Intellectuals in America
Robert Clancy
[Reprinted from the Henry George News,
October, 1958]
The "egghead" - the scholar, the scientist, the
intellectual - has been receiving a lot or attention in this country
during the past year - mostly because of our concern (as usual) that
Russia is doing a lot with her eggheads.
We deal with the matter as we Americans typically do - all out, one,
two, three, let there be light. And the egghead stands there, blinking
in the glare of the klieg lights, not quite certain whether this is
good or bad.
What is good about it is the effort to integrate the egghead into the
life of our society. What is bad about it is the way we're doing it.
I believe God intended that eggheads should not live in a world apart
but should get mixed up in this world with the jugheads, knuckleheads
and onionheads. They have a part to play in making life richer and
more meaningful for mankind, just as the baker and merchant and
artisan have theirs.
While civilization is advancing, the egghead does become integrated
with society, as the poets and philosophers were in ancient Greece. As
Greece declined, the egghead became a misanthrope, or a lackey for the
powers-that-be, or he buried himself in academic work.
In the nineteenth century, eggheads not. uncommonly were involved
with public affairs. Ralph Waldo Emerson went out into the world, John
Stuart Mill was a Member of Parliament, Emile Zola crusaded for reform
and so did Leo Tolstoy, Richard Wagner participated in revolutions.
More latterly, the egghead has been following the trend of his
predecessors during the decline of Greece - there is a schism between
the thinker and society. Today's eggheads, more often than not, from
private cults; enamored of their own subtleties, they strive to
impress one another. A lot of them fool around with Existentialism and
go caterwauling about "man's aloneness in the universe" and
other non-existent problems which mean nothing to the toiling billions
on this planet.
The eggheads who do care what happens are tragic figures - like
Oppenheimer; or Einstein, who thought he would have been more useful
as a plumber.
The egghead participation in social affairs that does exist is not
particularly gratifying. Scientists in industry are turned loose in a
laboratory and are asked to perform like pet monkeys. Scientists in,
government are not positive shapers of influence but are underlings of
state policy. The man of affairs distrusts the egghead, and the
egghead distrusts the man of affairs.
While these are symptoms of the choleric times we are living in, the
egghead can do something about it - something more constructive than
competing on a TV quiz show. He can turn his attention more fully to
social problems, he can seek a more creative liaison with the rest of
society and try to fill the intellectual needs of the people. And the
rest of us can meet him halfway.
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