Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Schumpeter on Academics
"The layman thinks he knows what a professor is. However, this term denotes a group of people who differ widely in type, function, and mentality. There is the academic administrator; the university politician; the teacher in the sense of a man who imparts current knowledge; the teacher in the sense of a man who imparts distinctive doctrines or methods; the scholar in the sense implied by 'learnedness'; the organizer of research; the research worker whose strong point is ideas; the research worker whose strong point is skillful technique, experimentation and its counterparts in the social sciences. And all of those--and others--are very different chaps and hardly ever fully understand and appreciate one another. Yet it takes all of them to make a modern university and it takes recognition of all these types and the way they cooperate or fail to cooperate in order to understand what a university is and how it works. And he who insists on merging them into a unitary professorial type and leaves it at that will obliterate not only secondary details but essentials."
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