The University in the 21st Century: Thinking about Ethics, Persons, and Discourse

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James F. Keenan, SJ
Boston College

Date:November 18, 2010

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Abstract

It is not only the Church that needs to be thinking of ethics, but the university as well. While physicians, lawyers, nurses, business people, journalists, and others study the ethics specific to their professions, clergy and university professors receive no such training—and, in fact, often teach ethics for the other professions. Issues regarding accountability, transparency and equity are simply not part of the background of professorial preparation, so it is not surprising that some of the most enterprising unethical scams come from the university.

So what to do? Fr. Keenan will argue that we start by dismissing the common view of the university as an anonymous but liberal space for the exchange of ideas, and replace it with an appreciation of the university as a place for people to develop ideas through discourse. If we want to talk about the university as it could be—that is, through the lens of ethics—then we must focus on particular persons rather than abstract ideas. This is, he says, a very modest proposal, but an urgent one nonetheless.

Speaker Bio

James F. Keenan, SJ

James F. Keenan, SJ,is theFounders Professor of Theology at Boston College. He has been a Jesuit of the New York Province since 1970, and an ordained priest since 1982. His research interests include: fundamental moral theology, history of theological ethics, Thomas Aquinas, virtue ethics, HIV/AIDS, genetics, and Church Leadership Ethics. Father Keenan received his BA from Fordham University, his MDiv from the Weston Jesuit School of Theology, and his STL, STD from the Gregorian University in Rome. As a professor at Boston College, he teaches many classes, including Virtue Ethics, Twentieth Century Catholic Moral Theology, and The Church and Ethics: Contemporary and Historical Cases. Among his many books, Father Keenan is recently the author ofA History of Catholic Moral Theology in the Twentieth Century: From Confessing Sins to Liberating Consciences(2010)andThe Ethics of the Word: Voices in the Catholic Church Today(2010), co-author ofPaul and Virtue Ethics: Building Bridges Between New Testament Studies and Moral Theology(2010), and co-editor ofTransformative Theological Ethics: East Asian Contexts(2010).

Event Photos

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James F. Keenan, S.J. and Erik Owens.

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Erik Owens

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Father Keenan

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Erik Owens, James F. Keenan, S.J., and Alan Wolfe

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Photos by Christopher Soldt, MTS Photography

Event Recap

This year’s Prophetic Voices Lecture marked the tenth in our annual series designed to honor extraordinary people who have drawn upon the prophetic traditions of their faith communities to challenge the consciences of all who hear them. Our honoree, James F. Keenan, SJ, is an internationally renowned moral theologian and one of the most widely admired professors at Boston College, where he is Founders Professor of Theology. He presented his lecture, “The University in the 21st Century: Thinking about Ethics, Persons, and Discourse,” before an enthusiastic crowd in Higgins Hall on the evening of November 18.

Taking his cue from a series of recent scandals involving embezzlement and abuse of power at several American universities, Keenan noted with chagrin that ethics training is virtually nonexistent for university faculty, staff and administrators. In fact, he noted, the Catholic Church was in the same situation until the sex abuse crisis brought such issues to the fore. How could it be, he asked, that other professions such as law and medicine have well-established codes of ethical conduct and mandate ethics training, while the church and the university do not? Keenan responded to this challenge by sketching some of the practices needed to develop a hospitable climate for academic ethics, and describing the sort of discourse that would take place in this environment.

Chief among the practices required in a university culture of ethics, Keenan argued, is transparency regarding the activities of faculty, administrators, staff and students alike. This transparency is realized through open course evaluations and syllabi, administrative reviews, and student journalism, among other activities. Community building is another key practice, which ֱ is doing quite well through faculty-student dinners, Intersections lunches, student retreats and more. Horizontal accountability would improve the tenure review process and curricular decisions, Keenan said, while vertical accountability would ensure that deans and senior administrators were doing their part as well.

These practices, he argued, should help us to see the university as a place where people learn ideas from other people, not an anonymous place for the transmission of information. This interpersonal ethos fosters a discourse guided by several important virtues, including justice (with regard to those close to us and others around the world), fidelity (to colleagues and benefactors), self-care and prudence, which helps to understand and adjudicate among the preceding virtues. In this manner, the academy will be better equipped to answer the call to solidarity and justice and reverse its current trend towards individualism and isolationism.

The event concluded with a lively discussion with the audience about ethics, interdisciplinarity, and the need to bridge the gap between our academic and personal lives. It was, by all accounts, an exceptionally thought-provoking evening with one of ֱ’s most compelling thinkers.

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Further Reading

","CTSA Proceedings 64, 2009: 1-14.

In a speech given to theCatholic Theological Society of America, Fr. Keenan discusses his personal story of impasse with cancer and his revaluation of the meaning of solidarity. He argues that, in order for the academy and the church to answer the call to solidarity and justice, these institutions must reverse the current trend towards individualism and isolationism.

"," by Judith I. Bailey, February 3, 2004.

In this speech, former Western Michigan University President Judith Bailey presents her belief that higher education is a public good. She also discusses three sets of ethical challenges facing the university: integrity and academic honesty, diversity, and maintaining access.

"(The Lack of) Professional Ethics in the Academy,"Louvian Studies 34, 2011: 98-116.

Other Books by James Keenan, SJ

(Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1992).

, edited with Thomas Shannon (Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1995).

(Kansas City: Sheed and Ward, 1996).

(Sheed and Ward, 1999).

, edited with Joseph J. Kotva, Jr. (Franklin, WI: Sheed and Ward, 1999).

, edited and assisted by Lisa Sowle Cahill, Jon Fuller, and Kevin Kelly (Continuum, 2000).

, with Daniel Harrington (Lanham, MD: Sheed and Ward, 2002).

(Lanham, MD: Sheed and Ward, 2004); second edition, 2009.

(Lanham, MD: Sheed and Ward, 2005); second edition, 2007.

, edited by James Keenan, Jean Bartunek and Mary Ann Hinsdale (Lanham, MD: Sheed and Ward, 2005).

edited,(New York: Continuum, 2007).

(Bangalore: Dharmaram Vidya Kshetram Press, 2008).

(New York: Continuum, 2010).

(New York: Rowman and Littlefield, 2010).

, edited with Agnes Brazal, Aloysius Cartagenas, Eric Genilo, and James Keenan (Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2010).

, with Daniel J. Harrington, SJ (Rowman and Littlefield, 2010).

In the News

byFr. James F. Keenan,2009
Speech given to theCatholic Theological Society of America

Fr. Keenan argues that, in order for the academy and the church to answer the call to solidarity and justice, these institutions must reverse the current trend towards individualism and isolationism.