A
Vision of Education as Transformation
Reflection by Parker Palmer, panel response and roundtable discussion
Plenary Session I
"...higher education has developed its own orthodoxy,
its own highly limited set of blinders through which to view the wonders
and marvels that surround us--and it is an orthodoxy, I believe, that is
as fully capable of trammeling inquiry as any of the orthodoxies found in
the religious traditions."
-- Parker Palmer

"The orthodoxy of objectivism insists that we can know the world only
by distancing ourselves from it, separating our inner lives from the external
objects we want to know. Such objectivism is morally deforming because its
distancing us from knowledge prevents a moral engagement with the world we
study and (prevents) a taking responsibility for it. One of the most important
contributions our religious and spiritual traditions can make through dialogue
on our campuses is in the alternative epistemologies they offer which are
more capacious, more relational and more responsive than classic objectivism."
-- Parker Palmer
In speaking about his work to connect scientific inquiry
with spirituality and morality Professor Zajonc responded, "I have been
coming increasingly to the opinion that this is really an artificial division
and that what life is about is coming to an undivided life...The openness
to transformation, the commitment to new knowing, has to move from the head
to the heart. We need a new alchemy, a synthesis, where the demands of spirit
and matter are somehow brought together and we realize that they are undivided."
-- Arthur Zajonc, Professor of Physics at Amherst College