--- title: The Mind of a Gentleman tags: [Classical Education, Culture] summary: "This essay explores St. John Henry Newman's conception of a gentleman's education; it was originally published in the Classical Teacher." banner: lily.jpg --- *This essay was originally published in the Classical Teacher.* An educated gentleman should live with a confident bearing toward the world. He stands with chin up. He looks out on the variety of human life and the vastness of the cosmos with an eye that takes it all in. He may not be an expert, but he knows how to think about any of the things he sees, and more importantly, he knows how to think about them all together as a unified whole. By contrast, the servile man sits with hunched shoulders and head down, toiling at his one assigned task. Being a slave to a particular kind of work, he will naturally become knowledgeable about that very specific subject. He knows exactly how to stack Widget A on top of Widget B, and he can tell you anything you want to know about these two specific widgets---but no more. He does not share the gentleman's flexibility and liberality of mind, capable of approaching the whole of life with intelligence and dignity. In his magisterial book, *The Idea of a University*, St. John Henry Newman argues that the goal of education in a university should be the cultivation of students away from the servile and toward the gentlemanly, "liberal" type of mind. (In Latin, *liber* means a "free man" as opposed to a slave, and the education appropriate for such a man is an education in the "liberal arts.") One might define the gentleman as the free man who uses his freedom wisely by becoming a man of broad culture, taste, and learning. Newman specifies the ultimate aim of such cultivation thus: "Our desideratum is, not the manners and habits of gentlemen...but the force, the steadiness, the comprehensiveness and the versatility of intellect, the command over our powers, the instinctive just estimate of things as they pass before us, which sometimes indeed is a natural gift, but commonly is not gained without much effort and the exercise of years." Newman does not conceive of this as a simple ability exercised in discrete mental acts but rather as a broad "habit of mind," an attitude toward reality that colors all one's thoughts, words, and actions: "A habit of mind is formed which lasts through life, of which the attributes are, freedom, equitableness, calmness, moderation, and wisdom"---If only we could reliably expect such a habit of mind to come out of our state universities today. We must be clear that the distinction between the gentleman and the slave is not at all the class distinction between white-collar and blue-collar worker. There are many suit-and-tie types who think in exactly the cramped, servile mode that Newman describes. The kind of person who only ever evaluates knowledge in terms of its *use* to his specific widgets---whether they be paper or spreadsheets and whether the widget factory be a tiny cubicle or a corner office. Conversely, there are some---I wish I could say, "many"---blue-collar workers who have cultivated their whole soul beyond their work through wide reading and deep reflection. How then do we cultivate this kind of soul in our students? The goal of the ideal university graduate lifted from a Victorian cardinal may seem rather daunting and remote to the homeschooling mother preparing to teach geography to her eight-year-old. But she should rest assured that teaching geography is exactly what she should be doing. Newman argues that the gentleman's habit of mind develops over long study in all those disciplines that teach a knowledge of the world. That eight-year-old may not go on to be an airline pilot, but when someone mentions the Danube, he will have a picture in his mind of a more-or-less definite line on a map. Possessing this general picture of maps and places, he will enjoy a certain confidence as he moves through life: the confidence of the man who knows where he is. As this student continues to learn not just geography but math, science, history, and literature, his mental map will hold not just cities and rivers but trees and weather systems, peoples and poems, fictional heroes and historical scoundrels. Educated in the classical manner, he will be able to situate all these little pieces into the whole of his learning, locating them somewhere on the map, and locating himself in their midst. He will have a comfortable familiarity with them and an ease in handling new pieces that are similar to the ones he already knows. He will not panic when he cannot place them immediately because long experience has taught him that all the truths that are really true will ultimately fit together into a single map. By contrast, many contemporary experts would have our student educated with a view toward efficiently learning the narrow skills that he will "actually use someday" when he becomes a middle-management bureaucrat at the city waste-management facility. He would know how to use the more recondite features of Excel, but he probably would not know what "recondite" means, and he certainly would not know where he is in the world. Newman calls the integrated vision of reality a "philosophical habit of mind," which is a little different than what you would get by reading Sartre in a college philosophy class. What Newman means by philosophy is a science distinct from all the other specific sciences and is "in some sense a science of sciences," that is, a discipline of mind that stands back from the details and reflects upon their meaning as they relate to one another and to the totality of reality. Philosophy is the science that pulls all the local maps together and draws up a single---hopefully coherent and accurate---map of the whole. Naturally, this map of the whole will not be finished all at once by the eight-year-old; he will draw it bit-by-bit throughout the rest of his life. He will make adjustments as he goes, and at crises or conversion moments of his life, he may need to erase whole continents and redraw them. But he will not have anything to put on the map if he does not begin by learning that the sources of the Rhine and the Danube are quite close to each other, that King David lived long before the Peloponnesian War, and that moths are different from butterflies. As he deepens and matures, familiarity with the process of drawing and redrawing details on his map will inculcate in our student the desired disposition of mind. He will sit at a dinner party and know how to say something intelligent about subjects other than himself. He will read an article and know how to have opinions other than those handed to him by propaganda. He will take his family to an art museum and know how to interact with the art through means other than his phone. He will face a difficult moral decision and know how to think in terms other than those of his passions. In short, he will have the mind of a gentleman.