Richard Gamble
Frustrated with the continuing educational crisis of our time, concerned parents,
teachers, and students sense that true reform requires more than innovative
classroom technology, standardized tests, or skills training. An older traditionthe
Great Traditionof education in the West is waiting to be heard. Since
antiquity, the Great Tradition has defined education first and foremost as
the hard work of rightly ordering the human soul, helping it to love what
it ought to love, and helping it to know itself and its maker. In the classical
and Christian tradition, the formation of the soul in wisdom, virtue, and
eloquence took precedence over all else, including instrumental training aimed
at the inculcation of useful knowledge.
Edited by historian Richard Gamble, this anthology reconstructs a centuries-long
conversation about the goals, conditions, and ultimate value of true education.
Spanning more than two millennia, from the ancient Greeks to contemporary
writers, it includes substantial excerpts from more than sixty seminal writings
on education. Represented here are the wisdom and insight of such figures
as Xenophon, Plato, Aristotle, Seneca, Cicero, Basil, Augustine, Hugh of St.
Victor, Bonaventure, Thomas Aquinas, Martin Luther, John Calvin, Erasmus,
Edmund Burke, John Henry Newman, Thomas Arnold, Albert Jay Nock, Dorothy Sayers,
C. S. Lewis, and Eric Voegelin.
In an unbroken chain of giving and receiving, the Great Tradition embraced
the accumulated wisdom of the past and understood education as the initiation
of students into a body of truth. This unique collection is designed to help
parents, students, and teachers reconnect with this noble legacy, to articulate
a coherent defense of the liberal arts tradition, and to do battle with the
modern utilitarians and vocationalists who dominate educational theory and
practice.
About the Author
Richard M. Gamble is the Anna Margaret Ross Alexander Professor of History and Political Science and Associate Professor of History at Hillsdale College. He formerly taught in the Honors Program at Palm Beach Atlantic University and is the author of The War for Righteousness: Progressive Christianity, The Great War, and the Rise of the Messianic Nation (ISI Books, 2003).