University of Toronto Friends of Wisdom

 

 

Join the Friends of WISDOM

 

This is an association of people sympathetic to the idea that academic inquiry should help humanity acquire more wisdom by rational means. Wisdom is taken to be the capacity to realize what is of value in life, for oneself and others. It includes knowledge, understanding and technological know-how, and much else besides. Friends of Wisdom try to encourage universities and schools actively to seek and promote wisdom by educational and intellectual means. At present, Friends of Wisdom communicate with one another in the main by email (JISCMAIL). If you wish to join, click HERE, and then click on "",nick [at] knowledgetowisdom.org

 

WE NEED A REVOLUTION

 

We need a revolution in the aims and methods of academic inquiry. Instead of giving priority to the search for knowledge, academia needs to devote itself to seeking and promoting wisdom by rational means, wisdom being the capacity to realize what is of value in life, for oneself and others, wisdom thus including knowledge but much else besides. A basic task ought to be to help humanity learn how to create a better world. Acquiring scientific knowledge dissociated from a more basic concern for wisdom, as we do at present, is dangerously and damagingly irrational.

Natural science has been extraordinarily successful in increasing knowledge. This has been of great benefit to humanity. But new knowledge and technological know-how increase our power to act which, without wisdom, may cause human suffering and death as well as human benefit. All our modern global problems have arisen in this way: global warming, the lethal character of modern war and terrorism, vast inequalities of wealth and power round the globe, rapid increase in population, rapid extinction of other species, even the aids epidemic (aids being spread by modern travel). All these have been made possible by modern science dissociated from the rational pursuit of wisdom. If we are to avoid in this century the horrors of the last one - wars, death camps, dictatorships, poverty, environmental damage - we urgently need to learn how to acquire more wisdom, which in turn means that our institutions of learning become devoted to that end.The revolution we need would change every branch and aspect of academic inquiry. A basic intellectual task of academic inquiry would be to articulate our problems of living (personal, social and global) and propose and critically assess possible solutions, possible actions. This would be the task of social inquiry and the humanities. Tackling problems of knowledge would be secondary. Social inquiry would be at the heart of the academic enterprise, intellectually more fundamental than natural science. On a rather more long-term basis, social inquiry would be concerned to help humanity build cooperatively rational methods of problem-solving into the fabric of social and political life, so that we may gradually acquire the capacity to resolve our conflicts and problems of living in more cooperatively rational ways than at present. Natural science would change to include three domains of discussion: evidence, theory, and aims - the latter including discussion of metaphysics, values and politics. Academic inquiry as a whole would become a kind of people's civil service, doing openly for the public what actual civil services are supposed to do in secret for governments. Academia would actively seek to educate the public by means of discussion and debate, and would not just study the public.These changes are not arbitrary. They all come from demanding that academia cure its current structural irrationality, so that reason - the authentic article - may be devoted to promoting human welfare.

For more detailed presentations of the above argument see the following by Nicholas Maxwell:"Can Humanity Learn to become Civilized? The Crisis of Science without Civilization", Journal of Applied Philosophy 17, 2000, pp. 29-44.Is Science Neurotic?, Imperial College Press, London, 2004.From Knowledge to Wisdom: A Revolution in the Aims and Methods of Science, Blackwell, Oxford, 1984.Second edition, additional material, brought up to date throughout, new introduction and three new chapters, Pentire Press, November 2007. See also the websites www.nick-maxwell.demon.co.uk, www.knowledgetowisdom.org, and www.ucl.ac.uk/from-knowledge-to-wisdom.

 

 

Join the University of Toronto Chapter, or Found a Chapter at Your Academic Institution!

 

The University of Toronto chapter aims to further promote wisdom and to help bring about a revolution needed to save the world from imminent crises. If you feel some sympathy with the above argument or with either of these objectives, do join. You can join by becoming a member of our Google Group, or by contacting uoft.friends.of.wisdom[at]gmail.com.

If you're part of another academic institution, please create a Friends of Wisdom group for it and spread the word!

 

 

Join the Toronto Chapter, or Found a Regional Chapter!

 

You can visit or join this website to keep informed of all events in Toronto presented or supported by Friends of Wisdom. If you live elsewhere, please feel free to create a Friends of Wisdom chapter for your region.

Upcoming (0)

Sorry, there are no upcoming events

 

 

Join the Friends of WISDOM

 

This is an association of people sympathetic to the idea that academic inquiry should help humanity acquire more wisdom by rational means. Wisdom is taken to be the capacity to realize what is of value in life, for oneself and others. It includes knowledge, understanding and technological know-how, and much else besides. Friends of Wisdom try to encourage universities and schools actively to seek and promote wisdom by educational and intellectual means. At present, Friends of Wisdom communicate with one another in the main by email (JISCMAIL). If you wish to join, click HERE, and then click on "",nick [at] knowledgetowisdom.org

 

WE NEED A REVOLUTION

 

We need a revolution in the aims and methods of academic inquiry. Instead of giving priority to the search for knowledge, academia needs to devote itself to seeking and promoting wisdom by rational means, wisdom being the capacity to realize what is of value in life, for oneself and others, wisdom thus including knowledge but much else besides. A basic task ought to be to help humanity learn how to create a better world. Acquiring scientific knowledge dissociated from a more basic concern for wisdom, as we do at present, is dangerously and damagingly irrational.

Natural science has been extraordinarily successful in increasing knowledge. This has been of great benefit to humanity. But new knowledge and technological know-how increase our power to act which, without wisdom, may cause human suffering and death as well as human benefit. All our modern global problems have arisen in this way: global warming, the lethal character of modern war and terrorism, vast inequalities of wealth and power round the globe, rapid increase in population, rapid extinction of other species, even the aids epidemic (aids being spread by modern travel). All these have been made possible by modern science dissociated from the rational pursuit of wisdom. If we are to avoid in this century the horrors of the last one - wars, death camps, dictatorships, poverty, environmental damage - we urgently need to learn how to acquire more wisdom, which in turn means that our institutions of learning become devoted to that end.The revolution we need would change every branch and aspect of academic inquiry. A basic intellectual task of academic inquiry would be to articulate our problems of living (personal, social and global) and propose and critically assess possible solutions, possible actions. This would be the task of social inquiry and the humanities. Tackling problems of knowledge would be secondary. Social inquiry would be at the heart of the academic enterprise, intellectually more fundamental than natural science. On a rather more long-term basis, social inquiry would be concerned to help humanity build cooperatively rational methods of problem-solving into the fabric of social and political life, so that we may gradually acquire the capacity to resolve our conflicts and problems of living in more cooperatively rational ways than at present. Natural science would change to include three domains of discussion: evidence, theory, and aims - the latter including discussion of metaphysics, values and politics. Academic inquiry as a whole would become a kind of people's civil service, doing openly for the public what actual civil services are supposed to do in secret for governments. Academia would actively seek to educate the public by means of discussion and debate, and would not just study the public.These changes are not arbitrary. They all come from demanding that academia cure its current structural irrationality, so that reason - the authentic article - may be devoted to promoting human welfare.

For more detailed presentations of the above argument see the following by Nicholas Maxwell:"Can Humanity Learn to become Civilized? The Crisis of Science without Civilization", Journal of Applied Philosophy 17, 2000, pp. 29-44.Is Science Neurotic?, Imperial College Press, London, 2004.From Knowledge to Wisdom: A Revolution in the Aims and Methods of Science, Blackwell, Oxford, 1984.Second edition, additional material, brought up to date throughout, new introduction and three new chapters, Pentire Press, November 2007. See also the websites www.nick-maxwell.demon.co.uk, www.knowledgetowisdom.org, and www.ucl.ac.uk/from-knowledge-to-wisdom.

 

 

Join the University of Toronto Chapter, or Found a Chapter at Your Academic Institution!

 

The University of Toronto chapter aims to further promote wisdom and to help bring about a revolution needed to save the world from imminent crises. If you feel some sympathy with the above argument or with either of these objectives, do join. You can join by becoming a member of our Google Group, or by contacting uoft.friends.of.wisdom[at]gmail.com.

If you're part of another academic institution, please create a Friends of Wisdom group for it and spread the word!

 

 

Join the Toronto Chapter, or Found a Regional Chapter!

 

You can visit or join this website to keep informed of all events in Toronto presented or supported by Friends of Wisdom. If you live elsewhere, please feel free to create a Friends of Wisdom chapter for your region.

Events

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