What is Wisdom Worth?
Get wisdom, . . .
Proverbs
4:7
Atul Gawande is two things at once, a philosopher surgeon. He can operate on your colon, and he can write about how doctors face human mortality (well, maybe not at the same time). He is equally at home on staff at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital and at The New Yorker–a scientist with the heart of a humanitarian.
I would love to see his tribe increase, this
tribe of philosopher scientists, or scientific philosophers, if you will. And I think Trinity School is uniquely positioned to help that
happen. That’s what I want to talk about
tonight.
Gawande is not a Christian–you’ll have to read
his book to get a sense of how he lives into his Hindu heritage. But he
bridges a divide that I is growing in our cultuer, an unfortunate divide: the chasm that separates math and science
from the humanities. In fact, my argument is that in the future the world
has a deep need for people who can master both the STEM fields (Science,
Technology, Engineering, and Math) and the traditional Liberal Arts like
literature, history, and philosophy.
Gawande is a teller of stories, and his book, Being
Mortal, an exploration of the limits, failures, and possibilities of the
medical profession’s approach to aging and death, is full of stories. Some of them are very personal, like the one he tells about his own
father, a physician with a tumor in his spine.
His father “interviewed” more than one
neurosurgeon. He ended up choosing Edward Benzel of the Cleveland Clinic. Why? In his book, Gawande tells
how Benzel modelled what experts call “shared decision making.” Benzel
was as confident as other physicians they had seen, but he was more patient
with the elder Dr. Gawande’s questions. Here’s what the younger Gawande
wrote in his book:
He recognized that
my father’s questions came from fear. So he took the time to answer them,
even the annoying ones. Along the way, he probed my father, too. He said that it sounded like he was more
worried about what the operation might do to him than what the tumor would.
Benzel had a way
of looking at people that let them know he was really looking at them. He
was several inches taller than my parents, but he made sure to sit at eye
level. He turned his seat away from the
computer and planted himself directly in front of them. He did not twitch
or fidget or even react when my father talked.
He had the midwesterner’s habit of waiting a beat after people have
spoken before speaking himself, in order to see if they are really done.
(198)
Gawande contrasts this with two other models of
medical posture: the paternalistic (“Trust me and do what I say”) and the
informative (“I offer no opinions here, I’m just giving you the facts and the
data”). Both of these models fall short of serving human patients
well. The paternalistic model lacks
humility and empathy; the informative model is robotic and uninvolved, as
though the doctor were only a walking-talking Google search. As Gawande
says, “We want information and control, but we also want guidance.” And guidance requires skills like listening,
asking good probing questions, discernment, patience to go beyond the
first-order desires of patients, ability to listen for deep fears and cares. These are much more like the skills that are developed in a humanities
seminar tackling complex texts than in a highly technical and demanding science
class. No one is questioning the
physician’s need for a deep understanding of organic chemistry and
pharmacology; but our brilliant doctors will need other skills that only the
humanities can develop.
Bill Roper, the Dean of UNC’s Medical School and
CEO of UNC’s Healthcare System (and also a Trinity alumni parent), tells me
that the kind of medical practice that Gawande is talking about in his book is
the kind of education that medical schools across the country are working hard
to provide now. Physicians need not only the hard skills of math, organic
chemistry, and biology, but also the softer skills of empathy, good listening,
and the ability to frame good questions.
A classical education has always been good at both sides of this challenge. Both the liberal arts of learning and the sciences have flourished in institutions of classical education. Like Trinity School. At Trinity, our commitment to and success with the liberal arts has been intentional and most effective. Listen to these two Trinity grads talk about their experience.
A classical education has always been good at both sides of this challenge. Both the liberal arts of learning and the sciences have flourished in institutions of classical education. Like Trinity School. At Trinity, our commitment to and success with the liberal arts has been intentional and most effective. Listen to these two Trinity grads talk about their experience.
What you hear is the fruit of a great education in the arts of learning: the skills of attending well, of reading and writing, of public speaking, of thinking critically. All of our classes and the entire arc of a Trinity education from TK-12 contribute to this success.
Now on the other side, with Trinity’s STEM
(Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) education, I give you our Robotics
program, which has flourished now for about eight years, since the founding of
Trinity’s Upper School. I don’t know how many of you know about this
program, and I want you all to take a close look at it and what it is doing for
students. In the first year of Trinity’s
Upper School, Trinity parent and scientist Mark Butler proposed to start, on a
volunteer basis, a Robotics program that was part of the nation-wide FIRST Tech
Challenge. I had never heard of FIRST, but the more I learned about it,
the more excited I was to see it grow as a “sport of the mind.” Under Mark’s leadership, the program took
off, and other leaders have taken the baton from Mark and passed it on. Trinity alumnus faculty Derek Skeen now runs
the program. Here are some things you
should know about the Robotics program:
- 19 students are currently
involved.
- We have a Middle School
Resource class and a MS Engineering Club that teach students the
Engineering Design process--great prep for US Robotics
- A number of students have
gone from Trinity robotics into Engineering and Design fields in college
and beyond.
- The project-based learning that happens in this program is a beautiful and missional thing--talk about engagement!
I wanted to share this program with you also
because I think it provides a model for the way we plan to grow other
STEM-based programs at Trinity. That model? Start with small bets, prototype some
classes, and if the students come and thrive, support and scale the program. Next year we are hoping to do just that with
a set of new Engineering Design courses which we hope to pilot for our Upper
School. The vision for this class and for others that may sprout from the
same root, is to enable students to use computer aided design (CAD) software, 3-D
printers, coding languages, and an array of digital, woodworking, and machining
tools to envision, design, and build products and solutions to real-world
problems. I attended a cross-departmental meeting recently where faculty
from the science, math, visual arts, music, drama, humanities, and theology all
brainstormed how such a space and such a program might integrate and enhance
the good work we are already doing in all those areas.
This is all very exciting, and I’d say that one of the focuses of
our leadership here at the school over the next 3-5 years will be in developing
and growing this kind of good work in applied math, science and engineering. And also to build Lower School and Middle School programs that feed into
this.
So what do you get when you put a strong humanities focus together
with a robust education in applied math, science, and technology? Well,
for one thing, I think you get good preparation for being the kind of doctor
that Atul Gawande is talking about in his book. In other words, you get widsom.
What is Wisdom?
I had a professor of Old Testament Wisdom Literature–that’s Proverbs and Ecclesiastes–who said that wisdom is the “art of driving well through life.” Do you remember when you first learned to drive? (Or do you remember when you taught a son or daughter how to drive?) How to stay between the lines, how to slow before a curve and accelerate into it, how to hit the brakes gently, how to turn left in traffic--these are things that come only with enormous practice. There’s an art to them.
Driving well through our lives is not easy. There are
dangers and challenges, and there is no rule book that we can follow all the
time. We all need wisdom, whatever “road” we are driving on:
- The judge who has to
decide whether to make an exception to recommended sentencing guidelines
needs wisdom.
- The teacher who suspects
that some of her students are not making friends needs wisdom.
- The venture capitalist
who is trying to decide how much control and information to demand in
exchage for investment needs wisdom.
- The clinical trials
project manager who is faced with an ambiguous interpretation of informed
consent needs wisdom.
- The social scientist
whose experiment may cause harm to the participants needs wisdom.
- And any parent who is trying to decide when to give her child a cell phone needs wisdom.
In the classical tradition, wisdom is a moral virtue. It’s
one of the four cardinal virtues–the other three are justice, self-control,
and courage. At Trinity we talk about these four virtues a lot. Here are two places where we reference them
as the points on our moral compass: in our use of technology, and in athletics.
In these spheres, as in others, the habits that students form by their
repeated actions either promote or detract from their ability to “drive well”
through life.
If we dissect wisdom, we find that it consists of two skills:
- First,
the ability to deliberate rationally about one’s choices;
- And, second, the ability to discern which choices serve one’s true purpose best.
In order to deliberate, students need to be able
to think critically and well--that’s what a classical education does. And
in order to discern, they need a clear sense of True North when it comes to
their life’s purpose. How can anyone act
wisely and discern whether an action serves one’s purpose if they don’t know
what that purpose is?
And here’s the thing about purpose: Common
culture would tell us that students need to define their own purpose. But
purpose is not something we invent; it is something we discover. Our purpose is a gift. We were created
by God to glorify him by enjoying him forever. We were made for God, to serve him first and others second. Ourselves, well, we flourish when we are third. This is what Trinity’s motto of Non Nobis
means: “Not to us, Lord, not to us, but to your name be the glory.”
There is an idea abroad that virtues like wisdom
can be developed in “values-neutral” spaces like our public schools. I am
not a denigrator of public schools–any institution that educates 80-90% of our
state’s students deserves our respect and support. But I would not be
honest if I said that I was confident that school with absolute commitments to
being “values-neutral” will be able to develop wisdom, self-control, justice,
and courage in our young students. Why?
Because we learn to live morally by living into a
particular story. Stories inspire us and guide us. And in the Christian tradition, we believe
that One Story shapes us: the story of the crucified Son of God. Values
neutral spaces are embarrassed or offended by the particularity of this
story. But we at Trinity believe that it
is the story that we are all graciously invited into, and we keep telling
ourselves this story. It shapes all we are and all we do. The motto that stands above the door of our
gym makes no sense apart from this story: “Not to us, Lord, not to us, but to
your name be the glory.” But within a
community shaped by the story of Christ’s death and resurrection, this makes so
much sense.
People get all lathered about teaching good
science in our schools. They want to make sure that we are teaching
students the way reality is when it comes to something like climate change. It’s dangerous not to tell them the truth about reality. I agree.
And I also think that we must have the same kind
of commitment to teaching about other parts of reality, including the reality
of the human person, created in God’s image, guilty and enslaved by sin,
redeemed only by the grace of God in Christ, through his life, death on a
cross, and resurrection to life. These ideas, if true, are as important
as gravity and thermodynamics.
I will end with another story, the story of
another Trinity graduate. I think these stories of our graduates are so
important and helpful to us as we think about the value of a Trinity education.
I’d like you to meet Chris Wu. Chris graduated in
2015 and enrolled at Stanford. I met up with Chris recently when I was out
in California (I have some grandchildren out there!) for study leave. I
try to meet Trinity grads whenever I travel, and I’ve always come away from
these meetings with a deep gratitude for these students and appreciation for
what Trinity has meant to them in their education.
But Chris’ story is a great one to show us the
value of a Trinity education. After two years majoring in Electrical
Engineering, with a plan to apply for medical school, Chris took the fall of
2017—what would have been his junior fall quarter—he took that off to intern
for SpaceX. Then, two weeks into his January term, a friend and former
roommate asked him to take the spring semester off and work for his small
start-up.
Turns out that this friend had taken a high
school science project (through Google’s Science Fair) and turned it into a
real idea for a biomedical start-up company called Athelas (named for the
healing plant that Aragorn applied to Frodo’s wound). After we had lunch,
Chris walked me over to the start-up space and I got to see the work in
progress. They have built an in-home
device about the size of Amazon’s Alexa, and its purpose is to measure blood
platelets and other blood cells for patients with rare blood diseases and those
whose pharmaceutical treatments affect the blood and need to be constantly
regulated. Before this device, such a patient would have to go into a
clinic and have blood drawn intravenously. With this device, the patient simply pricks her finger, smears a drop of
blood on a glass slide, inserts the slide into the device whose optical microscopy instantly reads
the sample and uploads the data to a program on the patient’s computer.
Chris’s role? He is tweaking the
electronics in the device. And he is helping the team perfect the way
that they read the slides—apparently blood platelets get pretty sticky when the
blood is smeared on the slides and this makes them hard to count.
So maybe that’s more than you wanted to know
about this project, but I thought it was really cool. And I want to just
highlight a few things from this story and from the conversation I had with
Chris that afternoon, things that demonstrate what we are talking about when we
say that a Trinity education helps shape young people who can live wisely in
the world.
I see Chris learning to “drive well” through his
young life, designing it wisely. His decision to hit the pause button on
his studies and practice a few things in the working world—I know that will be
controversial to some, but I see it as eminently wise. If he ends up in
medical school, as he hopes, he won’t have the freedom to prototype some things
as he’s doing now. I pray that this year
will be clarifying for him as he sorts out his calling.
When Chris was a Trinity student, he was a
stellar STEM student and pushed Trinity’s curriculum to the limits. But
he was also a fine writer and reader of texts, and I remember teaching him a
unit in Theology class—his paper was one of the best I’ve read over the years. I asked Chris about the value of a humanities education for someone so
invested in the STEM world. He said it
was really important. We talked about
hard decisions that people in the tech and VC world have to face all the time. At a tech start-up like the one he’s working on now, there is this huge
pressure to be first to market. But what
methods do you use to get there? What
corners can you cut–or not? What
sacrifices are you willing to make? And
it’s not just the temptations to do something wrong—in a way, those decisions
are easier. But it’s the good versus good decisions that are the hard ones. Like the greater good of the product versus the particular good of
subjects in a trial. For these kinds of
decisions, a Trinity humanities education is invaluable. And a Trinity
Christian education may be the best thing of all.
My goal is not to put Chris on a pedastal, but to
allow you to see a Trinity education through the lens of his life.
And I’ll say this as I close: I am glad that
Chris Wu is in the world. I’m glad that he is bringing his Christian
faith and his education in wisdom, the liberal arts, and the sciences to bear
on relieving the pain and suffering of a particular group of people. And
when it comes time for me make the hardest of life’s health decisions, I’d be
glad to have Chris as my doctor. And I’m grateful and glad that Trinity has
played some part in his education and in the education of hundreds of students
who will lead in the next generation. Non nobis.
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