NEH Chairman Bruce Cole recently spoke with this year’s Jefferson Lecturer, Harvey Mansfield, about his love of philosophy and the importance of liberal education. Mansfield has taught at Harvard University for more than forty years and is the author of fourteen books.
BRUCE COLE: How would you describe your scholarly activity or intellectual interests?
HARVEY MANSFIELD: The book I recently published on manliness is my most topical and has attracted the most attention by far. That has a good amount of
political philosophy in it, political philosophy being my subject and my love. But it also has some literature and even some science, social psychology,
and evolutionary biology. Before that, I did a series of books on Edmund Burke and Niccolo Machiavelli, on liberalism, on executive power, and on Tocqueville.
COLE:You’re a political scientist.
MANSFIELD: Yes.
COLE:What does a political scientist do?
MANSFIELD: A political scientist is supposed to study politics. There is a great division among political scientists, between those who use
mathematical methods and those who don’t. I’m very much in the second group, and there’s a kind of—war is too strong a
word—conflict between those ways of studying politics. The main difference between them is whether you begin from political issues
that actually exist, say, for example, the issue today over abortion, or whether you try to distance yourself from current politics
and abstract from it using mathematical formulae of one kind or another.
COLE:How do you do that?
MANSFIELD: You change the wording. You don’t use the words that people actually in politics use.
COLE: This is a much more theoretical approach, right?
MANSFIELD: It is theoretical, even though it doesn’t go very deep theoretically either.
COLE: But what’s the practical application of this mathematical approach?
MANSFIELD: The practical application is usually to seek peace. Political disputes are set in terms of what threatens stability.
They can be overcome if they are understood abstractly or theoretically. So those who adopt that point of view have,
in general, an inclination toward agreement or peace or harmony, and in great part they are liberals. So thereis a political
difference, too.
COLE: What drew you to studypolitical science?
MANSFIELD: By having a father whowas a political scientist.
COLE: It doesn’t always workthat way.
MANSFIELD: Right, but I never rebelled. I remember when I was a freshman, one of the teaching assistants in a government course I took said,
“It’s in the cards for you to become a political scientist.” I don’t remember ever seriously considering any alternative.
COLE: And what kind of political science did your father do?
MANSFIELD: He did American politics and public administration, constitutional law. He was a great New Dealer.
COLE: Did he work for the government?
MANSFIELD: He worked for the government during World War II, so I lived in Washington, D.C. during the war, which was a very exciting place to be.
I saw many famous events, like Franklin Roosevelt’s funeral and the two parades, for victory in Europe and victory in Japan.
COLE: Other than your father, who else helped to shape you as a scholar? Who were your influences?
MANSFIELD: Sam Beer, my manly professor at Harvard, was one. Leo Strauss, who showed me the way from politics to political philosophy, was another.
COLE: Let’s dig into your work a bit.Your first book was on Burke. What drew you to him?
MANSFIELD: His run of the language, the obvious plausibility of his remarks, the power with which he was able to argue, if not persuade.
Burke was the great conservative Englishman of the late eighteenth century and a great opponent of the French Revolution. He was also a reformer and one of the things that
he did was to write a famous pamphlet, Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents, which for the first time argued that political parties are a respectable feature of a free society. Before that, everyone had thought that parties were always a
sign of faction and distrust and disease. Burke changed that opinion. I studied him and that particular work of his as a way to show this great change in the politics of a free society.
COLE: Burke is often called the Father of Conservative Thought. How do you think he’d regard conservatism as it exists today? Would he recognize it?
MANSFIELD: I think he would. He, by the way, never used the word “conservative.” He once said, “To conserve, it is necessary to reform,” which I think is still true. But the word didn’t come into usage until the early nineteenth century, after he died. But, yes, I think he shows, first, that conservatism is reactive, and so it reacts against something
that it finds deplorable rather than advancing new propositions for further progress. Even when it reforms, it’s to cure or to address worse reforms that have been proposed by revolutionaries. Second, I think he shows the dilemma of conservatism, which
is between going back and going slow. The conservative has a choice of going back to better times that used to exist. The trouble with this is that it’s disruptive and causes a kind of revolution of its own. Or conservatism can go slow, which means toning down the shrieks of those who demand progress.
COLE: And it’s tempering.
MANSFIELD: It’s tempering, and modifying, and moderating. The trouble is that in this second mode it continues, accepts, and accommodates change that may not really be progress.
COLE: Burke is an interesting character because he supported the revolution in the American colonies, right?
MANSFIELD: He did.
COLE: How did that tie in with his conservatism?
MANSFIELD: Well, he thought that it was the English who were trying to impose new regulations on colonists who were mainly English in origin. He was not fully in favor of revolution in America. But he took the side of the colonists.
COLE: Is there still a lot of interest in Burke?
MANSFIELD: Less, I find. As conservatism has been on the rise in America, interest in his conservatism has waned. I tried publishing a book of Burke’s letters in the Reagan years and it was a flop.
COLE: After Burke, you moved on to Machiavelli. That seems to be a leap or is it?
MANSFIELD: Actually, Machiavelli had some of the same views as Burke on parties. Machiavelli thought that parties were a good thing for a free society, but he didn’t think that it was good for them to be respectable, or that respectable people would
divide into two parties. He thought it would always be the respectable versus the popular. But he thought that the conflict between the two made
Rome—he used Rome as his example—both more free and more powerful.
COLE: That’s interesting. When people think about Machiavelli, they tend to think just about The Prince, and the idea of Machiavellianism. But obviously the context for Machiavelli is important.
MANSFIELD: Most scholars white-wash Machiavelli. They think that he’s misunderstood and that he was fundamentally, and even overtly, a good guy on the side of the angels. That’s not my reading. I think that he is, on the
contrary, even worse than he appears.
COLE: That’s like what Mark Twain said about Wagner’s music: “It’s better than it sounds.”
MANSFIELD: Yes. He’s very bad on the surface, but underneath, he’s worse. He wants to bring on a very general revolution in our way of thinking about morality and politics. And he was in good part successful in this. I think he’s a figure of tremendous importance—the founder of modernity, modern thinking.
COLE: How so?
MANSFIELD: Well, I talk about this in my book Executive Power, which looks at the influence of Machiavelli on modern politics. I argue that executive power is power that exercised in the name of someone other than yourself, so it’s a kind of indirect government. It’s a way of acting without taking responsibility for your actions. In that sense, executive power is something weak or it’s something that you present as, “I’m sorry, I would like to help you, but the law says I can’t” or “I’m sorry, we need to do this because the people have spoken.” You always find some other authority besides yourself in which to supply clothing for your own actions. This is something that had not
been thought of or invented by the ancients, by Plato and Aristotle, it’s a modern idea.
COLE: This discussion seems to be heading towards manliness. That’s the title of your most recent book, right?
MANSFIELD: Yes.
COLE: At first sight, Manliness seems to be a departure from your earlier work, but it really isn’t, though.
MANSFIELD: Manliness, you could say, is the opposite of executive power. Manliness, instead of being indirect, is very direct. It’s
frank and open, and, therefore, somewhat oblivious to one’s surroundings and not, as we say today,
sensitive. I’d say the present day opposite of a manly man is a sensitive male.
COLE: You lament this.
MANSFIELD: I do. My book is a defense, but a qualified defense of manliness. It has a dark side, an evil side. You could
make a case that the Islamic hijackers who flew planes into the World Trade Center were manly. After all, they were committing
suicide while murdering.
COLE: That’s definitely the dark side.
MANSFIELD: But perhaps then we need manliness in a good sense to save us from manliness in the bad sense.
COLE: What do you consider manliness in a good sense? How would you define that?
MANSFIELD: Manliness is confidence in the face of risk. The good side is when the risk is of evil and the confidence is justified.
COLE: I find it interesting that in addition to writing about political theorists, you’ve also translated their work.
What is attractive about doing a translation?
MANSFIELD: I like to translate, because it brings me much closer to the text.I’ve translated Machiavelli and Tocqueville.
Those are authors in two different languages, two different times, two very different styles. Machiavelli
is more difficult to translate, because his Italian is closer to Latin—long
sentences, very hard sometimes to get the meaning—whereas Tocqueville has
a very lovely, open style, where almost every sentence is a beauty.
COLE: You really have to tease out the meanings of every word with Machiavelli. That’s very interesting. I hadn’t thought about that before. You mentioned Tocqueville. Democracy in America has become an enormously important book, because of his observations about how the country started and who we are.
That book is Tocqueville’s signature piece. What impact did his book on America have in France?
MANSFIELD: Not very much, at least politically. In fact Tocqueville was a liberal, one of the three or four chief French liberals of the early nineteenth century. The liberal point of view didn’t make much headway at all. It was overcome by stronger forces on the
right and on the left. France experienced another Napoleon and autocracy on the one hand, but it also was one of the birthplaces of socialism on the other. The liberalism that Tocqueville represented, though it had some political existence in the Third Republic, was overlooked or, indeed, despised by the majority of French intellectuals.
There was very little work done in France on Tocqueville until Raymond Aron in the middle of the twentieth century made him popular once again as a middle between the right and socialism or communism.
For Tocqueville, the book’s publication had a huge personal impact. He came here in 1831-32, when he was in his middle twenties. He went back to France and, after completing his research, wrote the first volume, which is about 350 pages, in less than a year. That’s the one that had the big success. The second volume was delayed
until 1840, because he went into politics.
France was going through a series of revolutions, and he was more involved politically than a typical philosopher. The second volume has more about democracy in society, culture, and literature—and oratory—and less directly about politics. It wasn’t as successful when published, but today it seems more powerful than the first volume.
COLE: Why do you think Tocqueville continues to have such resonance today?
MANSFIELD: Well, all you have to do is open it up and look at almost any random page and you’ll see the insight and the beautiful formulations of Tocqueville.
COLE: Tocqueville didn’t come to the United States to write about democracy. His original project was on prison reform, right?
MANSFIELD: Yes, but there is a letter in which he says that was a pretext.
COLE: Oh really?
MANSFIELD: It got him a traveling fellowship.
COLE: I never heard that before.
MANSFIELD: He and his friend Gustave de Beaumont used the fellowship to come to America. They were interested in the prison experiments occurring at that time—attempts to rehabilitate prisoners, but also to keep them or to make them penitent so that the word
“penitentiary” would actually describe what was going on. They wrote a book together about it.
Tocqueville’s other great book is the one he didn’t quite finish. It’s on the old regime and the French Revolution.He finished the part on the old regime, but died before he could finish the part on the revolution. The old regime, he shows, transforms itself into a kind of democracy, in a certain sense, before the revolution. That was his famous thesis. One of his famous theories was that revolution is more likely when things are getting better than when things are getting worse. When things are getting better, people want them
to get better still and lose patience more quickly.
COLE: I also wanted to ask you about Tocqueville’s concept of soft despotism. Do you think that’s relevant for understanding intellectual conformism in the United States today?
MANSFIELD: Even “soft” or “sweet” or “mild despotism” I think perfectly describes what’s going on today in America. It’s another term for political correctness, I would say. Tocqueville was already thinking about it in the nineteenth century.
The big difference between the second and the first volumes of Democracy in America is that in the first volume Tocqueville says the main danger is majority tyranny and in the second he says it’s mild despotism.
Majority tyranny sounds like something active and forceful, but mild despotism is a kind of conformity that happens almost without your feeling that you’re being oppressed by it. It’s all about the questions that are not raised or ideas that are put aside. Mild despotism tutors tyranny. It feeds people as children and keeps them or makes them unwilling to raise dissent or ask questions.
COLE: Is Tocqueville’s use here akin to Margaret Thatcher’s terms of the “nanny state”?
MANSFIELD: Yes, very much that, too. He thought that “Big Government” was a consequence of what he called “individualism.” That’s a word today which is usually given a positive sound as in “rugged individualism.” But he didn’t think it was rugged.
To him it was a disease of democracy that people felt incompetent or impotent among a mass of other people. One person couldn’t do
anything on his own, or lives seemed to be run by huge, impersonal forces that nobody can contend with, and,
therefore, it’s reasonable to withdraw into yourself or into your family or your small circle and not try to affect
things politically. So individualism and big government, which is a consequence, go together. Because you
think you can’t do anything, you’re perfectly willing to let the government take it on.
COLE: I’m interested in your career at Harvard. You’ve been there more than fifty years, as both a student and a professor.
MANSFIELD: Yes, right. I first came here as a student in 1949.
COLE: That gives you a long perspective. What’s changed? How different is it now from when you were an undergraduate?
MANSFIELD: In some ways, it’s the same. At Harvard, there are still a lot of very bright students. They continue
to be attracted towards political philosophy, so I’ve had a congenial time all these many years.
There are some differences in who the undergraduates are; above all, women. When I was an undergraduate, Harvard only
admitted men. The women attended Radcliffe, but took classes at Harvard. That meant there were fewer women in the classes.
That changed altogether in the 1970s. That change has many good aspects, because it means that conversation between the sexes is easier,
more natural. It’s almost more like brother and sister than a boy and girl on a date. In fact, dates hardly occur any more,
so I hear. So that’s good, but on the other hand, I think there’s a kind of damper on the high spirits of male undergraduates
that one used to see. It’s as if the male undergraduates were premature husbands, because a man is always afraid of making a
fool of himself in front of women. If there aren’t women at the dinner table, as it used to be, then there are more high
spirits and a lot more foolishness, but also perhaps some more interesting ventures of thought.
COLE: How has the curriculum changed?
MANSFIELD: There I think we have definitely gone downhill. I can’t speak for the sciences, because the sciences are always expanding,
but in my field the mathematical political science that I spoke of is a lot more powerful than it used to be. I think that’s
a bad thing, because it distracts students from dealing with actual political questions. And then, too, there’s much less reading
of great books in the humanities and the social sciences than there used to be. At that time, Harvard had a general education
program which was, not in principle but in fact, a great books program.
COLE: These great books were read by
all the students?
MANSFIELD: Everybody didn't read
the same books, but the books they
read were all great books. That has slid
downhill to the point where we have
a so-called core program, which has
just been replaced. The core program
only taught approaches to knowledge.
And it was done in such a way that
many of the courses had gimmicks or
were on subjects intended to attract
people from outside the field.
COLE:
What does Harvard have now
in place of the core program?
MANSFIELD: Hard to say—it hasn't
begun. There is a sentiment for more
substance, less attention to approaches.
But there is also an opinion that
no agreement on what constitutes
education is possible.
COLE: You've lamented the rise of
grade inflation.
MANSFIELD:
That's right. When I first
started inveighing against this in the
1970s—quite a long time ago—I
thought it was not that important in
itself, but a sign of something worse.
Now I think it is getting to be that
something worse. It has created a new
atmosphere of consumerism among
the students, who are demanding high
grades, always negotiating for higher
grades, and insisting on being able to
produce a transcript that is near perfection.
They are afraid of getting a "B,"
if you can imagine that. It used to be a
"B" was a grade many students never
saw, but once or twice in four years.
Now it's considered almost an insult.
Grade inflation is also very bad for
professors, because what they're doing
is saying that any student who takes
their course is excellent or near excellent—an "A" or an "A-." Nobody who
takes a subject seriously believes that
everybody who works in it is excellent.
Nobody who's a baseball fan believes
that all players deserve to get in the
Hall of Fame.
COLE: That would make the Hall of
Fame meaningless.
MANSFIELD:
Exactly. That would be
the naive attitude of someone who is
amazed that somebody could catch
or hit a baseball. So now courses have
become like drivers' instruction, where
everybody expects to pass at the
highest level.
COLE: But in fact that is happening.
MANSFIELD: That is happening, and
I think that's a very bad attitude.
COLE: I know you're a hero to a lot of
people because you took a strong stand
on it. Are you still giving the students
two grades?
MANSFIELD: Yes, because even though
under Larry Summers the Harvard
administration began referring to grade
inflation as a problem, nothing has yet
been done.
COLE: Tell me how the two-grade
system works.
MANSFIELD: One is a private grade
from me, the grade that I think the
student deserves. The other is a public
grade that goes to the registrar and is
put on the transcript. It's based on the
Harvard average.
COLE: What kind of student reaction
have you had from that?
MANSFIELD: They sort of laugh. It does
get me more customers, because I'm
no longer punishing the students for
taking my course by comparison to
what they would have gotten in other
courses. It's certainly attracted attention,
but it hasn't yet changed the practice.
COLE: I know from my own teaching
experience that what students expected
just crept up and up over the years.
It really started in the 70s, don't you think?
MANSFIELD: Yes, it did. Well, the late
60s and the immediate aftermath.
COLE: At the end of the day, it's made
many grades meaningless.
MANSFIELD: That's right. The main
victims of it are the best students.
Everybody else gets the grade that
only the best deserve.
COLE: You talked about consumerism.
Do you think consumerism has become
much more a part of university life
than when you were an undergraduate?
I'm not talking just about Harvard,
but everywhere.
MANSFIELD: That's right, and in all
parts of university life. For example, the
food is much better than it used to be.
COLE: Which is not necessarily a bad
thing.
MANSFIELD: It's a good thing, but it's
a bad sign. It shows that universities
are more concerned with pleasing
students, or more afraid of displeasing
them, than they used to be. Universities
are softer and so are students.
COLE: Well, in terms of the competition
for students, schools now have to
offer fancy dorms and bowling alleys
and an enormous amount of extra
curricular activities. Then there's the
whole world of sports and the like.
It's something I've noticed increasingly
over the years.
What about graduate education?
Has that changed? I think what people
study now is very different. Some of
the fields in the humanities and social
sciences have become very fragmented.
MANSFIELD: Oh yes.
COLE: And there's increasingly sub,
sub specialties with more and more
professors only talking to an increasingly
small number of their cohorts.
Do you agree with that?
MANSFIELD: Yes, that's very true.
The professors think that there's an
amazing coincidence between the
subject they want to study and the
subject that students ought to learn.
So they insist on giving courses on
what they're writing about or thinking
about instead of looking at undergraduate
education as a whole for
what students need to learn.
COLE: There is also great concern at the
moment about what people regard as
the decline of liberal education. What is
a good liberal education? What's the
purpose of it? It's a big question.
MANSFIELD: Well, the purpose is to
make a beautiful soul. I think it would
help if people admitted that there is
such a thing as a soul, or, if you want
to use a foreign word, psyche, that we
have that we're trying to improve. To
do this, you need to use words that
describe beauty, like "beautiful" and
"impressive" and "well formed." You
have to consider that the object is not
merely to convey information or even
knowledge, but also to refine and to
beautify the souls of students. That
is the special work of the humanities.
Students shouldn't go through college
without experiencing various kinds of
beauty-art, architecture, and music,
and literature.
COLE: Poetry.
MANSFIELD: And poetry, and so on. All
of that should be done with an overtly
edifying purpose.
COLE: It is where students get their
grounding really, to gain a kind of
perspective. They begin to learn how
to think critically as well and that prepares
them. I agree with you. It should
be a wonderful four years where you
get a grounding for what you are going
to do for the rest of your life.
MANSFIELD:
Yes. It's so easy to be
mundane.
COLE: I think that there is increasing
pressure from parents and from
the universities and colleges themselves
to emphasize vocationalism.
Undergraduate education seems
to have become a way to prepare
for a job.
MANSFIELD: That's right.
COLE: Vocationally, not intellectually.
I think that is where the humanities
can play a central role. What do you
think the place of the humanities is
in a liberal education?
MANSFIELD: The place of humanities
in liberal education is right at
the center.
COLE: I like that.
MANSFIELD: What is human life?
It's a life which is indeed partly
devoted to necessities, but also
devoted to what is above necessities,
to something noble. We don't live
without directing ourselves towards
something beyond mere life, some
picture of the good life. I think it's
the duty of the humanities, the
work of the humanities, not so
much to inspire, because I think
students come to our college with a
kind of inspiration, but to refine and
shape and direct the inspiration
they have on arrival, and not to kill
it. We need to think much more in
terms of the good and the noble and
the beautiful, and not always seek to
deconstruct or tear down these high
notions with low explanations.
COLE: Well, that's a good, beautiful,
and noble way to end. Thank you
for speaking with me today.
Photo by Justin Ide
courtesy of Harvard University
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