
Classical Wisdom Speaks #30 - What is the future of the humanities? Discussing The Battle of the Classics.
Mar 29, 2021
Eric Adler, classicist and author advocating a historically informed defense of the humanities. Alexandra Hudson, curator of Civic Renaissance, promoting public conversation about beauty, goodness, and truth. They debate the future and inclusivity of the humanities. They trace origins from Cicero, critique weak defenses based on vague ‘critical thinking’, propose a living, omni-cultural core, and discuss outreach, pedagogy, and AI’s relevance to humanistic inquiry.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Humanities Originated As Moral Education
- The humanities began as Cicero's studia humanitatis linking lifelong, non-vocational study to moral improvement.
- Renaissance humanists narrowed this to Greek and Latin literary mastery as the path to character formation.
Modern Humanities Are A Grab-Bag
- The modern humanities became a grab-bag distinct from sciences and vocational training rather than a single integrated ideal.
- That fragmentation makes clear, unified defenses of the humanities much harder today.
Babbitt's Inclusive Humanism
- Irving Babbitt's New Humanism sought overlap between civilizations to recover shared human wisdom.
- He framed inclusion as studying comparable moral insights across East and West, not as replacing one canon with another.


