Universities
Turning Away from Truth
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina,
June 15 (CNA) - During a visit to Argentina, the President of the Pontifical
Council for Culture, Cardinal Paul Poupard, said the mission of universities
is not to merely produce graduates, but rather to help students seek
out the truth.
In a speech at the University
of Argentina on the challenges that today’s culture poses for
education, the cardinal emphasized that the importance of the university
does not boil down to enabling its graduates to enter the workforce,
but rather it should be a place for seeking out the truth in communion
between teachers and students, and for the formation and growth of individuals.
According to the Argentinean
daily La Nacion, Cardinal Poupard said that to speak about the truth
in contemporary culture constitutes an annoyance in an atmosphere characterized
by nihilism, and he criticized universities for turning away from the
classical questions about human existence--God, the meaning of life,
death, and justice, as presented in literature, history and ethics—in
favor of satisfying the demand for job opportunities in the marketplace.
The cardinal also
expressed his fear about “living in a world dominated by soul-less
experts and at the mercy of specialists who know almost everything about
very little and almost nothing about everything else, about the things
that are most important.”
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Almost 70 percent of corporate supervisors rated the value of an online
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*based on a survey
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one employee who had earned a degree with a DETC-accreditied distance
program