In the German states, prior
to 1734, university teaching was dominated by Catholic and Protestant
proponents of Christian education. Since the purpose of religious education is
to preserve a particular sect’s understanding of the world, little was done to
encourage new learning. “Teaching methods were backward. The norm was the
teaching of static truths, not new ideas; professors were not expected to
produce new knowledge.” (Watson, p. 50).
The year
1734 is significant because that is the year that the University of Gottingen
was founded with Gerlach Adolph von Munchhausen as its Kurator. “Munchhausen
ensured that theology played a relatively quiet role. Gottingen became the first university to restrict the
theological faculty’s traditional right of censorship…By this
enlightened measure, Gottingen’s freedom to think, write and publish, became
unparalleled in Germany.” (Watson, p. 51). In addition, Munchhausen encouraged
the teaching of non-theological courses. The subjects of physics, politics,
natural history, mathematics, history, geography, art and modern languages,
flourished.
With a
broader definition of education, which included topics that required research
and the expansion of knowledge rather than the repeating of old dogma,
Gottingen found it necessary to introduce a new structured environment to
convey learning. In addition to the lecture, the traditional way a professor
imparts established wisdom, Gottingen initiated the seminar. Revolutionary for
its time, the seminar allowed a group of interested students, with a professor,
to discuss their ideas and research. Seminars were conducted in smaller rooms
to invite exchange, rather than in lecture halls. That the student was
perceived to have individual thoughts and ideas for exploration, which might
contribute to a general pool of knowledge, was itself an innovative idea.
An emphasis
on original research began to evolve for both students and faculty. Students’
research evolved into the PhD dissertation. Likewise, faculty were not just
freed, but expected, to perform and publish original research. The first German
professional academic journals were developed at Gottingen for communicating
the research of professors. Previously, the main way that a professor could
contribute to the literature of knowledge was by adding glosses in the margins
of traditionally accepted works.
Though
Gottingen was the first German university to employ these techniques, their
superiority over pre-existing static forms became apparent over time. The
methods employed by Gottingen expanded to other universities. These
universities created “a new stratum in German society” which “achieved a
prominent position in Germany by means of its domination of the state
bureaucracy, the church, the military, the professoriate, and the professions.
The self-understanding of this new stratum, which more than any other group
helped account for the revival of German culture, set it apart from the
traditional, more commercial middle class…a German intelligentsia.” (Watson, p.
54).
What
followed was a reading revolution and the notion that learning was a lifelong
pursuit. This thirst for learning created a golden age of German science,
technology, thought and arts, which persisted for almost two centuries. None of
this would have been possible without the initial vision to restrict the
religious domination of learning and emphasis on dogma. It is a lesson for all
of us that when we remove the bonds of religious education, we make room for
knowledge, innovation and the expansiveness of secular education.
Watson,
Peter. The German Genius. New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2010.
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