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The Two Fiduciary Duties of Professors

  • Article
  • Sep 20, 2022
  • #Ethics
Jonathan Haidt
@JonathanHaidt
(Author)
heterodoxacademy.org
Read on heterodoxacademy.org
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In September 2016 I gave a lecture at Duke University: “Two Incompatible Sacred Values in American Universities.” I suggested that the ancient Greek word telos was helpful for under... Show More

In September 2016 I gave a lecture at Duke University: “Two Incompatible Sacred Values in American Universities.” I suggested that the ancient Greek word telos was helpful for understanding the rapid cultural change going on at America’s top universities that began in the fall of 2015. Telos means “the end, goal, or purpose for which an act is done, or at which a profession or institution aims.” The telos of a knife is to cut, the telos of medicine is to heal, and the telos of a university is truth, I suggested. The word (or close cognates) appears on many university crests, and our practices and norms — some stretching back to Plato’s academy — only make sense if you see a university as an institution organized to help scholars get closer to truth using the particular methods of their field.

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Geoffrey Miller @primalpoly · Sep 24, 2022
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Excellent new essay on by @JonHaidt on the ethical/fiduciary duties of professors, & how mandatory 'diversity statements' (eg as required by @SPSPnews) violate those duties & debase the academy.
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