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Beyond
the Ivy Walls:
Our University in the Wider World
In
his inaugural address as Yale's 22nd President, Richard C. Levin
called for an increased awareness of the University as part of a
larger intellectual and social environment. His text:
December
1993
by Richard C. Levin
In the
second chorus of Antigone, Sophocles celebrates humanity:
"Numberless are the world's wonders, but none more wonderful
than man." The chorus sings of humanity's power over nature:
"Earth, holy and inexhaustible, is graven with shining furrows
where his plows have gone year after year, the timeless labor of
stallions." And the chorus praises our ability to use language
and reason to create a social space in which people can debate what
is good: "Words also, and thought as rapid as air, he fashions
to good use; statecraft is his."
We celebrate
today our University
-- a monument to the achievement Sophocles extols. We preserve humanity's
achievement in our collections of books and manuscripts, works of
art and architecture, objects and artifacts. We impart an appreciation
of that achievement by our teaching and augment it by our research.
My teacher
and colleague, James Tobin, Nobel laureate in economics, wrote some
years ago that Yale's primary mission is the preservation, advancement,
and enrichment of knowledge and culture. He observed correctly that
Yale is one of the very few universities in the world with the tangible
assets, human resources, and internal culture to make possible serious
dedication to this ambitious task. Ours is a very special place.
We are proud of our capacity to advance knowledge in the sciences,
the humanities, the fine arts, and the learned professions, and
we are especially proud that, within the select group of institutions
that share this capability, Yale is the most committed to the teaching
of undergraduates. At this inaugural, this time of looking forward,
we rededicate ourselves to our primary mission, and we reaffirm
those values that sustain us in its pursuit.
The
tragedy of Antigone and Creon teaches that human potential can be
fully realized only when the laws of society resonate with the deepest
truths about ourselves. This is our aspiration for the social order
we create within the University. As scholars and teachers, we live
by values intended to permit the full flowering of the human spirit.
We cultivate human potential by a profound commitment to free inquiry
and free expression. Only through the unfettered application of
"clear intelligence" can we advance genuine understanding
of nature and ourselves. We ask hard questions and answer them honestly,
and we follow reason wherever it leads, however treacherous the
terrain. We practice what we teach our students: Question every
assumption, and pursue every argument in the search for truth.
We live
also in a wider world beyond the ivy walls,
a world in which we bear enormous responsibility. Like Antigone,
the University stands for transcendent principles, those which permit
the preservation of culture and the advance of knowledge. To avoid
the fate of Antigone and Creon, our principles must coexist in harmony
with the principles that govern the civil society of which we are
a part. It follows that our responsibility is to educate and to
lead, to shape the values of the wider world so that they, too,
encourage the full realization of human potential.
One
of Yale's principal responsibilities to society was enunciated in
its founding charter. In 1701 the General Assembly of Connecticut
approved "An Act for Liberty to Erect a Collegiate School,"
which it described as a place "wherein Youth may be instructed
in the Arts and Sciences who through the blessing of Almighty God
may be fitted for Publick employment both in Church and Civil State."
For
nearly three centuries Yale has fulfilled its founding mission with
distinction, supplying leaders to the nation and the world. Fourteen
Yale alumni served in the Continental Congress; four signed the
Declaration of Independence. Three of the last five presidents of
the United States and ten of the 100 senators now in office have
Yale degrees. Until recently, Yale educated more leaders of major
U.S. corporations that any other university. Yale produced the greatest
American scientists of the 19th century (Benjamin Silliman and Josiah
Willard Gibbs), two of our greatest inventors (Eli Whitney and Samuel
F.B. Morse), the first African-American to receive a Ph.D. (Edward
Bouchet), the founder of sociology in America (William Graham Sumner),
and the father of American football (Walter Camp). From Cole Porter
to Maya Lin, few institutions rival Yale's record in producing artistic,
dramatic, and musical talent of distinction. Yale alumni served
as the first presidents of Princeton, Columbia, Williams, Cornell,
Johns Hopkins, the University of Chicago, and the Universities of
Georgia, Mississippi, Missouri, Wisconsin, and California.
We help
shape our society through the highly visible and distinguished leaders
we educate,
and we also improve public life and public discourse by cultivating
in all our students those qualities of mind most conducive to the
health of democracy. By encouraging our students to reason carefully
and to form independent critical judgments, we prepare them to be
thinking citizens for a lifetime. As an institution, we remain committed
to this Jeffersonian conception of the role of higher education
in our democracy. By encouraging freedom and independence in our
students, we help defend freedom and independence for all.
Yale's
early 18th-century mandate was to educate leaders and citizens for
a small New England colony. By the mid-19th century, our compass
had become the whole nation. As we enter the 21st century, we must
aspire to educate leaders for the whole world. Our curriculum increasingly
reflects those forces that have integrated the world's economy and
must ultimately, if we are to survive the dual threats of war and
environmental degradation, integrate the world's polity. We must
focus even more on global issues if our students are to be well
prepared for world leadership, if we are to be a world university.
We influence
the wider world by educating leaders and citizens.
Through our efforts to discover truths about humanity and nature,
we also influence, not always intentionally, the material well-being
of our nation and the world. I refer in particular to the substantial
contribution that university-based scientific research has made
to technological progress and economic growth since the end of the
Second World War. Scientific advance is the ultimate source of growth
in industrial productivity, which in the modern economy is the principal
source of improvement in the standard of living. Advances in basic
science provide essential knowledge for researchers in industry
and open, often unexpectedly, entire new areas for industrial application.
Since
the Second World War, research conducted at our universities has
led to dramatic increases in the food supply and human longevity.
University-based scientific research and training have also given
this country an enormous advantage in international competition.
Despite the widespread belief that America's strength in international
markets is eroding, American firms have consistently led the world
in those industrial markets in which technology is most closely
linked to advance in science. Ironically, the practical consequences
of scientific advance are often most profound when the underlying
research is least influenced by commercial considerations. The revolution
in biotechnology arose from discoveries made in the pursuit of pure
knowledge of the molecular basis of life.
Our
national capability in basic research was built by the farsighted
policy of pubic support for university-based science articulated
during the Truman administration and pursued consistently, though
with varying intensity, ever since. Today, the scientific capability
of American universities is the envy of the world. We neglect its
support at our peril.
As we
seek to educate leaders and citizens for the world, as our discoveries
spread enlightenment and material benefits far beyond our walls,
we must remember that we have important responsibilities here at
home. We contribute much to the cultural life of New Haven, to the
health of its citizens, and to the education of its children. But
we must do more. Pragmatism alone compels this conclusion. If we
are to continue to recruit students and faculty of the highest quality,
New Haven must remain an attractive place in which to study, to
live, and to work.
But our
responsibility to our city transcends pragmatism.
The conditions of America's cities threaten the health of the republic.
Our democracy depends upon widespread literacy, and literacy is
declining. Freedom for all requires that those without privilege
have both access to opportunity and the knowledge to make use of
it. We must help our society become what we aspire to be inside
our walls-a place where human potential can be fully realized.
At this
time of looking forward, we reaffirm the values of our past: to
preserve and advance knowledge, to defend free inquiry and free
expression, to educate leaders and thinking citizens, to teach the
world around us to give scope for human achievement, and to nurture
human potential. We reaffirm these commitments not merely as ends
in themselves, but as means to improve the human condition and elevate
the human spirit. Let us resume our "timeless labor."
Let us leave "shining furrows" behind.
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