Learning, Altruism, and Violence
Megan Heller, Rutgers University, Summer 2002
Assignment # 3: Altruism and Universalism
In your last paper I asked you to take a position on the place of kindness
and altruism in the workings of democracy. Frans de Waal calls altruistic
acts those than do not involve personal gain, in which the impulse to
help becomes dissociated from the consequences that shaped its evolution,
allowing the impulse to be genuinely unselfish. Lani Guinier,
in the meantime, seeks a democracy that is fair and just,"
involving a system of proportionality in which one would have to recognize
underrepresented groups and provide them with a voice equal to that of
the majority. But what about a situation where what is altruistic becomes
unclear?
Martha Nussbaum, a philosopher and social critic, takes a universalist
stance on the rights of women in her essay Women and Cultural Universals
in presenting her Central Human Functional Capabilities; however,
she also presents the side of the anti-universalists, the cultural relativists,
who place the right to tradition first. Both universalists and relativists
mean well, and act out of a sense of altruism and the greater good for
a particular group of people, without any real benefit to themselves.
Both groups see themselves as acting according to a system of proportionality,
giving equal rights to those outside the majority; for relativists, it
is a matter of placing the rights of non-Western traditions as equal to
Western thought, while for the universalists in this article, it is a
matter of placing the rights of women as equal to those of men.
Can cultural relativism and cultural universalism be reconciled or
made compatible at all? Do you believe that Nussbaum finds a compromise
in her Central Human Functional Capabilities? Does being kind to one
group while potentially violating the rights of another compromise an
acts altruistic intentions? You may consider the following questions:
De Waal offers a picture of evolution based on a mixture of survival
of the fittest and survival of the kindest; how might
these roles work according to relativists and/or universalists? Are the
women in Nussbaums article less entitled to enfranchisement that
the blacks in Phillips County because their tradition still prohibits
it? Or, is it wrong for Western democracy to impose change upon a culture,
rather than allowing it the autonomy to change on its own? You should
use at least three main supports to your argument, and each support should
contain at least three quotations, one from each author.
Rough Draft (4 pages)
Final Draft (5-6 pages)
I will evaluate your paper by looking at:
1. Your project: You should express and support your own idea about
the assigned topic and use textual evidence from de Waal, Guinier, and
Nussbaum to help develop and support your claim.
2. Your organization: You should express, explain, and explore a central
claim in each paragraph. Your paragraphs should connect logically to each
other. The paragraphs should all work toward developing your central project.
3. Your use of quotations and examples: Choose relevant concept quotations
and examples. Explain the connections between these quotations and examples
and your larger project.
4.Your sentence clarity and correctness: Proofread your essay carefully
for grammar and spelling errors.
Assignment #4: Universalism and Local Tradition
In your last essay, I asked you to take a position on the question of
cultural relativism versus cultural universalism. Martha Nussbaum offered
us the opportunity to compare the rights of a general group, in this case
women, to the right of a particular culture to exist. Your next article,
Susan Faludi's "The Naked Citadel," also draws attention to
the question of a culture's right to exist, but it brings the problem
a little closer to home. Faludi shows us the Citadel, a public (state-funded)
military institution in South Carolina which was, until recently, exclusively
male. Those who were against the admission of women to the Citadel believed
deeply in the traditions and internal culture of the college, and believed
they had a right to exist without outside interference.
For your next essay, I would like you to consider the following question
in terms of the two assigned essays: What right does a tradition have
to exist? You may also consider any or all of the following support
questions: If you believe traditions have some sort of inherent right
to exist, why? If not, how would you defend yourself against critics?
What, if anything, gives one tradition more weight than another? Does
changing particular elements about a tradition destroy it, or is it necessary?
Consider Nussbaum's Central Human Functional Capabilities; do they apply
to the Citadel? What difference does personal choice make? What about
the Citadel's public financial support? Remember to use at least three
quotations per author.
Rough Draft (4 pages)
Final Draft (5-6 pages)
Assignment #5: Gender and Learning
In your last essay, I asked you to demonstrate whether or not a culture's
traditions had some inherent right to exist. In Susan Faludi's "The
Naked Citadel," we saw the Citadel's controversial fourth-class system
as a means of breaking cadets before rebuilding them, and the conflicts
raised when women were introduced into that environment. She claims that
"[W]e are at a psychic and economic crisis point for manhood,"
both in confronting the traditions of the Citadel and on a larger scale.
Deborah Tannen goes beyond tradition as well to the roots of learning
in Western culture, and there finds what could be the same roots for the
violence at the Citadel. Tannen sees Western education as being based
in a system of confrontation and aggressive argument, and proposes a compromise
between debate and dialogue which would involve less the questions of
"wrong" and "right", and more the possibility for
constructive agreement and disagreement. She claims that the current
system is based in a militaristic model that is also responsible for the
exclusion of women in certain academic arenas.
For your next essay, I would like you to consider the following question:
How might a shift in the way we think about learning change the way
we think about masculinity? As you write, you may also consider the
following questions: Why do you believe that an agressive, militaristic
model of education has perservered for so long? Would the Citadel be
able to exist in a revised system like Tannen's, or would its traditions
be destroyed? Finally, a question which could potentially stir controversy:
Do you agree with Tannen? Is such a change really necessary? Remember
to use at least three quotations per author (one per support; six quotations).
Rough Draft (4-5 pages)
Revised Rough Draft (5-6 pages)
Final Draft (5-6 pages)
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