Belinda wrote: ↑Tue May 13, 2025 10:21 am
I respect the Roman Catholic schools and teachers where I have worked and made friends. I respect the disciplined atmosphere which helps the pupils to learn. All the RC teachers I have met, two of whom I counted among my friends and including two nuns, carried their religion lightly and were liberal in their attitudes.
By "carried their religion lightly " I mean they didn't talk about RC doctrine as authoritative but were open minded modern graduates in principles and practice of education and in arts. The pupils who were courteous and disciplined received liberal educations besides physical training and sound social principles by example from the teachers of how to practice these principles. (North of England 1960s -2000)
Since I was not educated in private Catholic schools, I cannot say much about the issue that concerns you.
What I think I can say is that, at bottom, a Catholic viewpoint is incisive and strict in some, core definitions, and these have to do with a picture, a description, an ideology, dealing with the reasons for our life in this plane of existence. The better Catholic theological writing that I have been influenced by (see the pdf book I linked to as an example) deal on the principles at this rational-intellectual level.
Now, what if one did not share this basic (Catholic-Christian) view about the value or purpose of life? What if a student did not agree? I am uncertain how they would or should be accommodated. Simply because there are sets of first principles in the Catholic-Christian viewpoint.
I can say that I am aware of Catholic colleges either a Catholic-values oriented program (
Wyoming Catholic College for example) but this is not primary education where, certainly in your view, “indoctrination” would occur.
My view about “indoctrination” is that: all education, and any platform of education, has as its purpose
in-doctrination. The entire issue hinges on what
comprises the “doctrine”. So, all education has to do
influence and imparting
value. These are decided on before the curriculum is established. One
assents to the program (or the parents assent) because their values concord).
My present view is that Catholic social doctrines are rational and sound. However, yes, I had to arrive at the intellectual locality where I
believed that. And belief involves
assent.
“Carried their religion lightly” is a problematic
valuation on your part. It is what you desire or think is right, no? But my view is that one cannot take one’s core and principle values “lightly”. One either believes them or one does not. They are either true or they are false. There is the age-old problem of
either/or.
However an English teacher whom I met more recently claimed that she had to teach some of her pupils to see beyond religious doctrine before they could be objective enough to understand novel ideas.
Any secular enthusiast involved in paideia will, quite naturally, assume they are
doing right if they recondition a student to disavow, let’s say, those basic terms of spiritual or metaphysical assent at the core of the (in this instance) Catholic-Christian orientation.
Your efforts — because you do not give your assent to a Divine Authority and do not “believe in” such — will be to inculcate your auditors in such a viewpoint. Your “enemy” would be one who presents a contrary argument (especially if successfully).
Novel ideas you say? That is a loaded term! If for example your novel idea were that the traditional concept of marriage as a sacrament had been superseded by the “novel” assertion that a man could marry a sheep and a woman a donkey — how should your novel idea be dealt with?
I trust you understand the point I wish to make?
Purpose and value of life can't be properly understood by people whose minds are not free to think and feel.
It really depends on how the term (concept) of
freedom is taken. Everything hinges on defined values: a dogma of valuation if you will.