Students “are not here to worship what is known” #ubc #ubcnews #highered

“It is important that students bring a certain ragamuffin, barefoot irreverence to their studies; they are not here to worship what is known but to question it.”
(Bronowski, 1973/2011, pp. 341-342)

“… barefoot irreverence to their studies”? “not here to worship what is known”?

Is this true? What does it mean?

postcard_an_85In Chapter 11 of The Ascent of Man— yes, ascent, not descent– Bronowski makes a point about the “irony of history:”

When the future looks back on the 1930s it will think of them as a crucial confrontation of culture as I have been expounding it, the ascent of man, against the throwback to the despots’ belief that they have absolute certainty. (p. 348)

Heisenberg was a graduate of the University of Göttingen, so Bronowski wants to make a point of the culture that eventually shaped the “uncertainty principle.” “The symbol of the University,” he says,

is the iron statue outside the Rathskeller of a barefoot goose girl [the Gänseliesel] that every student kisses at graduation. The University is a Mecca to which students come with something less than perfect faith. (p. 341)

Now comes the famous pronouncement on academic expectations: “It is important that students bring a certain ragamuffin, barefoot irreverence to their studies; they are not here to worship what is known but to question it.”

Is this true?

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