Harvard and Religious Courses
Back in 2010, Newsweek magazine had an article about Harvard
University and Religious courses. It
seems that there are certain professors who believe that for a person to be
“well-educated”, they should understand how religions play such an important
role in much of many societies. However
there are others who feel that religion should not be taught on the same level
as science and other courses of higher learning. Here is a link to the article: Harvard
I found it interesting that they didn’t discuss the approach
that seemed to be the most logical to me:
teach it like they used to teach (and hopefully still do) Greek and
Roman mythology when people studied to receive “The Classical Education”. It used to be that education included the
Classics of Latin as a language, and Greek and Roman Mythology. This provided a basis for studying the Classic
Literature. One cannot understand (to
say nothing about appreciate) John Milton’s Paradise Lost without a good
grounding in “the Classics”. So why not
present today’s religions in a secular university like Harvard, the same way
that Edith Hamilton presented the Greek and Roman myths?
I had a friend recently tell me that he was showing the
movie Elmer Gantry to a group of Japanese young women engaged in an immersion
program. He stopped the film and asked
if they understood what was going on in the movie and they confessed they did
not. He then found out that they did not
understand the concepts of heaven and hell nor of a preacher. When he asked them what religion they were,
they didn’t know how to answer him.
Finally one student said she guessed she was Buddhist. The teacher realized then that these students
should be taught religion if they are going to understand what goes on in our
society.
The various religions are better understood as stories
rather than conflicting facts and we can (and should) understand not only
Christianity but also other religions that are a major part of other
societies. Perhaps more of us should not
only understand Christians and Jews through their myths, but also Muslims.
What is the definition of a myth? A Google search comes up with this as the
prime definition: “a
traditional story, esp. one concerning the early history of a people or
explaining some natural or social phenomenon, and typically involving
supernatural beings or events.” This
definition seems to fit the myths of ancient Greece, Rome, Nordic lands, Hindu,
Christian, and Muslim.
In the article it mentions that Steven Pinker was against
including a course on “Reason and Faith” as a core requirement. His argument was that the goal should be to
pursue “truth through rational inquiry, and … religion has no place for
that.” While I love Pinker’s books on
how the mind works, I realize that Pinker is a scientist. But the universities used to separate
“science and the Humanities” for a reason.
They are different. They involve
different parts of the mind. While
science deals with what is true and not true, the intuitive part of the mind
deals with truth – which is not dependent on a binary distinction of true or
not true. And so religion should be
understood through the Humanities such as literature, history, art, poetry, etc. And as Humanists, we should understand these
stories in order to understand other people (humans) among us. So Pinker is right to say that religion
should not be taught as science, but wrong to say that it shouldn’t be taught
as a part of the Humanities.
I have no problems talking about the myths of Christians,
Hindus, Jews, or Muslims. And as such, I
have no problems with them being studied as myths in educational institutions
like Harvard. Perhaps if we studied the
myths of religions and understood them, we could then study the psychology of
those who insist on not only believing in them, but insist that others believe
in them also. And maybe we could study why
certain people insist on believing in the myths of Christianity but not the
myths of ancient Greece.
David Kimball
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