The initial purpose of
these schools, and the work with which they have chiefly had to do at the
earlier of these two stages of their evolution, has been that of fitting
the young of the industrious classes for work. On the higher, classical
plane of learning to which they commonly tend, their dominant aim becomes
the preparation of the youth of the priestly and the leisure classes—or
of an incipient leisure class—for the consumption of goods, material
and immaterial, according to a conventionally accepted, reputable scope
and method. This happy issue has commonly been the fate of schools founded
by "friends of the people" for the aid of struggling young men, and where
this transition is made in good form there is commonly, if not invariably,
a coincident change to a more ritualistic life in the schools.</p>
<p>In the school life of today, learned ritual is in a general way best at
home in schools whose chief end is the cultivation of the "humanities".
This correlation is shown, perhaps more neatly than anywhere else, in the
life-history of the American colleges and universities of recent growth.
There may be many exceptions from the rule, especially among those schools
which have been founded by the typically reputable and ritualistic
churches, and which, therefore, started on the conservative and classical
plane or reached the classical position by a short-cut; but the general
rule as regards the colleges founded in the newer American communities
during the present century has been that so long as the constituency from
which the colleges have drawn their pupils has been dominated by habits of
industry and thrift, so long the reminiscences of the medicine-man have
found but a scant and precarious acceptance in the scheme of college life.
But so soon as wealth begins appreciably to accumulate in the community,
and so soon as a given school begins to lean on a leisure-class
constituency, there comes also a perceptibly increased insistence on
scholastic ritual and on conformity to the ancient forms as regards
vestments and social and scholastic solemnities. So, for instance, there
has been an approximate coincidence between the growth of wealth among the
constituency which supports any given college of the Middle West and the
date of acceptance—first into tolerance and then into imperative
vogue—of evening dress for men and of the d�collet� for women, as
the scholarly vestments proper to occasions of learned solemnity or to the
seasons of social amenity within the college circle. Apart from the
mechanical difficulty of so large a task, it would scarcely be a difficult
matter to trace this correlation. The like is true of the vogue of the cap
and gown.</p>
<p>Cap and gown have been adopted as learned insignia by many colleges of
this section within the last few years; and it is safe to say that this
could scarcely have occurred at a much earlier date, or until there had
grown up a leisure-class sentiment of sufficient volume in the community
to support a strong movement of reversion towards an archaic view as to
the legitimate end of education. This particular item of learned ritual,
it may be noted, would not only commend itself to the leisure-class sense
of the fitness of things, as appealing to the archaic propensity for
spectacular effect and the predilection for antique symbolism; but it at
the same time fits into the leisure-class scheme of life as involving a
notable element of conspicuous waste. The precise date at which the
reversion to cap and gown took place, as well as the fact that it affected
so large a number of schools at about the same time, seems to have been
due in some measure to a wave of atavistic sense of conformity and
reputability that passed over the community at that period.</p>
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